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Flexible OLED screens could become a standard feature of tablets at some point in the futureRetina displays, better cameras and video features as well as smaller form factors are just some of the tablet advances we've seen in the past year. But innovation marches on in 2013. Here are some of the key technology advances you can expect to see in tablets in the year ahead.
High resolution LCD tablet displays from Apple and Google may have caught the eye this year, but the next step in tablet innovation on the display front is arguably OLED.
Organic Light Emitting Diode (OLED) displays have been niche up until with battery such as dell 6T473 battery, dell Inspiron 630m battery, dell Inspiron 640m battery, dell Y9943 battery, dell RC107 battery, dell Latitude D620 battery, dell 312-0386 battery, dell PC764 battery, dell TD175 battery, dell Latitude D820 battery, dell Inspiron 1370 battery, dell G3VPN battery this point – only featuring in select broadcast monitors and much smaller displays, but manufacturing improvements mean that OLEDs can now offer even color performance on much larger displays.
OLED displays promise much richer colors and enhanced contrast ratios, while the flexibility of the molecules could open up the possibility of bendable smartphones and tablets in years to come (the only tablet with an OLED display at the moment is LG’s Vue phablet).
DisplaySearch predicts that Active matrix OLED (AMOLED) display shipments will reach 191 million units in 2012, with its share of the small/medium display market to treble by 2015.
“OLEDs are too expensive, have low brightness compared to LCDs, are still power inefficient compared to LCDs, so are not yet viable for tablets,” said the display expert earlier this year.
Universal Serial Bus technology is commonly used for exchanging data and connecting peripherals on computing devices and, with the notable exception of the iPad, has been featured as an interface on tablets for a couple of years.
USB 3.0 will bring about faster data transfer rates between devices, in fact speeds in theory up to 10 times faster than USB 2.0 (4.8Gbit/s compared to 480Mbit/s). Backwards compatibility is ensured with USB 2.0, although USB 3.0 devices plugging in there will be restricted to the former’s speed restrictions.