If you zoom into the screen you are reading this on, you’d see an extremely fine pattern of red, green, and blue emitters, probably LEDs of some kind. This somewhat limits the resolution you can ...
Take apart your laptop screen, and at its heart you’ll find a plate patterned with pixels of red, green, and blue LEDs, arranged end to end like a meticulous Lite Brite display. When electrically ...
Forward-looking: An international team of scientists led by MIT engineers developed a way to make defect-free micro-LED wafers using a vertical approach that could pave the way for a new generation of ...
Suunto has unveiled the Vertical 2, a feature-packed successor to its well-regarded outdoor sports watch. The new model adds a vibrant 1.5-inch AMOLED display, a built-in LED flashlight, and a host of ...
Ingentec, which makes specialty gases used in semiconductor and display panel manufacturing, has developed CMW (copper magnetic wafer) substrates to match its vertical LED structure technology for ...
When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Here’s how it works. Read the first blog in this series here: Caveat Emptor — Buyer Beware Up to now, the only way to ...
Suunto has introduced the Vertical 2, the latest model in its adventure watch lineup. It is built for extreme expeditions and daily outdoor use. The new watch features a redesigned optical heart rate ...
A project at MIT has developed a possible new route to sharper defect-free displays, by stacking the light emitting diodes into vertical multicolored pixels. Although the size of conventional LED ...
Engineers have developed a new way to make sharper, defect-free displays, which could improve augmented and virtual reality devices. Instead of replacing red, green, and blue light-emitting diodes ...