December 15, 2004
Tokyo University's wraparound scanner
Tokyo University's Quantum-Phase Electronics Centre has come up with a scanner in the form of a flexible plastic sheet containing organic diodes that can be placed against an object to scan it. This makes it possible to get a perfect scan of both pages of old and fragile books without mauling them, for example. It also doesn't require the amount of light needed by a conventional scanner, as the organic photodiodes pick up reflected light from the object being scanned, though you do need the object directly under a fluourescent light to get a good image.
[Via Slashdot J (Japanese)]
[Some background reading which refers to the Tokyo U work here]
Posted by aragoto at December 15, 2004 02:06 PM | TrackBackComments
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