Are laptops set for a new roll in the enterprise?

Slip it in your pocket...

By Gemma Simpson, 25 September 2006 12:40

NEWS

Future commuters could be set to swap opening the morning paper for unfurling a laptop screen as the roll-up laptop takes one more step towards reality.

University of Cambridge engineers have developed a series of 'morphing materials' with the ability to change from one shape to another. With the right electronics in place these thin sheets of metal could allow you to download a document to your phone and then unroll a display screen to view it.

Dr Keith Seffen, lecturer in structural engineering, has developed these materials with a small team at the University of Cambridge and told silicon.com: "It will complement the arrival of flexible displays in the future."

Folding structures are already common on the market place: click open your laptop and it doubles in size, pull open your PDA and a keyboard appears.

The more hinges you put on a structure the smaller it will become with space for an increasing number of features. Seffen said "you have the extra freedom to store things in a much more efficient way". But Seffen points out that hinges present weak points on a structure.

Rolling devices can be thought of as having an infinite number of hinges, without any of the weaknesses, he said. Dropping your laptop would no longer be a colossal dilemma.

Seffen said: "By making flexible materials we are also making the structure more robust."

The morphing materials currently developed can hold three permanent structures, or 'tri-stables'. With quad-stables (holding four permanent structures) being a future possibility.

So could you ever use your folding laptop to do, say, origami when you're stuck on the Tube? Probably not, said Seffen: "There will be a limitation."

There are still concerns over the integrity of the structure, having a laptop screen unexpectedly unfurl in your trouser pocket could be an eye-watering experience. And Seffen conceded that "at the moment" absolute structural stability has not yet been achieved.

Mathematical principles are currently being developed by the Cambridge team to predict what will happen and detail the material's limits.

Comments

There is 1 comment. Join the discussion

  1. 1. Richard

    What happened to projected displays?

    Were the patents too strong and the projectors too weak?

    The idea was to project a keyboard image onto any flat surface, along with an image of the screen, and sense the movement of the user's fingers over the "keyboard."

Post your comment

In order to post a comment you need to be registered and logged in.

Log in or create your silicon.com account below

Will not be displayed with your comment

By signing up for this service, you indicate that you agree to our Terms and Conditions and have read and understood our Privacy Policy.

Questions about membership? Find the answers in the Membership FAQ