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Science Technology

E-Paper On Cereal Boxes 447

coastin writes "Wired Mag has an article about electronics maker Siemens, readying a paper-thin electronic-display technology. They say it is so cheap it could replace conventional labels on disposable packaging. Imagine items on grocer's shelves that flash commercials at you as you walk by. From the article: 'When kids see flashing pictures on cereal boxes we don't expect them to just ask for the product, but to say, "I want it", said Axel Gerlt, an engineer at Siemens tasked with helping packaging companies implement the technology.'"
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E-Paper On Cereal Boxes

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  • When kids see flashing pictures on cereal boxes we don't expect them to just ask for the product, but to say, "I want it"

    I envision the day when cereal company is selling hackable E-Paper that comes with edible cereals, or iPod that comes with a BMW.
    • by middlemen ( 765373 ) on Thursday December 15, 2005 @02:58PM (#14266628)
      I envision the day when porn will be flashed on the cereal boxes and the kid's Dad goes "I want it!"
    • I envision the day when cereal company is selling hackable E-Paper that comes with edible cereals

      Not everything is hackable. For example, if you get software on a SmartCard, you probably can't hack it to run your own programs because the ROM is printed between the PVC along with the microprocessor. Same type of problem here. The ePaper will probably be "printed" with the desired animation, and can't be changed. It'll be the moving "holograms" of the 21st century!
      • There still has to be a digital input to the ePaper. Like an LCD, it will always be possible to hack it to display something else.
        • by AKAImBatman ( 238306 ) <<moc.liamg> <ta> <namtabmiaka>> on Thursday December 15, 2005 @03:11PM (#14266748) Homepage Journal
          There still has to be a digital input to the ePaper. Like an LCD, it will always be possible to hack it to display something else.

          You mean, in the same way it's possible to "hack" the FPU out of a CPU into another unit? THINK about it. If they print all the circuitry as a single device, you'd have to have fab-quality tools to directly interface with the ePaper. That is NOT my idea of a "hackable" piece of ePaper. (Especially since it would be cheaper and easier just to purchase a generic ePaper display.) And that's assuming that they don't further cut corners with tricks like not adding eInk to areas that don't change in the animation.
          • While I recall a recent article detailing the etching of a functional Z80 onto glass, I question the ability to integrate large amounts of storage (comparatively) onto a flexible substrate. Is that really practical for a cereal box? The profit margins involved there can tolerate devices that cost pennies, not dollars.
            • While I recall a recent article detailing the etching of a functional Z80 onto glass, I question the ability to integrate large amounts of storage (comparatively) onto a flexible substrate.

              The largest SmartCards currently on the market have 8MBits(1MB) of flash memory [sharpsma.com] on board, plus a 16 bit CPU, plus 8KB of RAM, plus 8KB of ROM, plus RSA and DES accelerators, plus tamper and malfunction sensors. All in a credit card sized device sandwiched between solid PVC, and produced for ~$10 a unit. (You could open a
          • Someone - - will hack it.

            Someone will be able to get Cap'n Crunch's head to animate as goatse. I just hope they do it after they get the box home and not while it's on the shelf.
          • In other words, in order to be able to hack this e-paper, you would have to have all the tools and facilities required to make e-paper available to you. And if you have all the tools available, it will be easier and probably take less time and cost less to just make new e-paper to your own specs.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday December 15, 2005 @02:57PM (#14266616)
    to alienate parents?
    • Underrated (Score:3, Insightful)

      by guaigean ( 867316 )
      This post is underrated. The quote When kids see flashing pictures on cereal boxes we don't expect them to just ask for the product, but to say, "I want it" is absolutely disgusting. They are breeding mindless consumerism, and making the life of any parent that has to take their children shopping with them hell. It's bad enough when kids try and grab boxes as you push by, but having the boxes TELLING the children to pick them up is even worse.
  • Epilepsy? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by slavemowgli ( 585321 ) on Thursday December 15, 2005 @02:57PM (#14266618) Homepage
    Flashing stuff on boxes all over the supermarket? That's got to be a nightmare for those suffering from epilepsy.
    • Ah, I do believe you've identified the proper attack vector.

      You know, I think I feel a bit of strobe-induced epilepsy coming on now... yes, definately.

      (Apologies to real epileptics, but I can and have made the same joke about any number of other things, too. The ADA is a good thing for everybody, not just the disabled.)
      • Re:Epilepsy? (Score:4, Interesting)

        by |/|/||| ( 179020 ) on Thursday December 15, 2005 @03:18PM (#14266816)
        Absolutely. I can't stand animated web pages -- the last thing I want is animated packaging.

        There are potential benefits here, though. For one thing, if you can add some buttons to make the display interactive, you can fit a lot more information onto the label.

    • by dr_dank ( 472072 ) on Thursday December 15, 2005 @03:08PM (#14266721) Homepage Journal
      Flashing stuff on boxes all over the supermarket? That's got to be a nightmare for those suffering from epilepsy.

      In this age of data mining, persons afflicted with a seizure at the supermarket will quickly receive a coupon for a free shake from Baskin Robbins.
    • Re:Epilepsy? (Score:3, Insightful)

      That's got to be a nightmare for those suffering from epilepsy.

      You misspelled "everyone."

      Seriously. Pop-up ads on cereal boxes? I can't fucking wait.

      The epileptics have it easy; once they go into a seizure they will be able to stop paying attention to the damn ads.

  • by Toby The Economist ( 811138 ) on Thursday December 15, 2005 @02:58PM (#14266619)
    > From the article: 'When kids see flashing pictures on cereal boxes we don't
    > expect them to just ask for the product, but to say, "I want it", said Axel
    > Gerlt, an engineer at Siemens tasked with helping packaging companies implement
    > the technology.'

    Western culture appears to have lost its vision.

    New technology being thought of in terms of how much you can make a child coerce its parent into buying cereal?

    We're amusing ourselves to death.

    • True. But so much of advertising is already directed to children. Grocery shopping with the kids can be excruciating. At least they get a workout constantly returning items I reject back to the shelves
    • by hackwrench ( 573697 ) <hackwrench@hotmail.com> on Thursday December 15, 2005 @03:07PM (#14266709) Homepage Journal
      New technology being though in terms of not how to inform consumers but how to bypass the most informed and target the least informed, depending on them to persuade the better informed. Note: the child frequently doesn't actually want the cereal itself in this particular situation, but just the pretty box.

      I can't tell you how many boxes of Frosted Flakes I ate for the primary goal of getting the Disney Afternoon figurine inside. There were also numerous times I thought I wanted something, but didn't actually know what it was.
      • by lrucker ( 621551 ) on Thursday December 15, 2005 @03:57PM (#14267221)
        That's nothing new. When I was in high school I had a job for 1 day as an annoying mall survey person - not the one who accosts you in the mall, but the one who asks the questions once you've been captured.

        Had to ask a woman (mid 20's, high school drop out, and quite frankly couldn't even approach pretty without plastic surgery) if, after looking at an ad, she thought some shampoo that cost more than she made in an hour would make her "beautiful". Was totally shocked when she said yes, and decided I couldn't do a job where the point was to find people's misconceptions and exploit them.

        • and why the proletariat will never be the ruling class or indeed revolt. The smart ones will move out of the proletariat, and it's the smart people that are disaffected in society that will rebel, both the rulers and the rebels using the proletariat as cannon fodder. It's a waste to prey on the misconceptions of the proletariat when there are more effective and economical ways to decrease their purchasing power and increase their utilizability.
    • by tomhudson ( 43916 ) <barbara.hudson@b ... com minus distro> on Thursday December 15, 2005 @03:09PM (#14266734) Journal

      Its illegal in my jurisdiction to have advertising (magazines, etc.) directed to children under 13.

      This is over and above any broadcast requirements.

      This could be a good thing if it gets parents more used to saying "Mo!" to their kids. After all, a pissed-off parent is already hostile to your product.

      And I REALLY don't want to see the ads for Preparation H!

    • Exactly. This only works on the sick individuals that buy their kids things in an effort to make them happy (or shut them up). Granted, I don't have kids myself, but I like to think that my reaction would be to not take them down that aisle anymore, or else try to teach them that you don't need shiny things to be happy, rather than cave in to this twisted capitalistic crap.
    • by LithiumX ( 717017 ) on Thursday December 15, 2005 @03:17PM (#14266805)
      Vision?

      Haven't a great many of the popular advances in the 19th and 20th century been driven by marketing, and the desire to draw attention for purposes of profit? The earliest visions of the phograph's uses were more oriented towards automated marketing than towards the memoranda and music they were actually used for. Color printing was exclusively for the purpose of making product packaging more appealing, and television only became possible as a mass-market item when it was married to marketing (to this day, commercials are the life blood of the networks).

      Early radio broadcasts were practically commerials with a thin veil of entertainment laid over them. It took a little while for radio commercials to seperate from the actual content (when they started announcing the products during frequent breaks, rather than the programs constantly hawking a product within a poorly contrived story).

      Holograms were invented simply to see it done, but the bulk of the funding came from companies who sought to apply them as the new wonder-label (which turned out to remain prohibitively expensive for some time, and just never that appealing).

      Western technology has been driven by three primary needs:
      * direct threats - be it war, disease, famine, etc. Death avoidance.
      * misguided ambition - attempting to create something unrealistic, and ending up with something unexpected (and often unnoticed for some time)
      * commerce - the inherent desire to make people give you money

      Altruism is a noble thing, but it's greed that makes the world actually turn.
      • Erm... that's "phonograph". Not to be confused with "phograph", which is only a product of my diseased imagination.

        Damned wireless keyboards...
      • by jafuser ( 112236 ) on Thursday December 15, 2005 @05:20PM (#14267953)
        Altruism is a noble thing, but it's greed that makes the world actually turn.

        Actually, it's conservation of angular momentum.
    • by BobPaul ( 710574 ) * on Thursday December 15, 2005 @03:18PM (#14266814) Journal
      When kids see [snip] cereal boxes we don't expect them to just ask for the product, but to say, "I want it"

      They already do this. They're kids.
    • We're amusing ourselves to death.

      Didn't something like that happen to the Romans? :-)
    • New technology being thought of in terms of how much you can make a child coerce its parent into buying cereal?

      This has nothing to do with technology. Child product based advertising has been known for promoting things like nagging and other tricks to coerce parents to buy crap for them.

      Actually, its been going on for so long that parents don't even need to be coerced, they will preemptively do things like buy TVs and DVD players for their kids rooms and all over their SUVs to shut them up, instigate their
    • Yeah, it seems like an utterly frivolous and unimaginative use for the product.

      OTOH, I would pay decent money to have an e-Paper library, one sheet, multiple books. Sort of like the literary version of i-Tunes. I wonder when e-book downloads for this thing will become the norm?
    • 2 words: mediatronic chopsticks
  • Hell, i've seen it [imdb.com]. And it's scary.
  • Minority Report (Score:2, Interesting)

    by non0score ( 890022 )
    Looks awfully familiar to that cereal box in Minority Report...of course, this probably is an old idea put into a movie.
  • Soon (Score:2, Insightful)

    Let me know when it's legal to grab people on the street and inject them with chemicals to suggest irresistable urges to buying my company's project.

    (you know it's coming...)
    • Why injections?. Plenty of companies are doing fine with inhalable compounds that do exactly this.
    • Let me know when it's legal to grab people on the street and inject them with chemicals to suggest irresistable urges to buying my company's project.

      Trust me, you'll notice. :-)

      Or was your idea to be first, so you could preempt the market?

      But consider the way molecules are taken up into the nose and influence the brain... and then how "new car smell" and faked baked bread smells are used to sell things.

      We are, more or less, already there!

  • Harry Potter (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Deinhard ( 644412 ) on Thursday December 15, 2005 @03:00PM (#14266643)
    Are we getting close to the moving photographs in the Harry Potter movies?

    Seeing Nick Nolte's mug shot scowling out at me from a post office wall would be most disconcerting.

    Then again, a moving poster of [insert favorite model here] would be most intriguing.
  • Grocery store? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by michaelmalak ( 91262 ) <michael@michaelmalak.com> on Thursday December 15, 2005 @03:00PM (#14266646) Homepage
    Forget the grocery store (especially these days with groceries ordered over the Interent). Why, with e-paper, I'd want my cereal box to be web enabled, because it would be a whole lot better than reading the cereal ingredients over and over again over breakfast.

    Boy, did the prognisticators really miss that one -- everyone kept talking about web-enabled microwaves. Little did they know the web-enabled cereal box would come first.

  • In The Diamond Age, Neal Stephenson predicts chopsticks with messages in Chinese and Japanese running up and down them like movie marques. Soon we'll have advertising on every inanimate surface.
    • Yeah, because all the living surfaces already have [deseretnews.com] ads on them.
    • "Soon we'll have advertising on every inanimate surface."

      And it will lose most of its value, but be cheap enough that it will still be profitable. Signal-to-noise ratio and all that.

      I don't want the grocery store to look like Times Square. If I did, I'd shop at the convenience store in Times Square.
    • by Gabe Garza ( 535203 ) on Thursday December 15, 2005 @03:16PM (#14266797)
      > Soon we'll have advertising on every inanimate surface.

      Why would we limit ourselves to inanimate surfaces? I envision a day when I go to a seafood restaurant and the oysters have a self-updating "I've been out of water DD HH.MI.SS" display attached to their shells; the lobsters have a "My claws currently weight WW ounces each, and I was harvested only HH hours ago" display on their carapaces; and the waiters have dazzling, dynamic pieces of flair attached to their uniforms that vibrantly inform me how much they love their job.

  • Yeah, right (Score:5, Informative)

    by GigsVT ( 208848 ) * on Thursday December 15, 2005 @03:02PM (#14266665) Journal
    I work for a retail label printer.

    Average prices for labels run about $3-$10 per thousand. The most expensive labels on metallic stock with lots of spot colors might be $30 per thousand.

    That's still 3 cents per label for the most expensive ones. I doubt they could even sort out the power supply for these things that cheaply.
    • Start working on your patent for the printable, flexible solar cell.
    • I work for a retail label printer.

      LabelArt in Milford?
    • Re:Yeah, right (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Anti_Climax ( 447121 )
      Well, with something like a cereal box I doubt they would need to cover the entire thing, so you could have the same old box of Frosted Flakes but with an animated Tony the Tiger hawking his wares.

      By leaving most of the original printing intact the application of power becomes optional and could be done through an inductive system set on the store shelf. It probably wouldn't cost the store too much to begin with and would pay for itself after a short period. Not to mention, once the box is off the shelf, an
    • Re:Yeah, right (Score:3, Insightful)

      by YrWrstNtmr ( 564987 )
      I doubt they could even sort out the power supply for these things that cheaply.

      And TV is more expensive than newprint. Guess which one is in deep sales trouble.

    • by orasio ( 188021 ) on Thursday December 15, 2005 @04:51PM (#14267720) Homepage
      I work for a retail label printer.

      I feel your pain, brother. I work for a retail color laser printer. Printers are the worst bosses. This one pays me cash, the bank once said something about yellow dots in my money, and refused to accept a deposit.
  • Maybe we will finally be able to achieve the goal of making a paperless office when e-paper gets good enough. Some how I think the tansition is going to be a long slow and painful one though. I'm guessing the FDT (flattened dead tree) people will go out kicking and screaming much like the current music publishers are. In fact I foresee that it will be even worse than the current music and movie problems simply because it is so much more fundamental a shift. Should be fun to watch though :o)

  • Damn I just had a scary nightmare about cereal boxes demanding I buy them. I'm putting a pad and pen beside my bed. Come on lottery numbers!
  • by Rhys ( 96510 ) on Thursday December 15, 2005 @03:04PM (#14266680)
    Something less recyclable than paper to package all our crap with. That's flashy and annoying. And uses (and landfills) batteries.

    On the bright side you'll always know if the product is fresh or not. Not fresh: no display. Of course then you won't know till you open it if you have Cheerios or Chex Mix.
    • I agree.

      As a side comment, recycling paper is dumb. Planting (and eventually harvesting) trees is a net win for the environment. Chemically treating used paper is a net loss for the environment.

      -Peter
    • by r5t8i6y3 ( 574628 ) on Thursday December 15, 2005 @04:02PM (#14267288)
      and prior to recycling there is the impact of resource consumption.

      i wonder how many more resources go into the production of e-paper over tree/hemp/etc. paper? anyone feel like doing some back-of-the-envelope calculations?

      i feel very concerned when i notice so much focus on recycling and very little focus on consumption. if you are concerned about the earth/your home/"your back yard" ask yourself "how can i consume *less*?" because by consuming less we make the recycling problem smaller.

      if this site http://www.weeeman.org/ [weeeman.org] is at all accurate, we geeks are using quite a bit of our share of the earth's resources with each new computer we purchase. according to this site, if we divide the earth's resources evenly amongst the current population, our individual "earthshare" is equal to ~two football fields. purchasing *one* computer uses ~4.25% of your earthshare. if you purchase six computers you consume 25% of your earthshare. and this doesn't include _any_ of the other things you are consuming (car, house, other electronic devices, etc.).

      here's a couple more sites for more information about e-waste:

      Basel Action Network - BAN
      http://www.ban.org/ [ban.org]

      Computer TakeBack Campaign
      http://www.computertakeback.com/ [computertakeback.com]

      btw, here's where you can get the most eco-friendly paper i know of: http://www.livingtreepaper.com/products.html [livingtreepaper.com]

      peace
    • You could minimize that buy requiring a deposite.

      However, our problem with trash is not volume of space, it's how we manage it.
      We could dig a hole in the middle of the US 3x3x3 miles in size, double the estimated amount of trash we will create in the next 1000 years, and it wouldn't be half full.

      Putting tiny dumps near places where people live is not the best way to manage it anymore.
      Truck it out of neighborhood, swap the trashholder with an empty one, trainf the garbage to a nation wide cetral location.

      I w
  • First things first (Score:5, Insightful)

    by mean pun ( 717227 ) on Thursday December 15, 2005 @03:07PM (#14266711)
    Before we get all the useless and annoying applications of e-paper, could we please get something useful first: a comfortable e-book reader?

    Pretty please?

    Oh, and make it uncrippled. Yes, I'm looking at you, Sony.

    • by Castar ( 67188 ) on Thursday December 15, 2005 @04:49PM (#14267700)
      Exciting developments on that front, actually!

      Two e-ink based readers are supposed to be released soon: The Hanlin V8/V2 [jinke.com.cn] and a device from iRex [teleread.org]. The iRex reader is supposed to support Linux and be released in "early 2006" in Europe. The Hanlin V8 with a proprietary OS is supposed to be released "by the end of this year" in China for around $300, with the Linux-based V2 being released in May worldwide at about $320.

      My money is on iRex, since they're backed by Philips and have a larger screen, but they might be more expensive than the Hanlin device. We'll see!
  • by Dan Morenus ( 179942 ) on Thursday December 15, 2005 @03:07PM (#14266717) Homepage
    A disgruntled cereal packaging company employee quits, and a few weeks later at 5:00pm some fine Sunday all the boxes on the supermarket shelf simultaneously and inexplicably start flashing goatse...
  • Curse or Blessing? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by BeBoxer ( 14448 ) on Thursday December 15, 2005 @03:07PM (#14266719)
    Part of me thinks e-paper is going to be really cool and will allow us to make some neat gadgets. But at the same time, I'm terrified of what the marketing folks are going to do with it. We are already at a point where advertising pervades our environment everywhere we go. When it all starts flashing and jumping and pointing and demanding our attention at all times I think I'm going to go totally insane. I really think I might just snap and actually go crazy. And I suspect I'm not alone.
    • You're not alone.

      There is a growing urge among intellectuals, at least the ones I talk to, to run screaming for the hills, back to gardening and raising your own livestock; at the very least, there is a wish to live in smaller towns with simpler ways. All the shiny buttons have lost their lustre; I'd like to enjoy Nature before it's all polluted and stripped. Thank the gods for telecommuting - now where's my 40 acres and a mule?
  • by Guspaz ( 556486 ) on Thursday December 15, 2005 @03:08PM (#14266726)
    They've been talking about ePaper like this for years, along with a ton of other technologies. ePaper doesn't seem to be any closer to their claims now than it was years ago.

    OLED too. Considering they keep showing off larger and larger displays, and the stuff is supposed to be dirt cheap to manufacture, I sure haven't seen any OLED displays bigger than a few inches across. If they are truely as cheap as they claim they are, lifespan isn't an issue as you could buy frequent replacements. Make a 17" OLED display with a modular capability to easily swap out the display itself. If it only cost $50 for the display itself, replacing it a few times during the lifetime of the product could still be cheaper than existing technology.
  • by Anonymous Coward
    Cool - Lets replace biodegradable*, recyclable paper boxes with a mix of paper plastic and metals that can't be recycled and will leech nasty stuff (think batteries) into the environment.

    *OK, the inks involved can be fairly nasty, but there are less nasty options used by some.
  • Eye scanners to personalize the displays can't be far behind.
  • Vi4g7a (Score:2, Funny)

    by uberjoe ( 726765 )
    Does this mean that I will get 'organ enlargement' spam flashing on my condoms?
  • by mypalmike ( 454265 ) on Thursday December 15, 2005 @03:14PM (#14266786) Homepage
    Miniature displays in color could appear on consumer-goods packaging, including medicine vials, in 2007, with a resolution of 80 dpi, Gerlt said.

    "You say the defendant, Local Pharmacy Inc., failed to warn your late husband about possible side effects of the drug?"

    "Yes, sir."

    "Show me the bottle. Let's see here. 'Not to be taken with alcohol. May cause dizziness, blindness, and death.' Clearly, if he had read the bottle, he would have known about the 'death' side-effect."

    "Sure, but the label didn't say 'death' until just an hour ago. It said 'headaches'."
  • by Zordak ( 123132 ) on Thursday December 15, 2005 @03:15PM (#14266794) Homepage Journal
    Grassroots Press
    For Immediate Release.

    A recent conference of historians meeting in the bombed-out shell of a Hyatt hotel held a panel discussion on the cause of the downfall of human civilization as it was once known. The group uanimously traced the downfall of civilization to the following statement from the early part of this century:

    Imagine items on grocer's shelves that flash commercials at you as you walk by.
    "What were they friggin' thiking!" exclaimed noted historian Dulcinea Bumkis. "I mean seriously -- wasn't there anybody who looked at this and thought, 'That's the most idiotic idea I've ever heard.'" Another historian noted that a little-known insurrectionist going by the handle "Zordak" on a popular message board advocated just such a position, but he was quickly drowned out by a chorus of six-year-olds chanting for Cocoa Puffs.
  • It'll be a large grocery store, and they'll each have 100 4-year old kids. Boys, all of them hungry boys.
  • Will there be a wave of EcoHackers who override the labels and put a kid getting fatter and fatter and then dying of a heart attack on those boxes of sugar-sugar-sugar-fatty-sugar-froster-sugar-flakes ? Cuz that would be cool.

    Or an even better way, since telling people they'll get fat if they eat that stuff, would be to put goatse on there. Still want it? =) Nope, and didn't have to tell you anything either.

    I can see Tubgirl on Count Chocula.
  • by The Famous Druid ( 89404 ) on Thursday December 15, 2005 @03:22PM (#14266849)
    ... in the Supermarket Riots of 2008.
  • Pathetic parents? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Nutria ( 679911 ) on Thursday December 15, 2005 @03:22PM (#14266850)
    When kids see flashing pictures on cereal boxes we don't expect them to just ask for the product, but to say, "I want it"

    And I expect good parents to whack them upside the head until they say please.

    And then whack them upside the head until they politely shut up after the parent says "No".
  • by Trip Ericson ( 864747 ) on Thursday December 15, 2005 @03:22PM (#14266851) Homepage
    ...it's that in a world where all the advertisements are flashly, the plain one stands out.
  • Adult? (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Sv-Manowar ( 772313 ) on Thursday December 15, 2005 @03:24PM (#14266875) Homepage Journal
    I can see there being huge money in this for the first adult publication company to make moving porn magazines, or moving porn images on paper. The hype alone would eat up the initial cost in sales, and they could build up a huge brand on being the only one to offer it.

    The adult industry was the original driving force behind the internet progressing, so who knows what will happen next. If theres money in it, you can guarantee that the big adult companies will come knocking on the door after a while.
  • ugh (Score:4, Insightful)

    by slashdotnickname ( 882178 ) on Thursday December 15, 2005 @03:25PM (#14266890)
    Imagine items on grocer's shelves that flash commercials at you as you walk by

    And imagine me walking to the nearest competitor that will not annoy me with real life pop-up adds.
  • Cerealblock? (Score:2, Interesting)

    by dg13 ( 858863 )
    Grocery stores will be like the web prior to adblock, but then google will find some cool way to integrate relevant ads by scanning what is in your cart. "Hey you can make manicotti with what you have in your cart plus ricotta cheese and this box." All text, of course.
  • by nycroft ( 653728 ) on Thursday December 15, 2005 @03:31PM (#14266933) Homepage
    It seems that Phillip K. Dick's vision of a future where no one can escape annoying advertising is coming true. If we're not careful, Orwell's prediction of government controlled speech will come true. Oh wait...it already has [wikipedia.org].
  • I dont think so... (Score:3, Insightful)

    by mustafap ( 452510 ) on Thursday December 15, 2005 @03:38PM (#14267015) Homepage
    E-Paper or not, these displays will need power. From batteries. What an environmental nightmare.
  • Let's put it all together, shall we? Not only will the electronic cereal package be advertising to you, but it will also be tracking your cereal preferences, and as you look at the box, it will be looking at you and everything else in the room, and listening in on your conversations, which will be sent over the box's internet link to a goverment data center where the recording will be studied and retained for 20 years.

    Marketing people have proven themselves to be remarkably effective at minipulating our beh
  • by ChrisGilliard ( 913445 ) <christopher.gill ... m minus language> on Thursday December 15, 2005 @03:54PM (#14267198) Homepage
    ink-printed images of today to a digital medium of flashing graphics and text that displays prices, special offers or alluring photos, all blinking on miniature flat screens.

    This means that as people check out, the cash register could swipe the RFID tag on the umbrella that was just sold and tell all the other umbrellas to raise their price on this e-paper by $1.00 because it might be raining.
  • by Animats ( 122034 ) on Thursday December 15, 2005 @04:31PM (#14267568) Homepage
    The E-Ink/E-Paper crowd is always talking about how they'll have displays that are really cheap, really big, really soon. Yet they're not trying to break into the laptop or TV markets. What's wrong with this picture?

    You can buy an E-Ink Prototyping Kit [eink.com] for $3000. This is a sheet of "E-ink" material, with the little balls that rotate, mounted on top of an 6 inch LCD panel, attached to a little computer. Runs Linux, even. This gets you a little black and white display. Since there's an LCD panel behind it, this can't be cheaper than an LCD panel. It is sunlight-readable, though.

    There are some E-Ink point of purchase displays, but they're fixed signs where sections can be turned on and off, much like the special LCD displays that are used in control panels. These are still a few hundred dollars. Along the same line are the various "E-Ink clocks".

    If you want a display that holds its image with power off and is sunlight readable, try Kent Displays [kentdisplays.com]. It's not "E-Ink", but it actually works.

How many QA engineers does it take to screw in a lightbulb? 3: 1 to screw it in and 2 to say "I told you so" when it doesn't work.

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