CMEL introduces new tech to make better AMOLED displays


25 OLED prototype by CMELCMEL introduces a New OLED manufacturing technique called Metal encapsulated module (MEM). MEM displays are thinner (0.7mm instead of 1.7mm), lighter, and stronger.



CMEL showed a 25" AMOLED 'MEM' TV, and they say that it can be used on displays of any size. They plan to start offering such displays in Q2 2009. In fact they will offer the option of MEM on all their displays, so customers can choose (so we assume MEM displays will cost more than traditional OLEDs).



Attached below is a short datasheet on MEMs.


Read the full story Posted: Nov 04,2008

Past and future of TV Technology - from Mechanical sets to OLED TVs and 3D displays Continued

Back to the page 1

During the seventies, manufacturers changed the vacuum-tube Tech into all-transistor based TVs. The first wireless remote-controls were introduced in 1972 (although wired-remote-controls were available in the sixties!) Here's a TV from 1976, made by MagnaVox:

During the eighties, TVs began to take the shape of modern CRTs. Satellite broadcasting began in 1984. Here's a 1981 Magnavox TV, 19 :

The latest CRT TVs had great picture quality, used a 'flat' glass, had fast refresh rate, and the largest sized ones were around 34. During the nineties we saw some rear-projection TVs that were large (50-60) but with poor picture quality. Here's how a modern CRT looks like:

In 1997, Panasonic announced the first 'real' Plasma display, or PDP (plasma has been in research and some production since the sixties) a 42 model, 852x480 resolution, progressive scan. Thus begins the thin-TV era. LCDs were also researched in the sixties, and the first commercial model was actually made in 1971, although only in the last few years do we really use those new TVs at first smaller than Plasma, now they are made in roughly the same sizes (the largest LCD today is more than 100 across!), and most people do not know the difference between the two techs.

Compared to CRT, the picture quality (especially the 'refresh-rate') of LCD/PDP TVs are considered worse, and they are also more expensive but they have taken the world by storm, and some companies (such as Sony) have stopped making CRTs all together.

Here's an example Plasma TV:

The future of TV

The most promising new display technology is OLED (Organic.Light.Emitting.Diodes). OLEDs are made from a material that emits light when an electric charge is driven through it. Unlike LCD, it does not require a backlight and thus it is more simple to make, it is thin (really thin there are prototypes less than 50 micrometer thin!), efficient (low power), and the picture is brilliant, with great contrast and a very fast refresh rate. The first OLED TV available is the small (11) Sony XEL-1. It's only 3mm thin (and Sony are working on thinner versions), and has a contrast of 1,000,000:1 (compared to 10,000:1 or so you'll find in plasma TVs) :

The most exciting thing about OLEDs is that they can be made flexible, and even transparent. Can you image a transparent TV? When it's turned off, you can't see it at all . Or a rollable TV display? Think about taking your 42 TV with you, outdoors. I'm sure that when this Tech is available, the new applications will be exciting, we can't even imagine what the TV sets will look like.

Here are a few photos of OLED display prototypes and ideas:

Another future tech is 3D displays. The idea is to finally be free from the 2D projections of Television, and make 3D projections in space. This tech is referred to as 'volumetric displays'. Scientists are working on all sorts of ways to make this happen from pulsed lasers, to parallax barrier displays to Swept-surface... Here's some 'lighted-plasma-balls' floating in space, using 'pulsed laser':

Read the full story Posted: Nov 02,2008 - 3 comments

Past and future of TV Technology - from Mechanical sets to OLED TVs and 3D displays

At the end of the 19th century, people began thinking and dreaming of television. The word Television was first used in 1900 but it took more than 20 years for the first commercial sets to arrive. The first TVs were 'Mechanical Televisions' (or 'spinning Disc' tech). The picture was small, and the quality was poor, but the designs were something else:

Here's an interesting design from France (the Semivisor, 1929, photo credit from Musée des arts et métiers, Paris:

And here's a 3 one from GE (aptly name the Octagon, 1928):

During the thirties, they started to make Electronic CRT TVs (the same basic design as the CRT TV we used until we had LCD or Plasma). It took a bit of time, and the first electronic TV broadcast was made in July 1941. During World War II the US banned the production of TVs... and obviously things slowed down a bit. There were less than 7,000 sets total in the US before WWII!

Here's a GE TV from 1939:

And here's a Russian TV from 1938 (The TK1) :

Raytheon was making a round 12 TV back in 1949, which looks pretty good:

The first Color TV was the CBS Columbia, a Mechanical set, made in 1951:

The first Electronic color TV was the RCA CT-100, released in 1954, selling at 1,000$:

The Italians (who always know how to design things) have produced the Phonola In 1957:

Go to next page

Read the full story Posted: Nov 02,2008