LED carpet turns the floor into a screen ift.tt/1dAYkXc Video: - TopicsExpress



          

LED carpet turns the floor into a screen ift.tt/1dAYkXc Video: LED carpet animates your floor BIG-SCREEN TV not involving enough? How about a giant LED-studded carpet that transforms the floor into a vivid display? The design could let animated characters step out of your TV and whizz across the floor or guide passengers at an airport. Announced last week, the carpet is the result of a collaboration between Dutch carpet-maker Desso of Waalwijk and display and lighting firm Philips of Eindhoven. The trick was to engineer a carpet backing that could transmit light, says Dessos Ludwig Cammaert. Instead of the usual opaque, rubbery resin, Cammaert built a translucent plastic backing that can stand up to heavy wear and tear. This is laid on top of a 10-millimetre-thick steel screen peppered with LEDs. The carpet could provide animated signage on the floors of shops, theatres, and hotels, says Ed Huibers of Philips. And at airports, arrows could point passengers toward their departure gate, for example. Architects are looking into other interesting applications now, too – such as placing QR codes on the floor, he says. It is a clever idea to turn the floor into a display, says Simon Parnall of News Digital Systems, a firm developing ways to build large tiled screens cheap enough to cover walls. This technology could have an enormous range of uses, signage just being the first, he says. I am sure interactive gaming applications will soon follow. It very much fits in with the vision of ubiquitous screen technology we share. This article appeared in print under the headline Trip the light fantastic on a floor thats a screen Subscribe to New Scientist and youll get: New Scientist magazine delivered every week Unlimited access to all New Scientist online content - a benefit only available to subscribers Great savings from the normal price Subscribe now! If you would like to reuse any content from New Scientist, either in print or online, please contact the syndication department first for permission. New Scientist does not own rights to photos, but there are a variety of licensing options available for use of articles and graphics we own the copyright to.
Posted on: Wed, 27 Nov 2013 15:22:59 +0000

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