Skip to main content /TECH with IDG.net
CNN.com /TECH
CNN TV
EDITIONS

E Ink demos active-matrix electronic ink

image
PC World

(IDG) -- E Ink, a maker of electronic ink technology, says it is one step closer to the creation of an active-matrix version of paper-like electronic ink displays that could be used in cellular phones, PDAs, and reader devices.

Engineers at the company have demonstrated what E Ink claims is the first active-matrix electronic-ink display that is capable of producing high-resolution illustrations and text, E Ink says in a statement. The display prototype measures 12.1 inches diagonally with the resolution of a traditional laptop computer, the company says.

IDG.net INFOCENTER
IDG.net
Related IDG.net Stories
Features
Visit an IDG site


IDG.net search



The new technology is expected to be available by mid-2003, E Ink says.

In developing the active-matrix screen, E Ink researchers created a new version of electronic ink that changes 10 times faster than the company's current version. The company is currently not disclosing how it made the ink change faster, according to a spokeswoman for E Ink.

Electronic ink is similar to regular ink, but it contains millions of microcapsules. Each capsule contains a mixture of dye pigment and pigment chips. The capsules respond to electronic charges.

IBM Research provided some of the electronics used in the company's laptop displays for E Ink's research prototype. E Ink engineers, starting with the active matrix from the IBM laptop, added electronic ink and modified the circuitry to develop a working display. IBM and E Ink will deliver a paper describing the display prototype at the Society for Information Display Conference in San Jose, California, in June.

The new active-matrix electronic-ink display provides greater readability, uses less power and is thinner and lighter than traditional LCDs, LEDs, cathode ray tubes, and organic light emitting diodes, E Ink says. The technology will be 30 percent thinner and lighter than traditional LCD displays, the company says.

Among E Ink partners are IBM, Lucent Technologies, Motorola, Royal Philips Electronics, and Hearst.



RELATED STORIES:
Company hopes 'electronic ink' will transform books and newspapers
August 30, 2000
Random House jumps on e-book bandwagon
August 7, 2000
Full text of popular books available online for free
June 5, 2000
Publishers debate technology's role in their future
May 4, 2000
Rush to release Stephen King's e-book compromised piracy safeguards
April 4, 2000
eBooks are not just for reading
March 6, 2000

RELATED IDG.net STORIES:
Lucent, E Ink demo prototypes
(IDG.net)
Trends: space toys, electronic ink, & Net time with your fries
(CIO)
E Ink gets technology, investment from Lucent
(IDG.net)
Flat-panel display prices grow thinner
(PCWorld.com)
Roll over, Gutenberg
(Computerworld)
Flat panels big at CeBIT
(IDG.net)
Sony develops large OEL display
(IDG.net)
Top 10 19-inch monitors
(PCWorld.com)

RELATED SITES:
E Ink Corp.

Note: Pages will open in a new browser window
External sites are not endorsed by CNN Interactive.


 Search   





MARKETS
4:30pm ET, 4/16
144.70
8257.60
3.71
1394.72
10.90
879.91
 













Back to the top