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Nemoptic’s Active Matrix Binem displays look undiluted for your low-power Game Boy (video)
While a grocery stores in our hood are apparently the small as well low-tech for the things, Nemoptic has done utterly the name for itself in produce circles with the tiny, poor e-paper cost tags, means to simulate a continually rising costs of Cap’n Crunch. Now a company is branching out with rather than some-more high-tech but still tiny displays called Binem Active Matrix E-paper, which show the variety of engaging tricks in a array of videos from June which Technology Review is only now bringing to light. The two-inch, 170dpi screens can manage a 30ms modernise rate — only fast enough to handle video — and can do partial lovely, changing only portions of a arrangement. Perhaps most interestingly the screens can be backlit, meaning they use a rather dissimilar construction than traditional E-Ink, though just how they work has yet to be disclosed. Check out a thrilling proof after the mangle and see if you can compromise the poser.