The evolution of electronic devices has seen them getting smaller and smaller over the years. Computers, for instance, started out from complete units, to laptops, and netbooks, and then tablets. Would you believe that the new trend in electronic technology is now geared toward getting thinner instead of smaller? And when it comes to that, nothing beats the newest from Sony: the Sony rollable OTFT-driven OLED display.
You hear that right, friends. This new Sony innovation is so thin that it can be rolled to the size of a pen! This new display measures 4.1 inches and only 80 mm thick. How was this achieved? First and foremost, in the development of the OTFTs (organic thin-film transistors), the company used only original organic semiconductor materials. These materials dissolve easily in typical solvents, and utilizing them in the manufacturing process is more environment-friendly. Plus, the output produced from them, while being lightweight and thin, is also very durable.
If you’re wondering about the roll-up capability of the device, that’s achieved with the elimination of the usual rigid driver IC chips. Instead of these, the display is incorporated with a flexible gate-driver circuit. Additionally, this flexibility is achieved with the help of the organic materials used in the insulator.
The Sony rollable OTFT-driven OLED display can reproduce moving images while it’s rolled up around a cylinder and then stretched. The reproduction is high in quality, no matter how many times you roll-up and stretch the display. This new innovation gives all of us a glimpse of how future tablets will possibly look like—not only smaller, but thinner.

You have just recently arrived home and you suddenly notice a brand new flat screen TV at your living room–lucky day. Like any other tube and Hollywood loving creature, your initial reaction is to turn the thing on, pop in a movie, sit back and relax. As you were about to enjoy movie, all you can see are double vision images–lucky day indeed. Why? You just experienced a 3D crossover and the new TV on your living room? It’s the latest 3D LCD TV on the market. Now if only you could get your hands on those 3D glasses with the new Toshiba Mobile Display OCB (Optically Compensated Bend) liquid crystal display panel. The ever increasing demand for immersive gameplay and ultra realistic images paved way for the development of 3D technology for more applications like PC games, movies and television, and yes, even incoming hand held consoles. You know the rules, what the consumer wants, the consumer gets.

