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Displair

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Displair is a 3D interactive raster display technology developed by a Russian company of the same name. The Displair projects images onto sheets of water droplets suspended in air, giving the illusion of a hologram. Unlike other cold fog projecting technologies, the images projected by the Displair can also respond rapidly to multi-touch manipulation, as well as allowing taste and aroma to be incorporated.

Russian-made Displair screenless 3D multi-touch display being demonstrated at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) 2013, Las Vegas

History

Developer Maxim Kamanin introduced the Displair at Seliger 2010. In July of that year he chose the "Displair" name for both the product and the company as a portmanteau of the English words “display” and “air”.[1] The company subsequently obtained investment for further development of the prototype, technology licensing, and small-scale commercial production.[2] Applications to date have included displays for in-store advertising and kiosks.[3]

Technology

The Displair device projects still and moving images onto a "screenless" display consisting of cold stable air flow containing particles of water produced by a cavitation method. These particles are small enough not to leave traces of moisture, and their surface tension high enough to maintain stability after contact with physical objects and wind.[4]

Displair uses third party computerised multi-touch technologies to allow control of images with fingers or with other objects. The display can work with up to 1500 touch points simultaneously with a delay time of less than 0.2 seconds.[5] This makes it possible to allow manipulation by more than one user, and also to identify more complex gestures than similar 3D display systems. The company is working on incorporating flavoring and taste interaction with projected images in the future.[6]

See also

References

  1. ^ Василий Романцов (2012-02-07). "Русский гаджет: Максим Каманин (The Russkiy gadget: Maxim Kamanin)". Бизнес-журнал. Archived from the original on 2012-06-22. Retrieved 2012-06-10.
  2. ^ "Russian air screen was invested with $1M". Lenta.ru. 2012-05-24. Retrieved 2012-06-10.
  3. ^ CNN (2013-12-24). "In thin air: Could touch display projected on mist replace physical screens?". Retrieved 27 December 2013. {{cite news}}: |last= has generic name (help)
  4. ^ "Displair company from Astrakhan demonstrated interactive screenless display". kiosks.ru. 2012-04-17. Retrieved 2012-06-08.
  5. ^ TechCrunch. "Move over Kinect — Displair from Russia is a gesture interface in thin air". Retrieved 27 December 2013.
  6. ^ "Astrakhan company Displair showed interactive multi-touch screen". Retrieved 27 December 2013.