06.03.16
eMagin Corporation demonstrated for the first time in public a direct patterned OLED microdisplay that can reach a maximum luminance of 4,500 nits with vivid colors and in full video mode.
The demonstration was held at the Society for Information Displays annual conference during Display Week 2016.
The new full color DPD display, designated OLED-ULT, provides brightness that meets or exceeds the requirements for the augmented reality (AR) and virtual reality (VR) markets.
“eMagin’s ultra-high brightness OLED-ULT technology is at the cusp of enabling the next generation of AR/VR applications which demand ultra-high brightness, full color imagery with extremely high contrast, compact size and very low power,” said Andrew G. Sculley, president and CEO of eMagin Corporation. “This demonstration generated tremendous interest from hundreds of attendees, including a number representing Tier 1 display companies.
“We are currently shipping our OLED-ULT displays as engineering samples to a few key customers that are interested in ultra-high brightness microdisplays for applications as diverse as aviation head mounted displays to AR and VR applications,” Sculley added. “Our current expectation is that we will begin shipping additional engineering samples to other customers in the fourth quarter of 2016.”
The demonstration was held at the Society for Information Displays annual conference during Display Week 2016.
The new full color DPD display, designated OLED-ULT, provides brightness that meets or exceeds the requirements for the augmented reality (AR) and virtual reality (VR) markets.
“eMagin’s ultra-high brightness OLED-ULT technology is at the cusp of enabling the next generation of AR/VR applications which demand ultra-high brightness, full color imagery with extremely high contrast, compact size and very low power,” said Andrew G. Sculley, president and CEO of eMagin Corporation. “This demonstration generated tremendous interest from hundreds of attendees, including a number representing Tier 1 display companies.
“We are currently shipping our OLED-ULT displays as engineering samples to a few key customers that are interested in ultra-high brightness microdisplays for applications as diverse as aviation head mounted displays to AR and VR applications,” Sculley added. “Our current expectation is that we will begin shipping additional engineering samples to other customers in the fourth quarter of 2016.”