Samsung lets in on what makes their 55-inch OLED panel tick
For starters, we do know that the Samsung 55-inch OLED TV will boast of a contrast ratio of 150,000:1 and a 124% color gamut on NTSC standards, sporting a brightness level of 150cd/m2 alongside an all-white signal, not to mention having a peak brightness of 600cd/m2. It also comes with a response speed that is 0.001 second or faster, while the entire OLED TV measures just 1.6mm thick (or should we say thin?), tipping the scales at a featherweight 3.5kg. Dang, this means the entire TV might weigh less than some of the heavy duty desktop replacement notebooks out there!
Samsung lets in on what makes their 55-inch OLED panel tick | Ubergizmo
Morphing touchscreen lets you feel the keys
Love your smartphone but miss the feel of a real keyboard? Now you can have both, thanks to a new tactile touchscreen that morphs to create physical buttons.
Developed by Californian firm Tactus Technology, the new screen contains a tiny layer of fluid that deforms it to produce buttons of a given height, size and firmness. They act just like a regular keyboard, but disappear back into the screen when no longer needed.
One Per Cent: Morphing touchscreen lets you feel the keys

Onlive announces LG TV partnership
Cloud gaming service Onlive will be integrated into a new line of LG television sets.
Onlive announces LG TV partnership | TG Daily

-
Recent
- Deep learning in the human brain
- Is “Deep Learning” a Revolution in Artificial Intelligence?
- Microsoft Makes Speech Recognition Smarter For Users In U.S
- New type of stem cell helps your fingers regenerate
- Did we eat the Neanderthals? Dramatic new theory claims we may have devoured early man
- New flying dinosaur fossils found in China shed new light on how birds evolved
- New Artificial Heart to Be Tested
- IMFT boss expects 2D flash to scale down to 10 nanometers
- The quadcopter that doubles as an off-road car: Is this the future of transport?
- Atom pictures: Never-before-seen images of inside the atom are revealed after Dutch scientists do the impossible and photograph inside a hydrogen particle
- Ready to web: The ultra strong dress made from synthetic SPIDER SILK
- People with high IQs really DO see the world differently: Researchers find they process sensory information differently
-
Links
-
Archives
- June 2013 (4)
- May 2013 (47)
- April 2013 (42)
- March 2013 (97)
- February 2013 (58)
- January 2013 (41)
- December 2012 (53)
- November 2012 (38)
- October 2012 (35)
- September 2012 (56)
- August 2012 (38)
- July 2012 (82)
-
Categories
-
RSS
Entries RSS
Comments RSS