Showing posts with label SAMSUNG. Show all posts
Showing posts with label SAMSUNG. Show all posts

2012-03-11

Samsung Flexible OLED Display

Samsung flexible OLED gadgets incoming this year - SlashGear

Samsung is mass producing flexible OLED displays for products still on track for release in 2012, the company has confirmed, though the exact extent to which they actually bend will depend on more than just the panels themselves. Samsung Mobile Display’s assistant president confirmed the sales plans this week, Asia Economy Park News reports, insisting that “flexible displays will be commercialized within a year.” The initial implementations are expected to include smartphones and tablets.




DailyTech - New Samsung Flexible Display Patent Detailed

Foldable displays use plastic rather than glass as a substrate for the displays. The plastic allows a flexible display to be bent, folded, or rolled opening up the possibility of smartphones that are curved like bracelets or can be rolled up into a very thin profile. The patent in question showed images of just such a device with a screen that rolls up into a cylindrical holder.  
The displays can into electronic newspapers, while keeping the same features that are used to in rigid screens. One of the benefits of these flexible screens compared to rigid screens will be very apparent to any smartphone user who has dropped their device and crushed the screen.  
The flexible displays will be able to absorb the shock and bend rather than cracking and breaking, making a more robust screen that is lighter at the same time. According to the patent, the flexible display will be based on a substrate of flexible plastic, metal foil, thin glass, or other thin and flexible material. The patent also notes some the target products for the screens.



A Samsung Flexible Display Patent Emerges, Products due in 2013 - Patent Bolt

The display of patent FIG. 3A may be bent, folded or crooked with respect to a predetermined bending central line seen above as patent point #51. The sensor unit 20 may detect a degree of bending of the flexible display unit as the predetermined bending angle. If the unit is abused or not in use for a given amount of time, the power supply will shut off automatically.



Samsung's patent FIG. 3B simply illustrates the condition where the flexible display apparatus is substantially folded. In that particular bended state, it sure looks like it's mimicking a folded book, don't you think? Considering that Samsung earlier listed the possibility of using an electrophoretic display in an electronic book as one of their possible end user products, it's not much of a stretch at all to envision this being used as such in the future. A few other interesting concept designs have been leaked over time,  such as  this one.

Samsung Flexible AMOLED coming to a Phone near you in 2012 | OMG!Droid


The flexible display, we are looking to introduce sometime in 2012, hopefully the earlier part, said Samsung spokesman Robert Yi

2012-01-19

Samsung Galaxy Tab 7.7 The First Super AMOLED Plus Tablet



Samsung Galaxy Tab 7.7 preview: first SUPER AMOLED Plus tablet | Northern Voices Online: NVO News Blog

Samsung Galaxy Tab 7.7 is going to be the first super AMOLED Plus tablet being launched in the market

[...]

The new tablet is to become the world’s first tablet with the best quality display, which has been the attraction of smartphones for a while. The display features a resolution of 1280 x 800 pixels with 197 pixels per inch density (ppi). It is an Android Honeycomb tablet with TouchWiz UX user interface, 1.4GHz dual core processor, 1GB of RAM and various on-device memory options like 16GB, 32GB and 64GB. Read on to know more about the imminent tablet from Samsung.


Super AMOLED - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


Super AMOLED

Super Active-Matrix Organic Light-Emitting Diode or Super AMOLED is a display technology (variant from AMOLED) mainly for use in mobile devices such as mobile phones (see the list below for examples). One of the main differences from other display technologies is that the layer that detects touch is integrated into the screen rather than being overlaid on top.

Compared with the first-generation AMOLED, some of the Super AMOLED advantages are brighter screens, less sunlight reflection and reduced power consumption.[1][2]


Super AMOLED Plus

Super AMOLED Plus, first introduced with the Samsung Galaxy S II and Samsung Droid Charge smartphones, is a further development where the PenTile RGBG pixel matrix (2 subpixels) is replaced with Samsung's "Real Stripe" (3 subpixels) RGB RGB subpixel arrangement. This goes from eight to twelve subpixels per group, resulting in finer details. The screen technology is also brighter, thinner with AMOLED Plus displays being 18% more energy efficient than the old Super AMOLED displays.[3]



2009-09-28

Phase Change Memory -- Samsung announces 512Mbit PRAM

clipped from en.wikipedia.org
Phase-change memory

Phase-change memory (also known as PCM, PRAM, PCRAM, Ovonic Unified Memory, Chalcogenide RAM and C-RAM) is a type of non-volatile computer memory. PRAM uses the unique behavior of chalcogenide glass, which can be "switched" between two states, crystalline and amorphous, with the application of heat. Recent versions can achieve two additional distinct states, effectively doubling its storage capacity. PRAM is one of a number of new memory technologies that are attempting to compete in the non-volatile role with the almost universal Flash memory, which has a number of practical problems these replacements hope to address.

clipped from www.youtube.com
clipped from www.youtube.com
clipped from www.youtube.com
clipped from www.mobilewhack.com
MobileWhack.com - Covering Everything Mobile

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Samsung Electronics Co has announced that it has completed the first working prototype of what is expected to be the fast performance memory device of the future.
clipped from www.samsung.com
samsung

press releases

SAMSUNG Announces Production Start-up of its Next-generation Nonvolatile Memory PRAM

clipped from www.youtube.com

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Sources:
  1. Phase-change memory - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
  2. YouTube - Phase Change Memory
  3. YouTube - Phase Change Memory (PCM) animation
  4. YouTube - Phase Change Memory
  5. Samsung announces 512Mbit PRAM (Phase-Change Ram) : Specs, reviews and prices.
  6. SAMSUNG Semiconductor - About Us - News
  7. YouTube - Phase Change Memory 101
Related:
  1. Phase Change Memory on the Way as Early as This Year » The UberReview
  2. Faster than Flash, Meltable Phase-Change Device Memory Is Finally in Production | Popular Science
  3. Samsung Commences Production of 512Mb Phase Change Memory -- Tech-On!

2008-12-01

Samsung's Flexible OLED Mobile

clipped from www.cdfreaks.com
Samsung shows off flexible OLED display
Samsung shows off flexible OLED display
Electronics giant Samsung has successfully demonstrated a mobile phone with a flexible OLED display, though it will be a while before consumers can get their hands on this technology.
clipped from www.cdrinfo.com

A demonstration of the new phone is available in the following Youtube video.
clipped from www.oled-info.com

More info and a better video of the Samsung flexible oled mobile phone prototype


Apparently what Samsung are doing is tiling two OLED displays side by side, to create a larger display. So this is not really a flexible OLED at all - just two thin OLED put together!
clipped from www.oled-info.com

As a reminder, Samsung displayed this new flexible display a few weeks ago. It's a 4" display, 480x272, contrast 100,000:1, 200cd/m2 luminence. It is very thin - 0.05mm.

Related:
 Samsung shows off flexible OLED display
 Samsung Unveils Phone With Foldable OLED Screen
 Flexible OLEDs | OLED-Info
 More info and a better video of the Samsung flexible oled mobile phone prototype | OLED-Info
 Video of Samsung folding cell phone display emerges | Computerworld Blogs

2008-05-27

Samsung Announces World’s Fastest SSD Drive

clipped from www.tgdaily.com
Samsung announces 256 GB, 200 MB/s solid state disk drive
Taipei (Taiwan) – Samsung claims to have developed the world’s fastest solid state disk (SSD) drive, offering a blazing 200 MB/s data read rate – about the performance of fastest hard drives money can buy today.
Image
clipped from news.cnet.com

Samsung has developed one of the largest capacity and highest speed solid state drives to date.

Like upcoming Intel SSDs, Samsung's drive will use multi-level cell (MLC) technology and a high-speed Serial ATA (SATA) II interface. Later this year, Intel is planning to announce high-capacity SSDs, which select PC vendors are expected to adopt in forthcoming notebook PCs based on the Centrino 2 "Montevina" mobile processor.


Samsung expects its new drive to be sampling for computer manufacturers by September and shipping to those clients by the end of the year; this applies to both a 2.5-inch drive for more traditional notebooks and a 1.8-inch drive for ultraportables and other much smaller devices.

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Related:
TG Daily - Samsung announces 256 GB, 200 MB/s solid state disk drive
Multi-level cell - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Electronista | Samsung ultra-fast, cheap 256GB SSD due this year
Solid State Drives: Samsung may accelerate adoption just in time for Xmas | Between the Lines | ZDNet.com
Report: Samsung develops 256GB solid state drive | Nanotech: The Circuits Blog - CNET News.com
Dim Outlook Worries Samsung's New 'Chip Man'

2008-05-26

Mobile Second Life

Exploring the Second Life virtual world on a mobile. Some realizations of this fascinating idea are emerging: a concept demo of Second Life on the iPhone produced by mobile technology firm Comverse; a technology , that will make it possible to run Second Life on 3G handsets via a streaming media service developed by Vollee; a mobile application unveiled by Samsung and a mobile phone viewer for Second Life created by Sun.

clipped from techdigest.tv

MWC 2008: Second Life now runs on... an iPhone?!

In a layman's nutshell, all the processing is being done NOT on the iPhone, on a central server. All that's being streamed to the iPhone is the visuals - essentially, a video feed of the Second Life environment. Then, when you tap the on-screen buttons to move, or type in a message, that's sent back up to the server for processing.

clipped from www.vollee.com
Vollee
clipped from www.vollee.com

How does it work?
The virtual world is adapted for mobile and streamed directly from Vollee's powerful servers to 3G enabled handsets, giving access to the vast and ever expanding world of Second Life.

What type of phone do I need to have?
Vollee service requires high speed connections, so you need to have a 3G enabled phone. We will be releasing supported phone list shortly.

Samsung Unveils Mobile Application for Second Life
clipped from www.youtube.com
Review Samsung Q1 Ultra UMPC (parte 3)

Sun Inc Releasing Pay-per-Month Second Life Phone Client

clipped from www.vintfalken.com
Mobile phone viewer for Second Life

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Related:
'Second Life' coming to mobile devices? | Geek Gestalt - A blog by Daniel Terdiman - CNET News.com
Tech Digest: MWC 2008: Second Life now runs on... an iPhone?!
Vollee - PC Games on Your 3G Mobile
Vollee - PC Games on Your 3G Mobile - FAQ
Fully Capable Second Life on Mobile Phones | Think Artificial
Samsung Unveils Mobile Application for Second Life

2007-12-30

Samsung unveils 31" Ultra-thin OLED Screens at CES

clipped from www.reuters.com

Samsung unveils 31-inch organic screen

Photo
SEOUL (Reuters) - South Korean display screen maker Samsung SDI Co (006400.KS: Quote, Profile, Research) said on Thursday it had developed a 31-inch ultra-thin organic screen, raising the stakes in an accelerating worldwide race for organic displays.

An OLED or Organic Light-Emitting Diode is a light emitting device based on the principle of electrophosphorescence. Several types of organic material that will glow red, green and blue are placed between two layers of conductive material and covered with glass or another translucent protective material. When electric current is applied, the conductive layers act as anode (positively charged) and cathode (negatively charged), enabling the flow of energy from the negative layer to the positive layer and stimulating the organic material to emit a bright light. The two most common types of OLED:


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Related:
Free Preview - WSJ.com
RelishNow | Pocket TV? OLED technology could make it possible soon
Samsung unveils 31-inch organic screen | Technology | Reuters
Samsung to Preview Large and Ultra-thin OLED Screens at CES | Gadget Lab from Wired.com
LinkNotes: Search results for OLED