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Tag: displaysPractical Nanotube Electronics By Katherine Bourzac | 11/23/2009 | 0 Comments Researchers develop a new method for making efficient nanotube transistor arrays. By Duncan Graham-Rowe | 11/09/2009 | 0 Comments New OLED and LCD displays could be made using a hybrid material. By Katherine Bourzac | 10/27/2009 | 2 Comments Company will sell materials for making organic electronics using silicon manufacturing infrastructure. Head-up Displays go Holographic By Duncan Graham-Rowe | 10/16/2009 | 5 Comments A new projection technology could see in-vehicle displays pop up in wing mirrors. What's Augmented Reality's Killer App? By Kristina Grifantini | 09/23/2009 | 1 Comment Researchers plan to offer more than just directions with innovations in software and hardware. By Katherine Bourzac | 09/02/2009 | 1 Comment A rolling nanoimprint lithography stamp could be used to print components for displays and solar cells. By Katherine Bourzac | 08/20/2009 | 0 Comments Flexible arrays of bright inorganic LEDs could mean cheaper displays and lighting. By Katherine Bourzac | 08/06/2009 | 2 Comments A startup's conductive graphene inks can be used to print RFID antennas By Anne-Marie Corley | 06/15/2009 | 1 Comment Chemical bonds put a new spin on quantum-dot hybrid light-emitting devices. A Full-Color Screen That Bends By Prachi Patel | 06/08/2009 | 1 Comment A new way to mass-produce flexible OLED displays could mean affordable commercial products. By Katherine Bourzac | 06/05/2009 | 1 Comment New organic display materials can be printed with ink-jets. Higher-Performance Plastic Electronics By Katherine Bourzac | 05/26/2009 | 0 Comments A new way of printing organic electronics is more reliable and yields higher performance. By Prachi Patel | 05/11/2009 | 3 Comments An elastic conductor makes possible cheap, conformable displays. Color E-Paper That Rivals the Real Thing By Duncan Graham-Rowe | 05/08/2009 | 0 Comments Turning pixels on their side may finally mean high-quality color electronic paper. By Prachi Patel | 04/27/2009 | 1 Comment Pixels containing ink reservoirs could lead to bright e-readers that look more like printed paper. |
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