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Monday, September 15, 2008

Plastic E-Reader Debut

Plastic Logic will make flexible polymer displays and launch its product in January.

By Katherine Bourzac

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Plastic e-reader: A new electronic reader from Plastic Logic uses a lightweight, flexible polymer backplane. Its screen is the size of a standard piece of paper (14 inches on the diagonal) and won’t shatter like other displays.
Credit: Plastic Logic

This Wednesday, Cambridge University startup Plastic Logic, which is headquartered in Mountain View, CA, will open a factory in Dresden, Germany, that will produce about 11 million large, flexible electronic-paper display units a year. The displays will be used in an electronic reader that the company showed at the Demo conference in San Diego last week. The product, which is scheduled to be commercially launched in January, uses display technology from E Ink and backplane technologies that employ polymer electronics developed by Plastic Logic's founders at Cambridge University.

Plastic Logic is banking that there's room on the market for another e-book, this one targeted at businesspeople who want to read documents and newspapers on a lightweight, robust device with a large display. Several portable electronic readers already on the market also employ the E Ink display technology and enable users to take thousands of pages of documents on the road. Amazon's Kindle and the Sony Reader have six-inch screens--about the size of a paperback book. The Readius, made by Polymer Vision--a spinout from Philips Electronics--is the size of a cell phone and has a rollable display that stows away.

The Plastic Logic reader's screen is larger, the size of a standard sheet of paper--8.5 by 11 inches--but it doesn't weigh much more than the other readers. It weighs 13 ounces--compared with 10.3 ounces for the smaller Kindle. And it has a display on a plastic substrate, unlike the glass screen used for the Kindle and Sony Reader, which means that it is rugged. (At Demo, Plastic Logic's CEO, Richard Archuleta, showed a video of the display being whacked with a shoe and continuing to operate.)

Instead of dealing with buttons, users can flip through the pages of a book, magazine, or PDF using a touch screen and a simple swiping gesture. The Plastic Logic reader includes a "sticky note" function and a soft keyboard for marking pages. The company hasn't made a final decision on what the reader's storage capacity will be. In January, Plastic Logic will reveal the unnamed reader's price and disclose which partner media companies will provide newspaper and magazine content.

The display uses flexible electronics technology developed about 10 years ago by company cofounders Richard Friend and Henning Sirringhaus, both physics professors at the University of Cambridge. At the Dresden factory, the display's backplanes will be printed with flexible polymer transistors using a rapid, room-temperature direct-writing process. Nozzles akin to those inside an ink-jet printer spray a solution of semiconducting polymers onto plastic sheets, forming transistors. The backplane is then laminated with an E Ink frontplane, an array of microcapsules filled with electrically charged black and white pigments. Several microcapsules are controlled by a single transistor. E Ink said that some modifications to the usual lamination process were required to work with the Plastic Logic backplane, but the company did not disclose details.

While the display itself is flexible, the device's case is rigid, as are the conventional electronics that store the documents. "The benefit of the plastic electronic technology arises through no glass substrate being needed, which makes the display unbreakable," says company cofounder and chief scientist Sirringhaus.

Polymer Vision's Readius, which also uses organic electronics, has a rollable polymer display and takes more dramatic advantage of its flexibility than Plastic Logic's reader does. The five-inch screen folds into the device, which is as compact as a cell phone. However, the Readius screen, while made out of unconventional materials, is manufactured using more-traditional mask-based lithography. Sirringhaus says that the direct-writing approach is necessary to make the large display in the company's reader, which is nearly 14 inches on the diagonal. Plastic Logic may make fully flexible devices in the future, says Sirringhaus.

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Comments

  • e paper
    jcarroll09 on 09/15/2008 at 7:13 PM
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    e paper is a good idea both to save space and trees. not only is it good for the environment, but it would be a lot easier to carry around pamphlets of e-paper rather than books and briefcases and that sort of stuff.
    i think this shows where technology is going and how it's evolving. everything is getting smaller and less heavy. it's only a matter of time before computers will just be sheets of something like e-paper.
    Rate this comment: 12345
  • E-paper
    michaelwatterson on 09/15/2008 at 8:07 PM
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    I like the idea of e-paper a lot, it makes complete sense and if lots of people switch, e-paper could have a serious impact on the environment. What I like about the idea is that the device is large. The I-phone has a lot that the e-paper has to offer, but only in a micro sized way. with the e-paper it seems that useres will be able to get full hand on control of what they are working on. I predict that a lot of things might be going in this direction of function over size.
    Rate this comment: 12345
  • epaper
    johnbenson on 09/15/2008 at 9:34 PM
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    I like the concept of e-paper a lot because it provides an alternative way to process and present information while also saving the enviorment!! Woo Go Tree Huggers!

    Also it makes information much more compact and much easier to read, handle and manipulate which I think is only benefical to people in the future.
    Rate this comment: 12345
  • E-Paper
    Haddock53 on 09/15/2008 at 10:44 PM
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    The idea of e-paper could be one of the most significant in the history of mankind. The reason for this is because the reduction of regular paper production will have a fantastic environmental impact. There will be less pollution and everything can be saved on the paper.
    People will also be able to do things much quicker with e-paper because they will be more organized than they would be if they had files of paper. Overall e-paper looks like a great idea for saving the world, environmentally that is.
    Rate this comment: 12345
  • Interesting
    bpg131313 on 09/16/2008 at 1:49 AM
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    The first question that came to mind was, what will it cost?  We're looking at a couple of bucks for a Sunday newspaper these days, portions of which are in color.  I like the idea of where this is going, especially the improved dimensions for readability.  The downsides I see are: the lack of a color display, lack of clarity on content migration to and from the unit, and no discussion regarding open standards and formats readable. 

    I'm all for going down this road, but considerable attention needs to be paid regarding the finer details.  I, for one, think it'd be amazing to be able to open up one that was actually newspaper sized and have the paper delivered via WiFi or Bluetooth from my home computer with color accurately represented when used by the distributor.  Perhaps a way to double-tap (or compress a pressure sensitive button twice) on the right bottom corner (for those of us on the globe reading from left to right) to advance to the next page.

    There's lots of potential here.  I have refused to purchase one of these readers until I feel they accurately represent my needs.  The day is coming.
    Rate this comment: 12345
  • e-paper
    Preds on 09/16/2008 at 11:00 AM
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    I like the idea of e-paper from a environmental perspective but as a Luddite I wish that as a civilization we need to stick to some of the basics and try to take the time to hand write things and not lose the basic skills that we learned in elementary school which is already diminishing
    Rate this comment: 12345
  • open mind to save enviorment!
    lwf1990 on 09/16/2008 at 8:44 PM
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    I think the idea of plastic technology is incredible. The fact it will benefit our enviorment is a huge success! That in its self is almost enough to convince me that everyone should support or carry an open mind regarding this new ' plastic e-reader' concept. It appears to be compatible to our society although many of its 'ideal functions' seem bizarre and somewhat un- necessary. In all it would be an enormous technology update, and I am very curious to see the feedback once launched in January.
    Rate this comment: 12345
  • This looks promising
    Cw684 on 09/18/2008 at 8:04 PM
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    E-Paper looks like it's going to be one giant step forward in the technological world.  It looks very promising and will likely excite the general public.  One thing I'm worried about is the cost.  It can cost just a few dollars to buy a magazine or a newspaper, and this product looks like it will be pricey.  Will it really be worth it money-wise?  Also, think of the significant impact it will leave on our environment and humans' consumptions of trees.  I'm excited to see how E-Paper will turn out.    
    Rate this comment: 12345
  • This Is Beautiful
    Mapou on 09/22/2008 at 12:12 AM
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    Nice article. I hope they make it so that I can get my home town news wherever I travel in the world. Wirelessly, of course. At any rate this is what I call beautiful technology. And it's very green because it uses no paper and very little energy compared to conventional electronic displays. The day they introduce a four-color version is the day this thing will revolutionize the computer display industry.

    Here's a thought. Instead of one laptop per child, the powers that be should shoot for one E-Ink tablet per child, pre-loaded with books and educational board games.

    Come to think of it, maybe the entire display should be touch-sensitive. I mean, can this tablet be used to play things like tic-tac-toe, chess, checkers, crossword puzzles, etc.? If so, they should open it to the game development industry. If not, they should look into the possibility. Not that I think it will not be successful as it is. This product will rock!
    Rate this comment: 12345
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