Paper Tabs, Another New Nifty Tech Item

#1

YorkVol

Well-Known Member
Joined
Apr 2, 2010
Messages
19,001
Likes
4,456
#1
These are cool:

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=81iiGWdsJgg&feature=player_embedded[/youtube]
 
#3
#3
Looks cool. I suppose you could figure out some way to make this useful. Sending emails by shuffling papers around and pretending to put it in an out box is silly and a waste of time.

Autocad (or whatever drafting software) looked cool on there.
 
#4
#4
Looks like it uses the sane digital ink that b&w kindles/nooks use. The cords dangling below make them really impractical in a world were wireless mobile devices are what consumers want. There may be some practical uses for this tech (like larger sheets for blueprints or something) but overall this seems like a technology that is a little behind the times. .
 
#6
#6
Looks like it uses the sane digital ink that b&w kindles/nooks use. The cords dangling below make them really impractical in a world were wireless mobile devices are what consumers want. There may be some practical uses for this tech (like larger sheets for blueprints or something) but overall this seems like a technology that is a little behind the times. .

I think the paperthin flexible screens are the advancement, along with the variety of info sharing tools. i can see a lot of ways this could improve collaboration where I work. I'm sure there is no intent to keep the cables.
 
#7
#7
I think the paperthin flexible screens are the advancement, along with the variety of info sharing tools. i can see a lot of ways this could improve collaboration where I work. I'm sure there is no intent to keep the cables.

I think the cables are connected to the actual CPU a well as power. The "paper" is just a display using NFC for sharing. You already see that in mobile devices like the Samsung GS3 and Note2. There are some nifty advancements but it's got a long way to go until it becomes truly practical on a large scale.
 
#8
#8
I think the cables are connected to the actual CPU a well as power. The "paper" is just a display using NFC for sharing. You already see that in mobile devices like the Samsung GS3 and Note2. There are some nifty advancements but it's got a long way to go until it becomes truly practical on a large scale.

ok
 
#9
#9
Doesn't look like it works very well. Still a worth-while development for whoever made it, and neat.
 

VN Store



Back
Top