The world's first scrollable tablet can fit in your pocket
Researchers at the Queen's Lab (Human Media Lab) have successfully created the world's first scrollable tablet. This unique device is named MagicScroll.
Researchers at the Queen's Lab (Human Media Lab) have successfully created the world's first scrollable tablet. This unique device is named MagicScroll.
MagicScroll has a flexible 7.5-inch OLED touch screen, 2K resolution, and circular bending around flexible cylinder body.
To use this screen-scrolling computer, users can use the rotating wheel rolls equipped on each side of the body of the tube or can pull the screen off the body to turn it into a flat form to view web pages. easier.
MagicScroll in cylindrical form can also be used as a mobile phone or recorder.
The device is also equipped with a hand-controlled camera, similar to the Wiimote of Litendo.
The size of this device is small enough to fit in a pocket and is easier to hold than conventional tablets. However, researchers hope they can create a scaled-down version of MagicScroll with the size of a pen that can be carried in a shirt pocket in the future.
See more:
- Duo, accessories that help laptops have a second screen
- What is the screen of infinity? Does it resemble the overflow screen?
- Future phones will have screens on both the front and back
Discover more
scroll screen tabletShare by
Samuel DanielYou should read it
- The first scroll-screen phone in the world is here
- How to Screenshot on a Samsung Tablet
- Chrome OS is ready to replace Android on tablets
- Tim Cook predicts a computer with a touch screen failed
- 3 more years will be the 'booming' time of rotating screen laptops
- The Quiet Details That Make a Sports Betting Platform Feel Reliable
- Instructions on creating toy set images with ChatGPT AI
- How are AI agents changing the journalism industry?
- The launch of uTorrent Web downloads torrent files right from the browser
- Windows 10 October 2018 Update, version 1809 is the official name of the major update
- What is Industrial Internet of Things (IIoT)?