Thursday, November 21, 2013

Your future OLED TV could be created with an inkjet printer

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/11/21/kateeva-oled-tv-inkjet-printer/

Even though California startup Kateeva demonstrated it could print OLED displays way back in 2010, the printer it used was a prototype meant strictly for show and tell. The age of printed OLED TVs might finally be upon us however, as the company recently unveiled the YIELDJet, a machine it's calling the "world's first inkjet printer engineered from the ground up for OLED mass production." The machine is quite an impressive affair, comprising a shifting slab capable of handling glass or plastic sheets big enough for six 55-inch displays along with custom print heads designed to emit teeny tiny OLED pixels.

Why is this a big deal? Due to the oxygen and moisture-hating nature of OLED ingredients, current OLED televisions are built with tricky vacuum evaporation and shadow masking techniques that are too inefficient and wasteful to be inexpensive. The YIELDJet, on the other hand, prints the LEDs in a pure nitrogen chamber to avoid those problems, plus it promises better film coating uniformity as well. This, Kateeva said, will hopefully result in OLED TVs that won't cost an arm and a leg yet still look stunning when hung on your living room wall. Combined with Sony and Panasonic's separate efforts to mass-produce the stellar-looking sets, we certainly hope that day comes sooner rather than later.

[Image Credit: OLED-Info]

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Via: MIT Technology Review

Source: Kateeva

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You've Never Seen GPS Data Look This Beautiful

Source: http://gizmodo.com/youve-never-seen-gps-data-look-this-beautiful-1468837981

You've Never Seen GPS Data Look This Beautiful

It might look like a talented artist has been enthusiastically scribbling over an aerial photograph, but this is in fact a set of GPS data looking more beautiful than you could ever have imagined.

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This New Li-On Battery Packs More Power and Is Way Safer, Too

Source: http://gizmodo.com/this-new-li-on-battery-packs-more-power-and-is-way-safe-1468851001

This New Li-On Battery Packs More Power and Is Way Safer, Too

Li-on batteries are great and all, but there's a barrier preventing them from storing much more power: they, um, tend to catch fire. But a company called Solid Energy claims to have developed a technology which makes the power source both more energy dense and safer, too.

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Middle Earth comes to life in epic Chrome experiment

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/11/20/hobbit-chrome-experiment/

We're go out on a limb here and say that the Venn diagram of Engadget fans and Tolkien fans looks something like this. So, we figure you'll probably want to hear about a brand new Chrome experiment that brings various parts of Middle Earth to life, including the Trollshaw and Dol Guldur. It starts with a pretty simple interactive map, but from there you're able to dive into several locations and learn about Hobbit lore through text, animations and audio. At the end of each lesson on Tolkien's fantasy world, you're challenged to complete a simple mini game that has you causing flowers to bloom or avoiding troll attacks. While the WebGL-powered games are pretty impressive, its the HTML5 audio and animations that are the real eye-candy here -- doubly so since they work just as well on a phone or tablet as they do your desktop. As you swipe through slides in the story, camera angles change in coordination with your finger and characters dart across bridges. Honestly, even if you're part of that tiny sliver in the diagram that can't stand Tolkien, it's worth checking out the latest Chrome Experiment, if only to remind yourself of the growing power of the web browser.

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Source: Chromium Blog

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Wednesday, November 20, 2013

This App Lets You Control Objects On Your Computer Screen Just Like Tony Stark Does In 'Iron Man'

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/leap-motion-desktop-app-2013-11

Leap Motion Free Form App DemoLeap Motion, a company specializing in motion sensor devices, has expanded their services into a brand new desktop app called Free Form.

The app is an extension of the services found on the Leap Motion Controller. The program focuses on 3-D sculpting from the base of your fingertips. Similar to the technology found in the "Iron Man" movies, the app lets designers develop and sketch out their designs in a much more refined model. 

It has a large selection of customizations tools which can let users adjust and mold their drawings in which the CEO Michael Buckwald has compared to playing with Play-Doh.

As of right now, Free Form is still in beta with developers working out more of the kinks but Buchwald is expecting it to expand to other platforms like smartphones and tablets and be released to the public in 2014. Check out Engadget's demo to see it in action.

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