Berlin, Germany
-- Building on its leading position in rollable displays and drawing
on its considerable heritage in personal electronics, Philips
Polymer Vision is revealing its Concept Readius at the
Internationale Funkausstellung (IFA) in Berlin, Germany, September
2-7. Philips Concept Readius is a prototype of a connected consumer
device for business professionals unwilling to sacrifice
readability, mobility, performance, or weight in a pocket-sized,
e-reader concept.
Polymer Vision does not intend to commercialize this concept as a
product in the market. Instead, it is demonstrating the fitness of
its rollable displays for use in the mobile devices of tomorrow.
The Readius is the world’s first prototype of a functional
electronic-document reader that can unroll its display to a scale
larger than the device itself. With four gray levels, the
monochrome, 5-inch QVGA (320 pixels x 240 pixels) display provides
paper-like viewing comfort with a high contrast ratio for
reading-intensive applications, including text, graphics, and
electronic maps. Using a bi-stable electrophoretic display effect
from E Ink Corp., the display consumes little power and is easy to
read, even in bright daylight. Once the user has finished reading,
the display can be rolled back into the pocket-size
(100 mm x 60 mm x 20 mm) device.
Based on Philips Polymer Vision’s PV-QML5 rollable display reference
design, the Readius was created in order to demonstrate the
viability of the rollable-display concept in mobile applications and
to gain customer feedback at the IFA 2005.
“Making displays thinner and flexible will have advantages in power
and weight. But the only way to add the key advantage of
size—allowing larger displays in smaller, pocket-size mobile
devices—is by actually making the displays rollable,” says Polymer
Vision CEO Karl McGoldrick. “The Readius demonstrates this, as well
as showing that we have taken this technology a major step further
towards product and market.”
READIUS is a trademark belonging to Koninklijke Philips.
High-resolution photographs can be downloaded from:
+
www.polymervision.com/New-Center/Downloads/Index.html
For more information:
+
www.polymervision.com