A foldable TV that fits in your T-shirt

Sony has offered a tantalising glimpse of the television of the future, releasing footage of a foldable screen so thin it could be embedded in clothing.

The screen, which is only 0.3mm thick and can be folded while it plays video, was demonstrated by researchers before a conference in California this week.

In the 27-second video, a lab worker with white gloves is shown manipulating the 6cm (2.5 inch) display while it shows images of bicycle stuntman, a lake and a fish. At one point the display is curled into a tube while the images continue to play, unspoilt.

Sony said it didn’t yet know what products may result from the technology, which has taken five years to develop, but hinted at a range of personal items that could incorporate a folding display.

“In the future, it could get wrapped around a lamppost or a person’s wrist, or even be worn as clothing,” a company spokesman said. “Perhaps it can be put up like wallpaper.”

Carl Gressum, an analyst at Ovum, said it could be used to create a folding ‘sheet’ kept in the pocket or wallet that would display news and other information relevant to an owner’s location.

“As with any of these prototypes, however, it will come down to price,” Mr Gressum said. “This technology is undoubtedly expensive, and until you see a big market where flexible panels can be sold at a cost which justifies manufacturing them, then researchers will be developing them just for the sake of it.”

The screen, which was also demonstrated a ‘Society for Information Display’ symposium this week, uses a technology known as ‘organic light-emitting diode’ (OLED), which is different from the two predominant display technologies – liquid crystal (LCD) and plasma, both of which are made out of glass.

Sony’s existing ‘e-reader’, which is a tablet-shaped device about the size of a paperback, has a fixed screen.

“To come up with a flexible screen at that image quality is groundbreaking,” Tatsuo Mori, professor at Nagoya University’s Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, said. “You can drop it, and it won’t break because it’s as thin as paper.”

One problem with OLED displays, which are a matrix of polymers covered with organic compounds, is that they cannot emit blue light for as long as they can the two other colours – red and green.

“At the moment you only get 5,000 hours of blue light from an OLED screen before it fades, as opposed to the 25,000 to 30,000 hours that is standard for televisions,” Paul O’Donovan, an analyst at Gartner, said.

Sony has exhibited an OLED television with a screen just 3mm across at its thinnest point, but the product has not yet been released.

Other companies, including Philips and Seiko, are working on flexible displays, and Plastic Logic, a Cambridge-based firm, plans to bring out a foldable e-reader early next year, possibly in a leather wallet-type format.

Plastic Logic’s device, however, which uses a technology called ‘e-ink’, does not yet have the potential to play video.

A foldable TV that fits in your T-shirt

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Movie pirates caught with night vision goggles

Malaysian cinemas have found a powerful weapon in their fight against movie pirates–military-style night vision goggles.

After showing people to their seats, trained ushers are strapping on the goggles and scanning darkened cinemas around the country to spot anyone trying to make illegal copies of movies with handheld video recorders or mobile phones.

The Motion Picture Association, which is training Malaysian ushers to catch the pirates, said cinemas had caught 17 people in the past two months, during which Hollywood studios released blockbusters like Spider-Man 3 and Pirates of the Caribbean: At World’s End.

“All of the cases were spotted with night-vision goggles,” the association’s Malaysia manager, Nor Hayati Yahaya, said Friday. “It’s very successful.”

Malaysia is on the U.S. watch list for movie and software piracy, but local authorities have launched a major crackdown on producers and retailers of illegal DVDs since the country began free-trade talks with the United States a year ago.

The association, which represents the big Hollywood studios, recently brought to Malaysia two dogs trained to sniff out DVDs–with stunning results. The two labradors, Lucky and Flo, have sniffed out more than a million DVDs and have broken a fake DVD ring.

They have been so successful that authorities believe that Malaysian pirates have put a bounty on the dogs’ heads.

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Duke Nukem is still alive

3D Realms has posted a new screenshot for on-going saga Duke Nukem Forever.

It shows a huge boar-man brandishing some impressively yellow tusks, and proves to us all that the project is still very much alive.

The picture accompanied a job posting on Gamasutra that was advertising for an environment artist. But there’s little given away about the game other than the candidate will be working on Xbox 360 and Windows.

It follows news from January when game director George Broussard advertised another vacancy on the site accompanied by what he later confirmed to be an in-game screenshot.

Take-Two is expected to publish the title, but was unavailable for comment at time of writing.

Duke Nukem Forever has been in development for a very long time – 1997, to be precise. And quite a lot has happened since then, as people with more time than sense have decided to document.

Duke Nukem is still alive

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