![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjR82LyejtEA-0UTzVHKedLax9pRl6s3rw6VtzLEh-fCBIpw-RilsO3eCfxEWokmdrLdEXQwKOQ0pBFMkPS8GV5jgyaGCAXD2G3jDAWDayWhyphenhyphenYhrdVS7wYokHyukk0BucmGe6aNQ7RJE7Q/s320/MONITOR.jpg)
TRANSPARENT MONITORS
Go ahead, stare out the window—it’s also your monitor. Displays can already be 75 percent transparent when turned off, thanks to thin electroluminescent fi lms called organic light-emitting diodes, or OLEDs.
Universal Display Corporation in New Jersey and others are developing seethrough conductive materials to replace the last visible part: the grid of circuits that delivers power to pixels.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjR82LyejtEA-0UTzVHKedLax9pRl6s3rw6VtzLEh-fCBIpw-RilsO3eCfxEWokmdrLdEXQwKOQ0pBFMkPS8GV5jgyaGCAXD2G3jDAWDayWhyphenhyphenYhrdVS7wYokHyukk0BucmGe6aNQ7RJE7Q/s320/MONITOR.jpg)
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