Dublin-based electrochromic display firm Ntera has acquired two patents from a Swedish consortium to improve display manufacturability and life. “These will enable us to encapsulate our devices in a ...
Displays don't always have to live encased in glass houses. Instead, a color screen can now be printed on almost any material -- plastic, ceramic, paper or textiles -- through a process similar to how ...
Dublin-based company Ntera showed off their NanoChromics Display (NCD) at DEMO 2005 yesterday. The display uses a nanotechnology process to create a more paper-like image than traditional LCD screen ...
WEST CONSHOHOCKEN -- A newly local company is getting ready to unveil technology it says can dramatically improve displays in a wide range of electronic devices. "Everything from a clock to a notebook ...
LONDON — Ntera Ltd., an electrochromic display startup originally based in Dublin, Ireland, has partnered with Seiko Epson Corp. and the two companies have produced working direct drive display ...
Research indicates a steadily expanding market for smart cards that reached $12 billion worldwide in 2007. According to company officials, factors responsible for this growth include demand for ...
IRISH nanotechnology firm Ntera expects to achieve "significant commercial revenues" in the short term, following the re-organisation of its business earlier this year. This is an Irish tech firm ...
Chemicals group Merck and Dublin-based nanotechnology company NTera Ltd, have signed agreements to develop nanomaterial technology. Nanotechnology is computing at the small level of molecules and ...
Irish display technology developer NTera is considering a second production line, in China, to add to its Taiwanese plant commissioned two months ago. “What we’ve set up in Taiwan gets us to ...