Queen’s University researchers from Kingston, Ont. have teamed up
with Intel and Plastic Logo to invent a tablet prototype that resembles
and feels like a piece of paper.
Dubbed the PaperTab tablet, the fully-flexible device has an
interactive plastic display and a 10.7-inch, high resolution E-ink
touchscreen.
The tablet, showcased at the International Consumer Electronics Show
(CES) in Las Vegas, Nevada Jan. 8, features plastic transistor
technology courtesy of Plastic Logic and is run by a second generation
Intel core i5 processor.
Instead of using several apps or windows on a single display, users
have 10 or more interactive displays or PaperTabs — one per app in use
as seen in this video.
“Using several PaperTabs makes it much easier to work with multiple
documents,” Queen’s University’s Human Media Lab director Roel Vertegaal
said in a statement.
“Within five to 10 years, most computers, from ultra-notebooks to
tablets, will look and feel just like these sheets of printed color
paper.”
As an example, the device’s “intuitive interface” enables a user to
e-mail a photo in a few simple steps. The user first taps one PaperTab
showing a draft e-mail with another PaperTab showing the photo to
automatically attach the photo to the draft e-mail. The e-mail can be
sent by placing the PaperTab in an out tray or by bending the top corner
of the display.
To create a large image or display surface, the tablets can be
handled much like regular sheets of paper. The user can place two or
more PaperTabs side-by-side to. The thin displays allow the user to draw
or drag images across multiple tabs.
PaperTab also has the ability to file and display thousands of paper
documents that, soon, could make computer monitors and stacks of papers
or printouts unnecessary.
“Unlike traditional tablets, PaperTabs keep track of their location
relative to each other, and the user, providing a seamless experience
across all apps, as if they were physical computer windows,” the
statement says.
“For example, when a PaperTab is placed outside of reaching distance
it reverts to a thumbnail overview of a document, just like icons on a
computer desktop. When picked up or touched a PaperTab switches back to a
full screen page view, just like opening a window on a computer.”
PaperTabs may seem fragile due to their thin and lightweight bodies,
but the devices are hardy and can be tossed around on a table or desk
without harm. In fact, by bending one side of a PaperTab display, users
can also navigate through files and images much like a reader would
thumb through pages of a magazine.
“Plastic Logic’s flexible plastic displays are completely
transformational in terms of product interaction,” says Plastic Logic
CEO Indro Mukerjee.
“They allow a natural human interaction with electronic paper, being
lighter, thinner and more robust compared with today’s standard
glass-based displays. This is just one example of the innovative
revolutionary design approaches enabled by flexible displays.”
Jennifer Cowan in sitepronews.com
Paper-Like Tablet Could Redefine Tablet Market