FED TV | Field Emission Display

New technical paper on Field Emission Display – Carbon Nanotubes

There is a recently released, very technical paper titled “Selection of Application Specific Single and Multi Walled Carbon Nanotubes by In Situ Characterization of Conductive and Field Emission Properties”

While that’s quite a title, it explains the conductive and field emission properties of individual single and multi-walled carbon nanotubes for those of you interested in how field emission displays and eventually FED TVs work.

The article is at eeNewsFeed.com

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New FED video

I’ve posted a very good video showing the field emission display’s advantages over current flat panel TV technology. Check it out at: FED TV video

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Side by side comparison between FED and LCD – FPD 2007

The advantages of FED can be clearly seen when compared to LCD side by side. Hard to tell anything from the photo below but one participant from DisplayDaily.com at FPD 2007 in Yokohama is quoted below.

“If frame-rate doubling isn’t enough for you, one automotive display had frame-rate tripling, and Field Emission Technology (FET) was doing quadrupling: 240 frames per second. It was a gorgeous display with very crisp fast motion. But we know that FED can look great.” Read more

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10 bit Field Emission Display – first public showing at FPD 2007

One of Field Emission Technologies latest developments is the FED – Field Emission Display with a 10 bit driver. This was on display for the first time at FPD 2007 in Yokohama. The FPD Expo closes today after 4 days of showcasing the newest products and lots of future flat panel display technology. OLED, AMOLED, PDP, LCD, FED and more. The photo below shows Field Emission Technologies FED with 10 bit driver.

FED 10 bit field emission display

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FED frame rate up to 240 FPS

Field Emission Technologies displayed the wide range of frame rates available with their Field Emission Display at FPD 2007 in Yokohama. From the film standard of 24 fps all the way to an unbelievable 240 fps!

FED Field Emission Display at 240 fps
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FED on display at FPD 2007 Yokohama

FPD 2007 at the Pacifico Yokohama Japan runs this year from October 24th to October 27. The latest in flat panel display technology can be seen here, including Field Emission Technologies FED reference monitor. Their booth has a number of comparative displays to help show the advantages of the field emission display over any other current technology.

Field Emission Technologies Booth FPD 2007

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Field Emission Technologies’ Field Emission Display (FED)

FED TV News from CEATEC 2007

This Sony-spinout company debuted a 20-inch prototype high definition display sipping as little as five watts in dark scenes, and less than most LCD screens in the brightest (all pixels on) scenes. For slimness, rich color phosphors and energy efficiency, their future commercial displays will empower both quality-conscious broadcasters and appeal to consumers for size and energy advantages. The display renders an amazing 240 frames each second the fastest flat panel speed of any video display type. Fabricated using proven semiconductor nano technologies, these FEDs represent the finest chance for consumers and professionals to soon enjoy long-life, direct-emission phosphor CRT-like color quality and richness in flatter video panels which produce light more efficiently than existing designs.

From: theaussiemap.com

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Why OLED TV is the next big thing

A very interesting story found at smarthouse.com.au

Why OLED TVs Are The Next Big Thing

Here’s the introduction. Read more at the link above.

The next big thing in HD TV is OLED. The technology will result in thin screens, better picture quality and eventually cheaper large flat panel displays. It will also result in the death of LCD TV technology. However the technology is not without its problems.

So what is different about OLED TV technology.

Whereas a liquid-crystal display (LCD) removes light from a backplane to create its picture, an OLED emits light, which creates “a rather substantial amount of efficiency,” says Stephen Forrest, a University of Michigan at Ann Arbor vice president for research and a professor of electrical engineering and computer science. Since OLED pixels only consume energy when they’re in use, they can consume up to 40 percent less energy than LCDs. “LCD screens also have polarizers (applied to the LCD glass plate),” he says, “that make viewing very angle dependent. OLEDs don’t have all of the viewing angle deficiencies.”

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SONY XEL-1 OLED TV

Here’s a link to the Sony XEL-1 product site:

Sony XEL-1

Fantastic looking OLED TV I must say. Here are some of the specs:

1080p,1080i,720p,480p,480i

HDMI:1系統1端子(背面:1系統1端子)
USB:1系統1端子
LAN端子(10BASE-T/100BASE-TX):1端子

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Sony OLED TV to launch December 1

TOKYO (Reuters) – Sony Corp said on Monday it would launch an ultra-thin flat TV based on the organic light-emitting diode (OLED) technology on December 1, bringing a new contender to a market dominated by LCD and plasma TVs.

It will be the world’s first OLED TV, the company said.

Sony, the world’s second-largest liquid crystal display TV maker behind Samsung Electronics Co Ltd, expects an 11-inch OLED TV with a thickness of 3 mm to sell for 200,000 yen ($1,700).

OLED panels are said to be energy efficient, make thin and light displays, offer crisp pictures and have strength in showing fast-moving images, suitable for watching sports events and action movies.

But manufacturers still face some technological challenges in making larger panels and driving down production costs to compete commercially with LCD and plasma TVs, analysts say.

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