
Flat panel displays balance their smaller footprint and trendy modern look with high production costs and in many cases inferior images compared with traditional CRTs. In many applications, specifically modern portable devices such as laptops, cellular phones, and digital cameras, whatever disadvantages are overcome by the portability requirements.
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Flat Panel TV Blog | Because you need a new TV
the Flat Panel TV Blog Glossary (1) The pros and cons of LCD televisions (1) ... the Flat Panel TV Blog Glossary. 50" 52-inch Bravia Dolby Olevia Pioneer ...www.flatpaneltvblog.com/New Scientist Invention Blog: Flat-panel ion thrusters - New Scientist
A patent news blog from. Friday, August 22, 2008. Flat-panel ion thrusters ... The inventors hope the flat-panel thrusters will reduce the cost of spacecraft ...www.newscientist.com/blog/invention/2008/08/flat-panel-ion-t...flat panel Resources | TechRepublic
White papers, case studies, technical articles, and blog posts relating to flat panel ... sell new Panasonic Onyx TH50PX500U 50 in Flat Panel Plasma TV. ...search.techrepublic.com.com/search/flat+panel.htmlThe Energy Blog: Heliotube Flat Panel Solar Troughs
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Flat panel displays balance their smaller footprint and trendy modern look with high production costs and in many cases inferior images compared with traditional CRTs. In many applications, specifically modern portable devices such as laptops, cellular phones, and digital cameras, whatever disadvantages are overcome by the portability requirements.
Volatile
Volatile displays require constant power output to refresh the image on screen many times a second. The image appears steady because the images are refreshed more often than the human eye can perceive.
Examples of volatile flat panel displays
- Plasma displays
- Liquid crystal displays (LCDs)
- Organic light-emitting diode displays (OLEDs)
- Light-emitting diode display (LED)
- Electroluminescent displays (ELDs)
- Surface-conduction electron-emitter displays (SEDs)
- Field emission displays (FEDs)
- Nano-emissive display (NEDs)
Only the first five of these displays are commercially available today, though OLED displays are beginning deployment only in small sizes (mainly in cellular telephones). SEDs were promised for release in 2006, while the FEDs and NEDs are (as of November 2005) in the prototype stage.
Static
Static flat panel displays rely on materials whose color states are bistable. This means that the image they hold requires no energy to maintain, but instead requires energy to change. This results in a much more energy-efficient display, but with a tendency towards slow refresh rates which are undesirable in an interactive display.
Examples of static flat panel displays
- electrophoretic displays (e.g. E Ink's electrophoretic imaging film)
- bichromal ball displays (e.g. Xerox's Gyricon)
- Interferometric modulator displays (e.g. Qualcomm's iMod, a MEMS display.)
- Cholesteric displays (e.g. MagInk, Kent Displays)
- Bistable nematic liquid crystal displays (e.g. ZBD)
Bistable flat panel displays are beginning deployment in limited applications (Cholesteric displays, manufactured by Magink, in outdoor advertising; electrophoretic displays in e-book products from Sony and iRex; and bistable liquid crystal displays from ZBD in store shelf labels).
See also
- Large-screen television technology
- Sony Watchman

























