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CE TEXTE S'AFFICHERA PENDANT SECONDES. LISEZ-LE ET ESSAYEZ DE RETENIR UN MAXIMUM
Roll Up for the Floppy Television
Fri Jul 19, 2:06 PM ET By Pete Harrison
LONDON (Reuters) - First they went wider, then flatter, and now televisions
are set to go floppy.
Roll-up, flexible televisions, akin to the melting watches of Salvador Dali's
surreal landscapes, have become possible thanks to a glowing plastic compound
perfected in the laboratories of Britain's Cambridge Display Technology (CDT).
Roll-up televisions will allow viewers of the future to flip their sets out
of sight like projector screens and will come with a similar price tag to
bulkier boxes.
The technology stems from the discovery in 1989 of the compound p-phenylenevinylene
which glows greeny-yellow when given an electric charge.
A little tweaking over the following decade produced compounds to emit blue
and red light: the roll-up TV was born.
The market for light emitting screens is expected to grow from $20-25 million
in 2000 to over $3 billion by 2005, and CDT's Light Emitting Polymer (LEP)
screens are expected to grab a majority chunk of that.
"I think it (commercial production) is very close now," said Fyfe,
adding that the last bottleneck -- finding a flexi-screen that protects the
sensitive compounds from corrosion by oxygen and water vapour -- had almost
been overcome.
"Realistically, you will see roll up displays around 2004 or 2005,"
he added.
"Just four weeks ago Philips demonstrated an all plastic display -- an
incredible thing -- a device only a fifty millionth of an inch thick,"
said Fyfe. "If you can get thin enough plastic, then you would indeed
have a roll-up television."
The Japanese giants of television manufacturing, Sony, Hitachi and Toshiba,
are leading the race to put the technology to use, but not far behind is the
military, which envisions roll-up maps of the battlefield fed by overhead
satellites.
"They're interested in every ounce that can be saved from a soldier's
pack," said Fyfe. With the flick of a switch the display could convert
to infra-red for covert night operations.
On the home front, TV-watches, giant animated billboards, and a new wave of
roll-up battery rechargers are just some of the applications in the pipeline.
"I think we'll see a lot of innovation," said Fyfe. "People
are talking about weaving displays into clothing. Will there ever be a mass
market for that? I doubt it. But it will probably be seized on by someone."