Designed by industrial designer Susan McKinney, the EOS phone consists of a soft, semi-rigid polymer skin surrounding a flexible low-energy OLED display. Kyocera has developed a phone that utilizes OLED with amazing features like using kinetic energy to power itself, so no reliance on a battery. The more you work on it, the more power it gets. There's also talks of a solar version in the works.
Monday, April 20, 2009
OLED - Flexible, Lighter, Faster than LCD...and powered by YOU
What's cooler than a touch-screen phone? How about one you can fold like a wallet and stuff in your pocket? And when folded, it's still thinner than your iPhone.

Designed by industrial designer Susan McKinney, the EOS phone consists of a soft, semi-rigid polymer skin surrounding a flexible low-energy OLED display. Kyocera has developed a phone that utilizes OLED with amazing features like using kinetic energy to power itself, so no reliance on a battery. The more you work on it, the more power it gets. There's also talks of a solar version in the works.
Designed by industrial designer Susan McKinney, the EOS phone consists of a soft, semi-rigid polymer skin surrounding a flexible low-energy OLED display. Kyocera has developed a phone that utilizes OLED with amazing features like using kinetic energy to power itself, so no reliance on a battery. The more you work on it, the more power it gets. There's also talks of a solar version in the works.
Video Mapping on a 3D Surface
French company EasyWeb has developed content for video mapping on dimensional surfaces. The really cool feature here is that the content doesn't lose its focus as it is displayed over a variety of surfaces.
What do you think?
What do you think?
Labels:
3d content,
3d visual effects,
dimension,
video mapping
Sixth Sense
The TED Community has brought some amazing ideas to life, and Pattie Maes' Sixth Sense is no exception. Her team - consisting of IT technicians and developers - has brought disruptive media to the forefront. Check out this highly intuitive Minority Report-esque medium.
Labels:
disruptive,
Minority Report,
Pattie Maes,
Sixth Sense,
TED
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