In this way, part of the screen can remain transparent, while the other displays an opaque white or colored background. If you pull up, say, a side window or panel, it can display it as entirely white rather than see-through by activating all of those LEDs, showing up white as on a normal screen. The micro LEDs are, crucially, capable of making portions of the display virtually opaque, too. Video content is somewhat less viewable in transparent mode-all of the quickly varying colors and motion don't stand out quite as well on a transparent background, but you can still see what you're watching easily enough. (Credit: Joseph Maldonado)ĭesktop icons seemingly float in the air-mostly crisp, with only a slight fuzz around the edges-but remain perfectly usable. Despite the default transparency, it is easy to see images, text, and icons displayed on the screen our photographs here aren't nearly as clear as it was in person, because the effect is simply difficult to capture on camera. In short, it’s extremely cool to see in person, one of those stand-out prototype moments you enjoy before thinking too much about the practicality of it all. We’ll go through those below, but putting them aside for a moment, experiencing and using the screen is what struck me first. (In normal desktop operation, your text and icons will read backward from the reverse side, of course.) Lenovo ran us through some demos of potential use cases, giving a glimpse of future workflows. Your first inclination (and mine) may be to wonder why you’d want a glass display, and what benefits it brings. Micro LEDs present high brightness as an advantage this panel can push up to 1,000 nits, which is also crucial to displaying visibly on clear glass. This screen measures 17.3 inches diagonally, and it is completely borderless, with glass on three sides connecting to the bottom hinge. The display-an array of micro LEDs sandwiched between clear glass-is the obvious draw here, though it’s not the only interesting or unusual part of the design. So, about that transparent laptop screen. For a closer look, and some ideas for what you’d use a see-through screen to do, check out the video above and details below. This is 100% a proof-of-concept device, promising only that this technology is possible maybe it appears in a different product down the line. As it stands, Lenovo currently has no plans to bring Project Crystal to market as a real product. Before you get too carried away and scroll down for a release date or a price, stop here. Export: Save your crosshair to your computer as a.Positions: Display your crosshair on any monitor and manage saved positions for different games.Toggle: Toggle the visibility of your crosshair with many different mouse states and keyboard shortcuts.Images: Upload any image you want to overlay as a Crosshair.Share: Share your favorite designs with your friends.This is by far the safest and most secure way to overlay games. Exclusive Fullscreen with Game Bar Extension: Game bar is a trusted and secure game overlay platform that is built by Microsoft for PC gamers.Designer: Easy to use sliders let you adjust all features of your crosshair.Community: Explore thousands of designs created by the Crosshair X community.You can start out with a featured pro Crosshair or a community design, then make adjustments to create a custom gaming solution that takes your aim to the next level. Get a competitive edge by customizing your crosshair to be clear and precise on every game you play.
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