Bridgestone is a Japanese company known for making tires. Last year, they developed a QR-LPD powder liquid display. The last time they worked to explode the size of their screen. The biggest? A3 screen with a resolution of 2560 × 1920th is the size of two sheets of standard printer side by side. It is big enough for almost any task I can think of. When they showed us that babies last year, they have greatly improved technology and prototypes built in some tablets work.
DigInfo News included this video on Fine Tech Japan. Bridgestone is the demo eReader Aerobee using QR-LPD technology. If you have not heard of it before he uses a black and white powder electrified electrified hanging between two plates of glass or plastic. Because they can also put plastic these screens can be made to be placed on flexible or curved surfaces.
The tablet is shown in this video is running ARM 11 @ 533MHz processer with 128Mbyte of memory. In addition, a 4 GB storage iNAND. They defeated the Linux kernel 2.6.24-there, and some demonstration programs, and I am impressed. Response time of this screen seems to be completely flawless paint-by-numbers style of application. Where can I get one?
DigInfo News included this video on Fine Tech Japan. Bridgestone is the demo eReader Aerobee using QR-LPD technology. If you have not heard of it before he uses a black and white powder electrified electrified hanging between two plates of glass or plastic. Because they can also put plastic these screens can be made to be placed on flexible or curved surfaces.
The tablet is shown in this video is running ARM 11 @ 533MHz processer with 128Mbyte of memory. In addition, a 4 GB storage iNAND. They defeated the Linux kernel 2.6.24-there, and some demonstration programs, and I am impressed. Response time of this screen seems to be completely flawless paint-by-numbers style of application. Where can I get one?