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Revision as of 10:02, 23 October 2008 by Mac (talk | contribs) (→External links)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)Plastic Logic is a spin-off company from Cambridge University's Cavendish Laboratory, and is a pioneer in polymer transistors and electronics. The technology could cut the price for electronic circuitry by up to 90 per cent and hasten the day when goods including cans of baked beans and items of clothing are made of “intelligent” materials. The principal product the company has developed is a flexible A4-size plastic electronic display the thickness of a credit-card. These devices are intended as a replacement for paper, allowing electronic documents to be transported and read just like paper documents. Mass-production of the displays will begin in Dresden in 2009.
The headquarters of Plastic Logic is in Cambridge, United Kingdom.
See also
Notes
- DEMOfall 2008: Plastic Logic's Reader Is Thinner, Less Ugly Than Kindle, By Brian X. Chen, Wired, September 08, 2008
External links
- Company website
- Plastic challenge to silicon microchip, Peter Marsh, Financial Times
- Plastic Logic will make flexible polymer displays and launch its product in January 2009 (Technology Review)
- Plastic Logic and Toppan Printing
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