User:CDaignault1/draft

Electronic paper and e-paper, also sometimes electronic ink, or electrophoretic displays or e-ink, are display devices that mimic the appearance of ordinary ink on paper.[1] ("E-Ink" is typically used to refer to our "E Ink" trademark, as opposed to a generic reference to electronic paper generally.)

Technologies

Microencapsulated electrophoretic display

An example of a sScheme of an electrophoretic display.(This is a depiction of E Ink's electrophoretic display, as opposed to all displays generally.)
An example of a sScheme of an electrophoretic display using color filters.










Disadvantages

An e-ink E Ink screen showing the "ghost" of a prior image

. . . . E Ink Corporation of E Ink Holdings Inc. released the first colored electronic ink e-ink displays to be used in a marketed product. The Ectaco Jetbook Color was released in 2012 as the first colored electronic ink e-ink e-reader, which used E Ink's Triton display technology.[2][3] E Ink in early 2015 also announced another color electronic ink e-ink technology called Prism.[4] This new technology is a color changing film that can be used for e-reader, but Prism is also marketed as a film that can be integrated into architectural design such as "wall, ceiling panel, or entire room instantly."[5] The disadvantage of these current color displays is that they are considerably more expensive than standard electronic ink E Ink displays.

(Almost all of these criticisms are cited to a blog from an ebook vendor and E Ink's own website. Some of the content is not supported by the cited sources either.)

Applications

Wristwatches

In December 2005, Seiko released the first electronic ink based watch called the Spectrum SVRD001 wristwatch, which has a flexible electrophoretic display[6] and in March 2010 Seiko released a second generation of this famous electronic ink e-ink watch with an active matrix display.[7] (The cited source (a press release) correctly states "Electronic Ink" as opposed to referring to our trademark "E Ink" as the watch does not use our technology)

Mobile phones

. . . . On December 12, 2012, Yota Devices announced the first "YotaPhone" prototype and was later released in December 2013, a unique double-display smartphone. It has a 4.3-inch, HD LCD on the front and an or e-ink, electronic paper display on the back . . . .

References

  1. ^ Heikenfeld (2011). "A critical review of the present and future prospects for electronic paper". J. Soc. Inf. Display. 19 (2): 129. doi:10.1889/JSID19.2.129.
  2. ^ "Ebook reader for education - ebook for schools, students, middle school. Educational ebook reader for learning - jetBook k-12 - ECTACO".
  3. ^ "E Ink".
  4. ^ Liszewski, Andrew. "Color-Changing E Ink Is Here, But Not In eBook Readers".
  5. ^ "About E Ink Prism". Archived from the original on 2015-12-08. Retrieved 2015-11-28.
  6. ^ "The first watch that uses flexible e-paper hits the stores" Archived 2009-08-12 at the Wayback Machine 2005-12-01
  7. ^ "Baselworld 2010 - Seiko Press Conference - Future Now, EPD Watch Archived 2010-03-25 at the Wayback Machine 2010-04-01
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