The future in your pocket: Looking Glass launches the first portable holographic display
The holographic display combines 3D space platforms and artificial intelligence, and promises to turn 2D photos into holograms
The holographic display combines 3D space platforms and artificial intelligence, and promises to turn 2D photos into holograms
From biometric monitors to color-changing clothing, a new flexible, color-changing display opens up endless possibilities.
Brighten, change color, repeat: the octopus-inspired ink revolution.
A new more than flexible (but what do I say: elastic) screen kicks off the next revolution of "free-form" displays
One technology will allow the projection of digital information directly into the retina. In a few years, says the CEO of EyeJets, zero smartphone: only glasses.
The rollable display is getting closer and closer to mass adoption: designs are becoming more versatile and essential.
A new smart fabric has been designed by the team at the University of Cambridge. Imagine a fabric that becomes a display.
Our clothes will speak to us, leaving our hands increasingly free from devices. PocketView is just the latest product of wearable display research. And it's currently the best.
An emergency cell phone powered by a simple AA battery, with infinite standby? We are close: a little useful, a little pleasing, here is SpareOne.
From the round, colorful old headlight to a smart hub: Lebedev's traffic light of the future makes a lot of sense.
A wearable device in color literally changes its appearance - and this flexible display from Plastic Logic will do just that.
An incredible 3d display shows moving images with ever more realism: it is not a holographic viewer, but it gets closer to it.
TLC has announced NXTPAPER, a new technology that allows E Ink color displays to have resolutions worthy of a normal LCD.
An ingenious e-ink display that powers itself with heat accompanies Fuffee, a mug with a social vocation and a horrendous name.
Change the environment as you change the background of a smartphone. The houses of the future will have systems like ASB Lumiflex, which changes floors and walls on display.
A Stanford team works on a way to show blind people 3D information such as shapes and objects thanks to a special touch display.
Imagine a thermometer that shows a patient's temperature with figures appearing directly on his temple. The flexible skin display is reality.
The revelations come from the latest Bloomberg report signed by Mark Gurman, a "sleuth" who has never made a mistake. These new augmented reality glasses will be equipped with holographic displays inside the frame, and will work in conjunction with the new iPhone11s coming out in 2020.
The choice of Honda EV now shows a trend: the progressive transformation of cars into entertainment hubs, the screens increase dramatically.
Byton, an industrious Chinese startup is about to launch its first electric vehicle on the market: the first images show the interior which stands out for the incredible size of its screens.
They are a million times smaller than the pixels we have on today's cell phone displays