Wednesday, June 10th 2015

Samsung Display Introduces First Mirror and Transparent OLED Display Panels

Samsung Display Co., Ltd. unveiled the industry's first Mirror and Transparent OLED display panels in a dazzling state-of-the-art showcase for personalized shopping and informational browsing, held this week at the Hong Kong Convention and Exhibition Centre. The exhibit features the first retail use of advanced commercial OLED panels - a "virtual necklace" display for the world renowned Chow Sang Sang jewelry company.

The new Samsung Display OLED panel technology provides a digital viewing platform for making the consumer purchasing experience more visually engaging. When Samsung's OLED display technology is integrated with Intel Real Sense technology, a visually compelling, interactive closet or "self-modeling" wardrobe is created that can enable consumers to virtually "see" clothes or other retail items from an extremely realistic, customized perspective.
Together, the two technologies create a "virtual fitting room" that will be used to help consumers vividly see themselves wearing clothing apparel, shoes or jewelry that they might wish to buy. Once retailers like Chow Sang Sang adopt the combined Samsung-Intel "personalization" virtual imaging solution, consumers will be able to go to leading stores around the world to see retail items in ways that will greatly enhance point-of-purchase shopping as we know it today.

The Intel technology takes human-computer interaction to the next level of visualization, which combines consumer-grade 3D cameras with an easy-to-use, automated library of stored "perceptions" to simplify camera enhancement efforts of software developers.

The Samsung Mirror Display may also replace home mirrors in the future, providing digital information services to sophisticated consumers in the same space where they now just have a traditional mirror.

Samsung Display's Mirror OLED display panel, with its more than 75 percent reflectance level, delivers at least 50 percent higher reflectance than competitive Mirror LCDs now in limited availability and a much improved color gamut (over 100 percent vs. around 70 percent of NTSC), as well as an exceptionally high contrast ratio (over 100,000:1 vs. 4,000:1) and a much faster response time (under 1ms vs. 8ms) than LCD transparent panels. In addition, the new mirror display technology does not need the ambient backlight for displaying on-screen images that LCD technology requires.

Like the Samsung Mirror Display, the new Samsung Transparent Display will visually accentuate the gesture and voice control of Real Sense 3D-rotatable viewing systems, with OLED's vibrant Full HD video playback. Collectively, these features will enhance consumer-facing displays in car dealerships, and other innovative signage applications in public information and transportation environments, as well as at retail and hospitality/hotel locations.

Compared to conventional LCD alternatives for today's digital signage market, Samsung Display's Full HD Transparent OLED display panel has a substantially higher color gamut (100 percent vs. around 70 percent of NTSC), sharply increased transmittance (45 percent vs. around 10 percent), and better clarity through a wider range of viewing angles. It features a transparency level of over 40 percent, much higher than the 10 percent level of today's transparent LCD displays.

"Samsung has a long legacy of leadership in technology innovation for digital signage, as well as for other applications, and we are now leading the next wave of digital signage advancement with our Mirror and Transparent OLED display solutions," said Oseung Yang, vice president, Samsung Display Company. "We are very excited to help bring a new interactive dimension to the world of multi-channel shopping through the integration of our newest OLED displays with Intel RealSense technology," he added.

Samsung Display's advanced OLED display panels will open up new possibilities for optimizing the potential for visually interactive computing technology. Here, Intel Real Sense features a front-facing camera that captures even the most subtle facial movements, precisely tracks widely varying finger and hand movements, and clearly distinguishes between backgrounds and foregrounds. In addition, the Intel technology includes a rear-facing camera that can accurately scan and measure rooms and objects, and a snapshot camera that can alter a photo's background after a photo has been taken.

"Samsung Display's revolutionary Transparent and Mirror OLED display solutions will drive retail and digital signage leaders, and their customers, to further innovate through greater manipulation of the Intel RealSense platform in order to deliver highly differentiated, exquisitely personalized customer experiences," said Jose Avalos, worldwide visual retail director, retail solutions division, Internet of Things group, Intel Corporation.

Mirum, the global digital technology integrator involved in the project, specializes in bringing leading-edge technology to the masses by helping retailers and public information display providers undergo a digital business transformation, said Win Mak, CEO of Mirum Hong Kong. "Magic Mirror 2.0 is a prime example of how Mirum Hong Kong is staying at the forefront of technology, utilizing our partnerships wisely as we continue to explore opportunities to help our clients incorporate innovation into their business activities. This is how we help market leaders become successful digital pioneers within their respective industries."
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12 Comments on Samsung Display Introduces First Mirror and Transparent OLED Display Panels

#1
Xzibit
Time to go to Pandora and mine some unobtanium
Posted on Reply
#2
GreiverBlade
XzibitTime to go to Pandora and mine some unobtanium
i was thinking the same ...
Posted on Reply
#3
Uplink10
Samsuing is not the first one to introduce something like this: www.extremetech.com/computing/186241-lgs-flexible-and-transparent-oled-displays-are-the-beginning-of-the-e-paper-revolution

And this does not have a lot of uses except watching movies in your car while driving and similar things because I will not look at my screen at home and be constantly bothered by what is happening at the background or because of bad visibility which is side effect of transparency.

More links:
www.newhitechgadgets.com/lg-flexible-18-inch-display-concept/
Posted on Reply
#4
Xzibit
Together, the two technologies create a "virtual fitting room" that will be used to help consumers vividly see themselves wearing clothing apparel, shoes or jewelry that they might wish to buy.
Hopefully Victoria Secret implements these then I wont dread stepping inside a mall.

You do your shopping honey, I'll just sit here and wait.
Posted on Reply
#5
yotano211
XzibitHopefully Victoria Secret implements these then I wont dread stepping inside a mall.

You do your shopping honey, I'll just sit here and wait.
I am wondering when hustler or play boy will ship these in their magazines. I want the full experience pron.
Posted on Reply
#6
Legacy-ZA
I would only take this type of monitor... if it was free.
Posted on Reply
#7
Haytch
I think this would be a fabulous, must have product if there is a black background and I was enclosed in a room that did not allow light in. I guess that would defeat the purpose of having a transparent screen :)

On a serious note, I think the only real uses would be;
Shop window display's, windows around the house, vehicle windscreens with an awesome HUD (Don't they already have these ?), awesome sun-glasses (Don't they already have these ?), and maybe a space-ship like wonder woman has! (I know she already has one of these!) :p

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Edit :- I forgot the magic crystal ball, so fortune tellers can spin $|-|17 and gullable tools believe them.
Posted on Reply
#8
rooivalk
Apart from some niche applications and obvious marketing display, what's the point?
Posted on Reply
#9
natr0n
Reminds me of the Back to the Future movie.
Posted on Reply
#10
remixedcat
we needed these in our cars like... umm... last decade!
Posted on Reply
#11
Caring1
Didn't they have similar screens in the movie Minority Report?
Posted on Reply
#12
lastcalaveras
Caring1Didn't they have similar screens in the movie Minority Report?
Don't forget the Iron man movies

Next step Holographic displays
Posted on Reply
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