In a revolutionary development, a Taiwanese company claims to have
developed a gen-next transparent mobile phone which it says will be in
the market by the year end.
The company, Polytron Technologies, has
already begun marketing a transparent multi-touch phone. Its prototype
uses a 'Switchable Glass' technology.
That is a conductive Organic
light-emitting diode (OLED) using liquid crystal molecules to display
images, the 'Daily Mail' reported.
When the phone is in off mode,
the molecules align to form a milky composition, but when switched on
they re-align to form text, icons, and other images.
Electric current is carried through transparent wires.
"It will happen near the end of 2013. Trust me," said Polytron general manager Sam Yu.
The
device still contains some parts that are not transparent, including a
SD card and SIM card. The microphone, camera, and batteries are also
visible, and will be hidden behind a dark glass cover when the model
goes into production.
The company, according to Yu, will develop a
smaller lithium ion battery that would be much less noticeable. When
complete, the phone will have a dual-sided multi-touch display in front
and back.
The prototype phone has yet to feature any software or operating system, the report said.
A
Japanese company recently used a transparent liquid crystal display
(LCD) in its wristwatch but had trouble adding hardware to the smaller
frame.
"The challenge of using a transparent display in a
wristwatch, and I suppose other wearable technology, is that you need to
store the batteries somewhere else (usually they are stored behind the
LCD panel)," Tokyoflash marketing manager Paul Cooper said.
It
remains to be seen whether the phone's transparency by itself will
attract buyers, as the prototype does not offer significantly different
functions than most smartphones.
"Display quality is paramount," Avi Greengart, research director at Current Analysis, told The Verge.
"If
the display quality is not up to par with the best of today's AMOLED
and LCD screens, a phone using it won't sell even for its novelty
value," said Greengart.
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