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#46 | |
Wizard
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For that to have a resolution of 170dpi, which is comparable to current eInk readers, it would have to be at least 1941x1091. Unlikely. LCD is a very mature technology will well-tuned manufacturing processes and you can't get a 13" LCD that's over 1440x900. It's larger than the top end of current eInk displays, but larger invariably translates into lower dpi resolution because size multiplies the difficulties in quality control. And in terms of the readability of text, it's the dpi that counts, not the total pixel count. |
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#47 |
Karmaniac
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@Charleski:
If it is 16/9 perhaps it uses a 1280x720 screen; or a 1024x600 screen like a netbook. But the way I see it, the screen looks to be more like a 8:5 ratio. A resolution like 1280x800 seems more likeable... |
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#48 |
Guru
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It's good for magazines too. I have 3 magazine subscriptions, I don't read the paper since I read the news on the internet. But I do get People, Tennis, and Essence magazines at home. I have no e-subscriptions since I prefer my magazines in color. It would be great for someone to come up with a 13 inch color screen just for magazines. Maybe it could be like a cell phone deal, a deep discount for a 2 year subscriptions of several magazines.
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#49 | |
Guru
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#50 | |
Wizard
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The whole point of eReaders is to make text look good. Colour and video may be desirable, but if they cause the text quality to be sacrificed then they're useless. I'm sure there are several applications that can justify designing a very low-power mid-res display that can do video, but they don't include eReaders. |
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#51 | |
Maratus speciosus butt
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This is how science reporting works: http://www.smbc-comics.com/index.php?db=comics&id=1623 A laser is a tight beam of light. You do not see that beam unless it is passing through a medium that scatters some of that light. Think of the very common red laser pointers-- you see the dot where the laser beam touches a surface, you do not see the path of the beam through air unless there is smoke, steam, or some other type of fine particles suspended in the air. Now, with much more powerful red lasers and with somewhat more powerful green and blue lasers (wavelengths the eye is more sensitive to) and if the room is pretty dark, you can make out a beam. You have to have DAMN powerful lasers to make beams strongly visible in normal daytime lighting. I'm talking about lasers that burn skin and boil eyeballs with a moment's contact. And even then, we are talking about a beam-- a beam which will continue on into infinity until it has lots it's focus too far to be visible. Not a volume pixel. The ability to make a laser show up as a single pixel in a volume of open air, not showing up as a beam before or afterward, is a FANTASY. You will never, ever, ever have any type of display that displays real, 3-dimensional images in open air. It is not how light physics works. There are ways to make things that look kinda-sorta like how we expect a hologram to look, but they involve rotating mirrors and bulky equipment-- nothing that you will ever have in a flat device that will fit in your pocket. Here's an interesting discussion: http://holography.ning.com/profiles/...-be-lovin-this http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Holograms |
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#52 | ||
Karmaniac
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Seehere for details: https://www.mobileread.com/forums/sho...865#post452865 (there's another thread about colors and pixels (used as B&W on a reflective background) too which I can't find right now..) Also LCD screens do not give a good B&W ratio. Most of the text will be dark grey/green to dark yellow/light grey. Last edited by ProDigit; 11-01-2009 at 01:37 AM. |
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#53 | |
Murderous Mustela
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As for Pixel Qi, my limited understanding is that they placed the color filters below the reflective element. Which makes the reflective mode essentially black and white. Saturation is entirely dependent on the intensity of the backlight relative to ambient lighting. |
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#54 | |
Karmaniac
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They do use a very transparent type of polarization filter; or exactly how they get their screens so light I don't know. The saturation effects of the colors follows the same pattern as a laptop with glossy screen, set to low backlight, in an outside environment (under sunlight); but minus the green-greyish color LCD's have. |
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#55 |
Wizard
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Er, no. It's a variant of electrophoretics: http://www2.bridgestone-dp.jp/global.../overview.html
Aha, just found some concrete specs on their site. They list res for their monochrome models and it's around 150dpi. Last edited by charleski; 11-01-2009 at 09:37 AM. |
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#56 | |||
Guru
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So once it passes thru the interference pattern we're no longer talking about a beam. And you're correct that current technology requires bulky equipment-that's one of the reasons why it's still in the labs. (And they don't really need rotating mirrors, but it's easier. If I remember correctly, what they need is two beams interfering with each other in order to produce the interference pattern we see as an image. (And it won't be a single pixel unless that's the image you want to produce. The basic nature of a hologram, as an interference pattern in light, requires that they 'produce' the entire image rather than a portion of it.) The mirrors & prisms are currently used to 'split' a single beam into two synchronized beams, then bring them back together to produce that interference pattern. Will it ever be miniaturized enough to fit into a pocket-sized device? I don't know. It's certain that it theoretically can be, but that theoretical device requires all sorts of technology that is also still theory. It's possible the human race will die out before this proves true. It's possible some other technology will be developed to do essentially the same thing before this proves true. And it's possible that there won't ever be enough 'need' for this that people will continue to develop it. But it's also definitely true that it is possible. Whether or not that possibility will ever become reality is something else. |
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#57 | ||
Maratus speciosus butt
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http://science.howstuffworks.com/hologram1.htm I see that kits are still available, and cheaper than when I first looked at them maybe 10 years ago: http://www.google.com/#hl=en&source=...c9ea851cee2c5b Last edited by ardeegee; 11-01-2009 at 11:09 AM. |
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#58 | |
Murderous Mustela
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If you're interested, you can read the patent filed by May Lou Jepsen here (warning: PDF). Last edited by Dylrob; 11-01-2009 at 04:14 PM. |
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#59 | ||
Guru
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Holography talks about the 3-D holograms, which are the *original* holograms. I'm not a lexicographer so maybe Gresham's law applies here, but I tend to keep the original meanings for words. And by that meaning, the pictures on credit cards, etc. are hot holograms. But I do see that your references call them holograms, so I guess at this point I'll just note that there appear to be two different meanings for the word. As to how much science I know, I at least know enough to tell that something which has been demonstrated in the laboratory, regardless of the name that's applied to it, is not fantasy. |
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#60 | |
Maratus speciosus butt
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"3D holograms" are stored in crystals, and thus store data in 3 dimensions, not in 2 like a holographic film like that used on credit cards. "3D holograms" are NOT free-standing displays of laser light floating in the air-- and they never will be, as I have already explained that only very dangerous, high-energy lasers have visible beam paths in clear air. That is not an engineering issue, that is a fundamental physics issue. Your sci-fi fantasies will never come true. Yes, it is possible to make volumetric displays, but they will always be confined within something-- inside a glass cylinder or sphere, or inside a case with a projector and a spinning mirror, for example. But there will never be a device that you hold in your hand that projects visible, 3D laser holograms. Last edited by ardeegee; 11-01-2009 at 09:46 PM. |
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