> How is this possible, when OLEDs have been shown to last longer than > incadescent lightbulbs (which certainly last longer than one to two > years these days)? Something sounds awfully fishy to me.
If an OLED is run at full brightness with a fixed image, the image gets burned in. Each LED "ages" according to its use - it gets dimmer with use. In my case, I'm using the color that ages least, and running it most of the time at a tiny fraction of its max brightness. > Personally, I think it's just a matter of economy of scale. LCDs are > probably quite a bit cheaper to produce, and technology these days > rivals the contrast ratios of OLEDs. OLEDs have a nearly infinite contrast ratio - off is off, on is on. There is no "leakage" because there just isn't any light. LCDs leak if the backlight is on. Hence, OLEDs are ideal for alarm clocks, where they're used mostly in the dark. _______________________________________________ geda-user mailing list geda-user@moria.seul.org http://www.seul.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/geda-user