By Anonymous CowardPosted Thursday 11th October 2007 17:47 GMT
The comment about blue lifetime, while correct for actual coloured OLEDs, is not necessarily relevant. I think you'll find Sony's OLED TV uses a natively white-emitting OLED but puts coloured filters in front of it. This reduces efficiency and changes the production considerations... but does ensure all three colours age at much the same rate.
By Anonymous CowardPosted Thursday 11th October 2007 17:48 GMT
A variation on the OLED theme, polymer LEDs offer advantages over OLEDs, potentially in the lifetime of the device but also in the processing - ink-jet technology could be used in the same way as SED displays. Other advantages include screen flexibility (a bit pie in the sky, but with the potential to give roll-up displays, and clothing with displays built in).
And it wouldn't be right not to talk about environmental concerns - LCDs contain toxic metals (including mercury, I'm led to believe) that are difficult to dispose of, especially with the new IEEE regulations that came into force in the EU this summer. And that's half the problem with these new technologies - everyone will want to upgrade, chucking out their perfectly good TVs (in the same way that happens with mobile phones).
By Christian BergerPosted Thursday 11th October 2007 19:15 GMT
One should not forget the _other_ type of laser TV: The scanning ones.
German company Schneider Rundfunkwerke presented a prototype of such a device in 1997. Essentially it looked like an oversized video projector with only one lens. The picture however was sharp independently of the distance. You could even display pictures onto irregularily shaped screens.
Unfortunately that technology didn't seem to go anywhere.
By David WiernickiPosted Thursday 11th October 2007 20:02 GMT
I saw a fairly impressive laser-based projector at a military show last year. The image quality was fantastic; they were running the thing at something like 6500x5000, but the problem is that any laser reflection generates that funky laser sparkle (the one that's there even if your eyes aren't focused on the surface) and I found it fairly distracting.
While fine for military / commercial usage where seeing the data is the primary goal, I doubt people would be very comfortable with it for movie/TV watching.
By Anonymous CowardPosted Thursday 11th October 2007 20:19 GMT
How long are OLED lives roughly anyway? Are we talking one year of general home use? Or more like 5? I should imagine most early adopters of a new(ish) tech like OLED would be likely to be replacing their sets well within 5 years anyway - hopefully before the display begins to fade too much.
Also, how bad does the display get when these panels get old? I have watched some 25+ year old TVs before (CRTs obviously) and while the quality was pretty poor compared a new top of the line display it was still plenty watchable. I would imagine that even OLEDs that are double their "normal" service life are still in use by diehards/cheapskates later in the day.
By Anonymous CowardPosted Thursday 11th October 2007 21:16 GMT
The lowest lifetime usually considered as acceptable is around 10,000 hours (that's 10,000 hours of continuous use). So for domestic TV use (say an average of 4 hours a day) that's over 6.5 years (and of course much more for other devices such as digital cameras that are only on for short periods). Ok, so it's not fantastic compared to CRTs, but as one of the other Anonymous Cowards above states, should be enough for a lot of households, particularly those adopting new technology before it's really had a chance to develop commercially.
Of course, a major use of OLED screens would be to replace advertising hoardings, and 10,000 hours is only a little over a year's use, so there's still a long way to go.
By lesliePosted Thursday 11th October 2007 22:07 GMT
4 hrs a day!
maybe if you work a normal 9-5, butif you are on nights and rest of familyis on days etc......
Kids get up at 07:30 and TV is on as I would have fell asleep on sofa watching late news, they go to school, I go to bed.
it stays on while wife does whatever and crap morning TV dribbles out, then its the lunch time news and I would be getting up for breakfast, I watch what I missed the night before as I would be working, so thats upto about 4pm if a few items
Then kids come home and watch kids tv till about 6pm, I go to work, then its the news, kids/wife watch more tv, then I come home about 2am-4am wife will be asleep on sofa as she always falls aslep waiting for me toget home
I wake her to go to bed, make a drink, catch up on late news or crap shows as I wont be tired, then I'll fall asleep on sofa, so kids wake me up at 7:30 and the cycle repeats....
That TV has suffered this for about 7 years until this year, the things glad I lost my job....
(you watch now I dont have real income it will fail.....)
Plasma & LCD to be banned in Aust due to power requirements #
By DiogeniesPosted Friday 12th October 2007 07:03 GMT
I heard on the radio yesterday that in Australia LCD & Plasma will be banned from 2010 because of its power consumption - some sets draw use as much power as a fridge or washing machine (right after we switch off the analogue) anything that reduces this has to be a good thing
By Hugh_PymPosted Friday 12th October 2007 08:22 GMT
Notice how often IP rights court cases appear in this article. Considerably slowing the introduction of new technologies or stopping development altogether.
By Claus P. NielsenPosted Friday 12th October 2007 08:53 GMT
No matter what OLED technology is being used, the pixels that are on most of the time will get degraded faster than others, so the "Cartoon network" logo will get burned into the corner of the screen over time.
By shane fitzgeraldPosted Friday 12th October 2007 09:31 GMT
> Other advantages include screen flexibility (a bit pie in the sky, but with the potential to give roll-up displays, and clothing with displays built in).
Cool. Is this not the basis of the invisibilty cloaks mentioned some time ago? (Where they display on the outside what is behind them whilst me, the perv, sits on the inside watching women remove various items of clothing)? I can't wait.
By Alan JenneyPosted Friday 12th October 2007 10:55 GMT
A lot of sparkle is due to de-focussing of the beam in order to prevent eye damage. Very few commercial LASERs do without this.
Many people experience red LASERs used for presentation pointers, etc. and see a fair amount of sparkle around the illuminated spot. It can appear to be floating in the space between the LASER and the surface.
Green and blue LASERs have a great deal more sparkle and also the human eye can "see the beam" more intensely in these colours - these are the ones that tend to be used for "spectacular" displays and astronomical pointers as it's the beam, not the illuminated spot, that is important.
A LASER TV projector undoubtedly uses scanning beams instead of the back-lit grating that other technologies employ. The narrow scanning beam will pick out airborne particles between the apparatus and the projection surface. For a large system, the amount of twinkling could be horrendous.
I'm not surprised that the mentioned military system was difficult to watch!
By Alan JenneyPosted Friday 12th October 2007 11:10 GMT
Obviously there are other advantages to OLED over LCD, but the media focus seems to have been on how thin these units are.
Currently, the OLED sets that have been demonstrated are no chunkier than the largest LCD laptop screens or even some LCD computer monitors.
The physical packaging of Laptop screens rarely exceed 0.5", desktop monitors 2" and the biggest LCD TV I have seen (50") wasn't exactly "deep" at less than 6". Internal to each of these, the LCD panel itself is a few millimetres "thick". Exactly how thin does "thin" need to be?
The depth from front-to-back of an LCD case tends to be because of the bulky connectors, control boards and any wall-mounting hardware. The demonstrated OLED panels had all the guts in a separate box. Surely that's more of a packaging issue than an advantage of OLED?
I mean, if you made an LCD TV with just the frame to keep it stiff and some cooling in the flat part and put the gubbins in the stand - wouldn't it be similarly thin?
Well when you want a projection device built into your mobi, I think laser is the only option, and to be fair a bit of sparkle can be tolerated in this usage, highly mobile/demonstartion only type package, I can see LCoS & laser being a perfect in chip package.
By Anonymous CowardPosted Saturday 13th October 2007 08:59 GMT
right so none of this is any good compared to a CRT I can watch beautiful full screen video and my dad who has a flat screen LCD gets fuzz both PC monitors one cost a lot more than the other (the LCD is more) and still does I will hoard CRT's I am not young and so I will have the best viewing technology around until I die Plasma screens at one point were supposed to last about three years which is ridiculous for how much they still cost you know none of these new screen techs are worth a shit and yet I still see mindless eager rubes drooling over them.
By David Paul MorganPosted Friday 19th October 2007 10:04 GMT
Anyone remember the LASER TV demonstrated on TW many years ago?
It consisted of a disc of lasing crystals the were energised by a CRT scan from the back. The picture was always 'in focus' but the demo was only in sepia - diffferent colour lasing was not demonstrated. Or did I dream the whole thing.I think it was shortly after the Soviet Union collapsed.
Comments on: Telly vision: future display technologies
OLED lifetime #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Thursday 11th October 2007 17:47 GMT
PLEDs #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Thursday 11th October 2007 17:48 GMT
Laser TVs #
By Christian Berger Posted Thursday 11th October 2007 19:15 GMT
laser projection #
By David Wiernicki Posted Thursday 11th October 2007 20:02 GMT
OLED Life #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Thursday 11th October 2007 20:19 GMT
there's always this idea... #
By Paul Kinsler Posted Thursday 11th October 2007 20:26 GMT
Great #
By SpitefulGOD Posted Thursday 11th October 2007 20:35 GMT
Laser TV #
By E Posted Thursday 11th October 2007 20:44 GMT
Lifetime #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Thursday 11th October 2007 21:16 GMT
typical usage #
By leslie Posted Thursday 11th October 2007 22:07 GMT
Plasma & LCD to be banned in Aust due to power requirements #
By Diogenies Posted Friday 12th October 2007 07:03 GMT
re:leslie #
By Steve Posted Friday 12th October 2007 08:15 GMT
IP Rights #
By Hugh_Pym Posted Friday 12th October 2007 08:22 GMT
Burn-in is the major OLED lifetime problem #
By Claus P. Nielsen Posted Friday 12th October 2007 08:53 GMT
Harry potter eat your heart out #
By shane fitzgerald Posted Friday 12th October 2007 09:31 GMT
Pity #
By Campbell Posted Friday 12th October 2007 09:54 GMT
LASER projection sparkle #
By Alan Jenney Posted Friday 12th October 2007 10:55 GMT
How thin does "thin" need to be? #
By Alan Jenney Posted Friday 12th October 2007 11:10 GMT
Laser Projectors #
By Parax Posted Friday 12th October 2007 15:12 GMT
Title #
By Noah Monsey Posted Friday 12th October 2007 15:51 GMT
CRT's #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Saturday 13th October 2007 08:59 GMT
GOOD CALL ON C R T MONITORS & TV SETS #
By h g glover Posted Saturday 13th October 2007 18:16 GMT
Tomorrows World Russian demo #
By David Paul Morgan Posted Friday 19th October 2007 10:04 GMT
Samsung prototype #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Saturday 20th October 2007 14:20 GMT