You might be pretty proud of
your iPhone 4's Retina Display, and those teensy pixels 4x smaller than the already good-looking usual Apple displays. Or maybe you're looking forward to seeing the Retina installed in some of Apple's other products
at the event later this week. But like most consumer electronics these days, that display isn't quite state-of-the-art. Researchers at the University of Michigan have
created a display with nanometer-thin sheets of metal (called nanoresonators) that use slits to create pixels
eight times smaller than the pixels currently on the iPhone 4. To show off their work, the University of Michigan researchers created their school's logo on a display only 9 microns tall (a strand of human hair is
about 100 microns wide, so the display itself could fit inside the period at the end of this sentence).
Crazy. You have to wonder what an iPhone-sized display would look like with a resolution like that (or if we'd even tell the difference, given that our eyes
have a limit on the amount of detail they can discern). Obviously, this is strictly a research project at this point -- creating all of the "nanoresonators" required to make a fullsize display would probably cost a lot more than the iPhone 4 actually does. Maybe it's something to look forward to for the iPhone 5, 6 or 7.
Researchers create pixels eight times smaller than the Retina Display originally appeared on
The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Mon, 30 Aug 2010 20:00:00 EST. Please see our
terms for use of feeds.
Researchers create pixels eight times smaller than the Retina Display originally appeared on
The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Mon, 30 Aug 2010 20:00:00 EST. Please see our
terms for use of feeds.
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