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Wednesday, January 9, 2013

X Factor 'Tab'.

Imagine buying one paper could do almost what you want in computer terms go to a supermarket till buy your virtual paper. How about that, this idea is to come as Book Club Introduces it just buy a prepay credit buy a book or any type of print. If you have photos locked inside which new magnetic technology these plastics will be available to almost everyone.
Paper Tab  is the first this allows a user to send a photo simply by tapping one as Paper Tab showing a draft email with another Paper Tab showing the photo. The photo is then automatically attached to the draft email. The email is sent either by placing the Paper Tab in an out tray, or by bending the top corner of the display. Similarly, a larger drawing or display surface is created simply by placing two or more Paper Tabs side by side. Instead of using several apps or windows on a single display, users have ten or more interactive displays or 'Paper Tabs', with each being a different app. They can also be used as e-books, with users simply bending the screen to turn pages. 'Using several Paper Tabs makes it much easier to work with multiple documents,' says Roel Vertegaal, Director of Queen’s University’s Human Media Lab. The bendable screens can work together, allowing users to move pictures between them with a single tap.
It could be as evolutionary as the printing press with as they become solar power like calculators with new tablet screen is the thickness of a sheet of paper. However, it is fully interactive with a flexible, high-resolution 10.7” plastic display developed by Plastic Logic, a flexible touch screen, and powered by the second generation Intel® CoreTM i5 Processor. 'Plastic Logic’s flexible plastic displays are completely informational in terms of product interaction. 'They allow a natural human interaction with electronic paper, being lighter, thinner and more robust compared with today’s standard glass-based displays. ‘This is just one example of the innovative evolutionary design approaches enabled by flexible displays,' said Indro Mukerjee, CEO of Plastic Logic to book club.
That can be twisted and dropped without damage has been revealed. Developed by Queen’s University in Canada in collaboration with Plastic Logic and Intel Labs, it could lead to revolutionary new gadgets that are virtually unbreakable - and as thin as a piece of paper. The firm behind the screen has even shown off a radical new version of the office desk - with sheets of paper instead of screens. How it works: The 'paper' has a thin display bonded to a back plane made from a flexible material It plans to launch the screen later this week at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas. It has also shown off a concept for a new desktop - using sheets of paper for each app rather tahn a traditional screen with windows. A prototype flexible screen developed by Intel, Plastic Logic and Queen's University. It could lead to a new generation of paper thin, bendable computers racier hard drives.
The screens can be bent without breaking as colour versions of the product are also under development A prototype Plastic Logic flexible colour display using the technology. Intel claims the technology could eventually replace traditional screen altogether. 'Within five to ten years, most computers, from ultra-notebooks to tablets, will look and feel just like these sheets of printed colour paper,' said Ryan Brotman, Research Scientist at Intel. The developers claim it could even replace paper altogether.
'Paper Tab can file and display thousands of paper documents, replacing the need for a computer monitor and stacks of papers or printouts,' it said. 'Unlike traditional tablets, Paper Tabs keep track of their location relative to each other, and the user, providing a seamless experience across all apps, as if they were physical computer windows.  For example, when a Paper Tab is placed outside of reaching distance it reverts to a thumbnail overview of a document, just like icons on a computer desktop. 'When picked up or touched a Paper Tab switches back to a full screen page view, just like opening a window on a computer. Higher resolution versions of the screen are also under development, and Intel claims they could replace laptop screens within five years. The prototype Paper Tab set to be shown off at CES later this week looks and feels just like a sheet of paper, the firm says.

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