<img src='/images/misc/cupofcoffee.gif' style='float:right' vspace='8' hspace='8'> <b>An image scanner built into a piece of flexible plastic little bigger than a credit card has been developed in Japan.</b><br /><br />16:10 23 December 2004 Exclusive from New Scientist Print Edition Celeste Biever<br /> <br /> The idea is that you will plug the scanner into a mobile phone which will both provide power for it and act as its display and storage medium. And because it is flexible, it will let you copy just about anything, even if it is on a curved surface such as an open book or the label on a wine bottle.<br /> <br /> The lightweight device, unveiled last week at an electronics conference in San Francisco, is the latest development in the field of flexible organic electronics, which exploits the electronic properties of conducting plastics.<br /> <br /> Light-emitting plastics are already being used in flexible computer displays, and organic LED-based TV screens are in development. But the new flexible scanner is using light-sensitive organic components instead of light-generating ones.<br /><br /> <div class='newslinks'><img src='http://www.bleepingcomputer.com/forums/public/style_images/1/cs_page.gif'> <b>Link: <a href='http://www.newscientist.com/article.ns?id=dn6826' target='_blank'><font color='red'>No swiping allowed and more</font></a><br />
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Flexible scanner works on curved surfaces Future Product
#1
Posted 24 December 2004 - 08:38 AM
The only easy day was yesterday.
...some do, some don't; some will, some won't (WR)
...some do, some don't; some will, some won't (WR)
#2
Posted 24 December 2004 - 10:17 AM
I read or saw the flexible tv screen a year ago. Very cool!
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