
While on a trip to visit Samsung in South Korea last week, the company's top brass asked our opinion on laptops with OLED screens. "They don't exist," we said, "but if they did, they'd probably be awesome. Not to mention expensive."
Nothing more was said at the time — aside from a hastily retracted allusion to quitting the laptop business — but now we're back in the UK, it would appear Samsung was holding out on us. It's actually created a prototype laptop with a 12-inch active matrix organic light emitting diode (AMOLED) screen that pushes 1,280x768 pixels and, according to Samsung, has a contrast ratio 20 times higher than that of a standard LCD.
Most of you have probably heard of OLED displays without the AM prefix. Many of these displays — such as those on mobile phones, and cameras — are Passive Matrix (PMOLED) units, which aren't as good as their Active Matrix (AMOLED) counterparts. AMOLEDs displays are said to have wider viewing angles, lower power consumption, higher resolution, and the possibility of larger screen sizes that don't reduce in brightness as they get larger. There are drawbacks, however: the AMOLED manufacturing process is more complex and the final products are pricier.
Samsung's prototype has other cool touches, including a touch-sensitive keyboard that allows the laptop to be extremely thin. This raises all sorts of questions, though: will resting your fingers on the keys cause the laptop to go ballistic? Will it have some kind of pressure sensitivity? Will it have any tactile feedback such as vibration? Is this an effective, or even feasible, substitute for real keys?
It's unlikely we'll see this particular model reach the market, but if the cost can be reduced, the screen technology will almost inevitably make an appearance on future Samsung laptops, and on the laptops of Samsung's competitors — many of whom use Samsung displays.



Trentyn
26/05/2008 03:33 PM
I WANT ONE!! to answer your questions: >>will resting your fingers on the keys cause the laptop to go ballistic? I'd be pretty happy (as a non gaming machine) for there to be a key lock preventing more than one key to be pressesd at a time (with the obvious shift etc exceptions) >>Will it have some kind of pressure sensitivity? Why? unless you want to use it as a keyboard.... or are you going Type writter style, allowing a firm press to be a capital letter.... that'd be cool too! >>Will it have any tactile feedback such as vibration? Again, why? people will adapt, in the same way I have to typing on my LG KU990. >>Is this an effective, or even feasible, substitute for real keys? Given my answers I say hell yes! we've been moving toward the startrek/sci-fi world in all other ways, why not or manual interfaces?
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man.dovvn
26/05/2008 06:23 PM
Great response. Too bad you're not a representative of either Cnet or Samsung.
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