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As we look ahead to the future prospects for display technologies,
we see many excellent opportunities. The rapid increases in computer
capabilities and communications bandwidth have accelerated the need
for excellent displays. New improved displays are needed to interface
all the information that is being created and transmitted at ever
greater speeds and in ever growing quantities.
The display products that we will see over the next ten years can
be quite accurately predicted from the base materials technologies
that are currently under development. It takes at least ten years
and typically longer for products to become available in significant
volumes once a new display technology is discovered. Therefore,
by a careful look at the display materials technologies that are
currently in the research stages or being developed for use in products,
we can quite reasonably ascertain the next ten or more years of
display product evolution.
However, the understanding of the underlying display technologies
only gives us one part of the story. We must also appreciate that
new applications are not primarily technology driven. Technology
is a facilitator but the final product choices are made by the various
users of those technologies. Therefore, a thorough understanding
of the needs that will be driving the various market segments is
equally important for a complete understanding of the products that
we may be using some years from now. Getting the new technologies
to market will be just as challenging as the scientific research
and engineering development that spawned those new display capabilities.
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The goal of this column is to explore the technologies that will
become available over the coming years and to combine this understanding
with an analysis of evolving user needs to predict the trends in
the markets that pertain to displays in the industrial work
environment, in the typical home, and during the time that we are
in transit between our work environments and home or other locations.
Displays for Industrial Equipment -The industrial and professional
usage markets typically demand functionality and ruggedness in the
displays selected for a given application. These markets often present
excellent opportunities for the introduction of new display technologies.
This is because performance can be more important than cost and
because usage volumes are typically modest. This can allow a new
technology to enter a market with low risk and with users to whom
new performance features are vitally important. These markets are
also characterized by a large variety of display product configurations
ranging from simple portable instrument indicator displays to large
CRTs or flat-panels with extremely high- resolution demands. Below
we address the medical, test and measurement, and factory automation
market segments for further analysis.
Medical -Several new trends are going to be important for
medical displays. The three most important are likely to be displays
with higher resolutions, displays that can depict 3-D images, and
displays that can be used in head-mounted configurations. The higher
resolution and excellent gray scale rendering capabilities are necessary
for accurate analysis of images captured by X-ray, MRI, ultrasound,
or other non-invasive methods. The need for 3-D rendering will become
more important as computer power is combined with these non-invasive
diagnostic tools to visualize the information captured. The head
mounted display technologies will see increased usage as doctors
begin to rely more on real-time diagnostic image capture during
surgery and other medical procedures. We can also expect to see
new display technologies being applied to help improve various vision
deficiencies such as macular degeneration.
To meet the needs for higher resolution and accurate gray scale,
LCD and CRT technologies are going to dominate. Currently, monochrome
CRTs can provide precise high resolution rendering of X-ray images,
but LCD panels, of also very high resolution, have recently been
introduced by IBM that will pose a serious challenge to the more
mature CRT technology.
For rendering 3-D images, many of the existing display technologies
can provide an adequate solution. The simplest approach for rendering
3-D images is to use a conventional display (a two-dimensional surface)
and to create the third dimension artificially by electronically
rotating the image. A more sophisticated method is some form of
stereoscopic image rendering. The only known techniques that can
produce acceptable results for medical applications utilize the
presentation of alternate images with electronic switching and/or
light polarization. Therefore, for the more critical medical applications,
it is likely that active or passive eyeglasses will continue to
be necessary for stereoscopic viewing.
The evolving need for head-mounted displays will be met by several
approaches. These displays will either be based on LCOS (Liquid
Crystal on Silicon) or Micromechanical (MEMS) Scanners. The first
applications will be met with monochrome displays because that is
all that the diagnostic capture equipment is capable of creating.
However, over time the application of computer generated color will
become more important as new information capture and processing
capabilities are added.
Test and Measurement - The dominant trends in this market
segment are going to be directed toward improving the viewability
of displays, to more use of head-mounted display products, and to
the wider application of touch input and voice interactivity. This
market segment is characterized by perhaps more variety than any
other. Displays of all sizes and varieties may be suitable. Cost
is often a driving criterion for the final selection. That means
that this market is very sensitive to the perceived value (performance
vs. cost) of a display product or technology.
The majority of T&M applications over the next ten years will
utilize LCD panels. There will also be some opportunity for the
newer OLED and FED technologies for meeting the demands of excellent
viewability, higher light conversion efficiency, and ruggedness.
For applications where diagnostic information must be transmitted
to the user during a servicing or repair operation, head-mounted
displays will become more common. The technologies here will be
the same as in the medical segment, i.e. LCOS or MEMS scanners.
However, this will represent a small segment of the overall T&M
display market. Similarly we can expect some modest adoption of
touch or voice inputs, but there will be no massive shift away from
the traditional instrument configurations.
Factory Automation - Every element of a modern production
process demands complete documentation and real-time tracking of
yields, quantities produced, process variables, and material flow.
Displays become the critical interface for collecting and analyzing
all this information. At each step, one must know the equipment
status, operating parameters, and all the pertinent information
about the product that is progressing through this step. The display
technologies available today by-and-large already meet the needs
of the automated factory. What we can expect in the future is the
incorporation of displays at virtually every process step and every
operator's station. We can also expect the increased use of voice
processing and head-mounted units that allow the operator hands-free
operation while providing critical information such as instructions
on how to repair a malfunctioning piece of equipment.
Direct view LCDs will satisfy virtually all of the non-HMD applications.
We may also see a limited use of plasma panels for certain common
information functions. However, factory automation should not be
expected to drive the development of new display technologies.
Electronic Home Appliances
The electronic home has been the technologists dream for
perhaps over 50 years. But it has not evolved nearly the way the
early technology pioneers predicted. Consumers have been reluctant
to adopt the many electronic "features" that have been
offered up over the years. And, it turns out, for a very good reason.
The major difficulty is that homes and electronic products have
very different life cycles. Referencing the graph, we can see that
the life cycle of a typical house is over 100 years. At the other
extreme, a desktop computer has a typical life cycle of perhaps
three years. Therefore, if we combine a computer and a house, the
computer will be obsolete long before the new house is even beginning
to be show significant wear. An illustration of this incompatibility
can be found in the intercom systems that were built into houses
ten or fifteen years ago. Today, they look obsolete, old fashioned,
and replacement parts are difficult to find. Yet, the house itself
is in its prime and ready for many more years of productive service.
Consumers seems to have more common sense than the technologists
that keep predicting the future electronic home with all functions
interconnected and run from a central control unit or computer.
From this analysis it is reasonable to conclude that it will be
easier and more sensible to introduce products that are self standing
and do not require permanent installation into the basic structure
of a house or apartment building.
The second major trend that is likely to impact the use of displays
in a home environment is the convergence -- or not -- of television
and the Internet. Again, it is my conclusion that it will not happen
the way some are predicting. Information processing and television
watching are two distinct activities that are not all that easy
to combine. The typical user of a desktop or laptop computer positions
his eyes less than one meter from the screen for optimum viewing.
On the other hand, the typical television viewer sits approximately
three meters from the screen. It is difficult to surf the Internet
from a three-meter distance. Also the usage objectives are typically
quite different. Television is meant to be a non-interactive entertainment
experience while the computer is intensively interactive and often
representative of a business-like environment. Certainly this is
not to say that some users will not appreciate having access to
television broadcasts from their computers, but the two functions
will have only very limited convergence potential. Therefore, we
can expect that most homes will have a multiplicity of entertainment
devices as well as a multiplicity of information processing appliances.
This will be a very positive driving force for the display industry.
Over the next decade we can expect television, computers, and communications
appliances to dominate the usage of home displays. We can expect
a proliferation of specialized electronic appliances rather than
a convergence into some kind of ubiquitous entertainment/information
appliance. We can also anticipate that sophisticated products such
as eye-recognition security systems that attempt to replace simple
and reliable mechanical functions will have very limited and slow
acceptance. Ease of use, cost, and reliability will be important
criteria for all new products.
Internet appliances will be used to acquire time sensitive information,
for electronic commerce, for data searches, for e-mail communications,
and only later for the transmission of real-time video images. Features
such as instant access and virus-proof operation will become commonly
available in response to consumer demands.
An often-neglected market segment, when new technology applications
are being considered, is the product category encompassing toys
and games. This market often turns out to be a leading indicator
for other future products. Currently, we are seeing dramatic improvements
in interactive and visually realistic games, new and innovative
learning aids, and the early efforts at intelligent and interactive
robots. As sensors and voice processing capabilities improve, we
can expect these products to grow in popularity and utility. Over
time we can also expect the wider introduction of virtual personae
and the combination of computer intelligence with video to both
entertain and inform.
Over the next decade, we can expect the CRT to continue to be an
important display technology for television sets. There will be
a stronger shift to LCDs for desktop computers. Plasma panels will
be important for larger screen hang-on-the wall television, but
it is also possible that the expected high price of plasma panels
will encourage the increased adoption of projection systems. Both
front and rear projectors are likely to increase in popularity for
home theater use. There are a number of interesting technologies
that are going to provide major improvements in projection display
image quality. These improved projection systems may present an
interesting challenge to plasma technology in the home entertainment
market.
Mobile Communications
Over the last decade, we have seen a dramatic growth of location
independent communications. This newly found mobility can perhaps
be thought of as "wearable electronics." Unlike the desktop
computer market, this one is far from saturation. Opportunities
abound. Wearable electronics usage breaks down into the two broad
categories of communications (voice or data) and entertainment.
Within the communications segment, in addition to the obvious voice
functions, we are beginning to add data, mapping, monitoring, and
eventually near-real-time video functions. This opens up many new
product possibilities and thereby new display requirements. In the
entertainment segment, the increased capability of portable games,
video functions, and access to music libraries will also drive new
products and new display opportunities.
Wearable electronics presents perhaps the greatest challenge to
display developers. There are some fundamentally conflicting needs
for portable displays. Since they are used in a variety of environments,
from a dimly lit room to bright sunlight, readability is important
so the display must have good contrast and adequate brightness under
all of these conditions. This is not always compatible with the
requirement for low power to achieve long operation from small (portable)
batteries. Size and weight of the display itself are also important
considerations but these can be counter to the need for high information
content. Finally, portable displays must be extremely rugged and
reliable, yet most consumers wish to have them at low (throwaway)
cost.
This market segment will present many opportunities for the exploration
and introduction of the newer display technologies. While the dominant
display technology over the next decade will be the LCD, there will
be excellent new opportunities for Organic LEDs and perhaps even
for FEDs.
Summary - Expectations for Display Technologies
With these many opportunities for the application of displays to
existing and new products, what can we expect from each of the technologies
that are either currently being used or that are under intensive
development? Let us briefly consider each one in turn.
CRTs - This is a technology that is over 100 year old, but
is still the dominant display based on worldwide revenue. The CRT
is far from obsolete. Recently, we have seen the trend to flat screen
CRTs. The current major development push is to reduce the depth
of the CRT while continuing to improve its image quality. We can
expect to see this cost-effective technology to survive for still
many years with continued improvements. A major advantage for the
CRT over any known flat panel technology is that flat panels are
fixed-format displays whereas the CRT is not. Therefore, as resolution
increases the complexity of flat-panel displays increases as the
square of the linear resolution while the CRTs complexity does not.
LCDs - Unquestionably, this will be the dominant display
technology of the next decade. We can expect continued improvements
in image quality and there will be a major trend to larger sizes.
As the display size increases beyond 20 and 30 inches and as prices
continue to decline (at a slower rate than during the past few years)
there will be further penetration into the desktop computer market
and then into television products. A few years from now, LCDs will
begin to challenge plasma panels in the 30" to 40" sizes.
LCD technology will also become prevalent for projection applications.
Plasma Panels - This is currently the only available flat
panel technology for larger-size displays of video images. At this
time, the major challenge for plasma display products is cost. In
the professional and commercial markets this is not a serious impediment
to the early adoption of this technology, but for consumer television
applications the high prices could become a barrier preventing the
anticipated growth toward high-volume sales. For this reason, manufacturers
are working diligently to try to reduce costs while improving efficiency,
brightness, and contrast.
Projection Displays - There are many technologies that can
create viable products. These can range from the traditional projection
CRTs, to LCDs, MEMS, and combinations of light amplifiers and color
converters. We can expect projection displays to be stimulated by
the introduction of new technology variants. They also present a
new opportunity to explore higher color accuracy and higher display
quality than is available from today's direct-view or projection
displays.
LEDs and OLEDs - The efficiency and brightness of these
direct emission technologies makes them highly suitable for use
in lighting applications, signage, and for full-video displays.
Over the next decade, we can expect continued rapid development
of these technologies with intense efforts by many companies to
bring new products to market.
FEDs - A few years ago, field emission technology was predicted
to provide competition to LCDs. Unfortunately, too many promises
were made too soon. Significant technical problems were encountered
and it was necessary to do additional basic materials research before
applications to display products could be considered. This research
is now beginning to bear fruit and we can expect to see a second
generation of developments that should provide interesting display
applications for this technology.
Progress in displays and lighting depends on the discoveries of
new emissive or light-control materials. The only real "breakthroughs"
occur at the materials level. Only after a new emissive or light-control
material is found and thoroughly understood is it possible to create
the display devices that eventually become successful products.
Further progress in creating new displays that are brighter, more
efficient, or more rugged will depend on such materials developments.
The demand for new display capabilities will accelerate over the
next decade.
Since the cycle from early discovery to product application takes
at least ten years and often much longer, the international display
community must be prepared to respond with increased effort and
additional resources in all phases of display research. We in the
display community are increasingly the critical information bottleneck
of the Internet Society. The challenges will be great but the future
will be rich with opportunities.
As always I appreciate hearing your comments and opinions. You
can reach me by e-mail at
Email,
by phone at 425-557-8850, or by fax at 425-557-8983.
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