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Thursday, August 28, 2008
 OLEDs are like the old saw: They're always a bridesmaid, never a bride. Of all the display technologies developed during the latter part of the 20th century, none have captured the public's imagination like OLEDs. They promise bright, super-thin displays that could be slapped on a wall like a refrigerator magnet, worn on your wrist a la Dick Tracy, or molded to a dashboard. But so far OLED hasn't made it to the mass adoption altar.

Meet our PRO AV bloggers. Editor of PRO AV Magazine Brad Grimes- LATEST ENTRY, 08/20/08:
"Recession? Don't Tell Flat-Screen Buyers"
- PREVIOUS ENTRY, 08/06/08:
"The Softer Side of Signage"
- PREVIOUS ENTRY, 07/30/08:
"They Care, But Do You?"
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The McEvoy Auditorium originally opened in July 2006 as part of the massive renovation project. Led by Hartman Cox Architects of Washington, D.C., the renovation added architectural features like curving staircases and vaulted galleries, as well as four new public-use facilities: the McEvoy Auditorium, the Lunder Conservation Center, the Luce Foundation Center for American Art, and the Kogod Courtyard.
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If HDTVs can be mounted on a wall or over a fireplace like art, why not use them as art? Samsung and Thomas Kinkade Co. have teamed up to produce a prototype that's just that.
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