OLED laptop - Page 19

Samsung announced production-ready 14.1" OLEDs for Laptops and 31" OLED TVs

Samsung Mobile Displays announced 14.1" and 31" OLED TV panels, using what they call Fine Metal Mask (FMM) technology. Those panels are 'ready for production'.

The 14.1" WXGA is aimed for laptop computers. It's got a 1366x768 resolution, 200cd brightness, color gamut of 107% NTSC and a 1,000,000:1 contrast ratio. The whole panel is just 2.7mm thick.

The 31" FHD (1920x1080) TV panel is using LTPS, and also has 200cd brightness,  color gamut of 107% NTSC and a 1,000,000:1 contrast ratio. The panel is thicker at 8.9mm.

Samsung 31-inch HDTVSamsung 31-inch HDTV

The last display is a 40" FHD OLED TV, with pretty much the same features as the 31" TV. This one is not 'ready for production', yet.

Read the full story Posted: Jun 01,2009 - 3 comments

Laptop displays Introduction - A Look Back at the LCD

This guest article was written by Daniel Shain from LaptopLogic.com - the best place to read about new laptop hardware and check out the latest laptop news.

If you're a frequent visitor to oled-info.com, chances are you know something about OLEDs.  Just to name a few of their best traits, they’re thin, lightweight, environmentally friendly, potentially flexible, and they produce high quality color.  You can find out more about OLEDs in oled-info’s introduction.  Although it looks like OLEDs are the displays of the future, what about the displays of today?  LCD (Liquid Crystal Display) technology has taken great strides since its inception, and it’s worth taking a look back to see how far we’ve come.

When LCDs first hit the scene in the early 80s they were small, black and white, and heavy, not even achieving color until 1993.  Since then, the technology has been improving rapidly.  In the early nineties most notebooks used a slower passive matrix LCD that could not keep up with fast moving images, but standard LCDs today use a much faster active matrix TFT-LCD (active matrix TFT technology is also used in the new AMOLED displays).  LCDs have become thinner, lighter, and brighter as the years have gone by, and the technology has become so common that many people even have a secondary larger LCD screen for their LCD equipped laptops.

One of the major areas of modern LCD improvement has been in backlighting.  Traditional LCDs use CCFL (Cold Cathode Florescent Lamp) backlighting, but these are bulky and consume a lot of power.  LED technology has recently improved to the point where LED backlit LCDs are becoming more and more common.  LED backlit LCDs produce more light with less energy and can be very thin, making the laptop display simultaneously more useful for seeing color accurately and more mobile (not to mention saving battery life).  LEDs are also solid state components, making them less vulnerable to shock than florescent lighting, and they are more environmentally friendly since they lack toxic mercury.

Another recent LCD innovation is the transflective LCD.  Transflective (transmissive + reflective) displays can have an illuminance sensor which makes them aware of the ambient light around them.  When in low lighting, the transmissive backlight is enabled like a normal laptop screen.  When there is ample light, the backlight is disabled and the display acts mainly as a reflective display.  This allows the use of a laptop or other device outdoors without glare or battery-wasting backlighting.

Although OLED displays will outshine LCDs in time, LCDs are quite capable displays and currently much cheaper than their new organic cousins.  How much development and innovation continues in LCD technology will determine if it becomes a true competitor for OLED displays, or if it will go the way of other forgotten display giants like the CRT.

Read the full story Posted: Feb 13,2009

Laptop OLED poll closed

Well, the OLED Laptop poll was open for a week, and we got over 100 results. 57% of the people said they are willing to pay 100-250$ extra for an OLED laptop. Obviously our poll is problematic because OLED-Info visitors are likely to want an OLED display... but it still seems to be that adding something like 10%-20% cost to a laptop is something people are willing to pay in exchange for a better display, thinner laptop and better battery life.


The real question is of course whether this is practical... with Sony's 11" OLED TV costing 2500$, it doesn't seem probable that a 14" OLED will add only 250$ cost to a laptop. However the technology is always improving, and it's possible that LG or Samsung will be able to pull off a much cheaper OLED display than Sony's.


See the full results here


Read the full story Posted: Feb 01,2009

New poll - how much more money will you pay for an OLED laptop?

I'm trying out a new feature here at OLED-Info: Polls. The first one is about OLED in laptops. LG said they may start producing their 15" displays within 6 months, if they get customers. We know that Samsung has 14.1" AMOLED panels as well, probably close to production.


It still remains whether laptop makers will take the plunge and introduce an OLED laptop. It will bound to be more expensive... but how much more will people be willing to pay for an OLED laptop? It will be gorgeous looking and save batter life and enable thinner laptops... but the money is obviously a crucial factor.


It'll be interesting to see what OLED-Info readers have to say. So help and vote ;-)


You can see the poll in the right-side of our home page, or through this link.


Read the full story Posted: Jan 25,2009 - 2 comments

Samsung - OLED laptops by 2010 and by 2015 third of all laptops will use OLEDs

Samsung gave their point of view about OLED mobile displays in a keynote speech. They like OLEDs because of the great picture quality, environmental issues and touchscreen compatiability.


Samsung says that by 2010 we will have OLED laptops - and 5" and larger displays will be 'the mainstream'


In 5 years 28% of laptops will use an OLED display (yeah, exactly 28%). OLEDs will only cost 10% more than LCDs by that time. 



Read the full story Posted: Dec 02,2008

Toshiba's first Vista laptop to feature a small external OLED display

Sitting on the front edge of the system is a small OLED readout, called the Toshiba Edge Display. This, by default, shows you the time, the battery level, and the wireless signal strength, but it can also be used with a new Windows Vista feature called Active Notification. If you set up a POP3 e-mail account with Outlook 2007, Active Notifications allows the system's wireless connection to stay active (or cycle on and off periodically) even when the laptop is closed and in sleep mode. If a new e-mail message comes in, the Edge Display can display an appropriate icon.

Read more here (C|Net)

Read the full story Posted: Jan 08,2007