November 2018 1 6 Report
Hola por favor necesito transformar esta noticia a voz pasiva en utilizando solo el present perfect.
esta es la noticia debe ser tranformada a voz pasiva utilizando el presente perfecto

When it comes time to purchase a new laptop or display for your computer, the question always arises of whether to purchase one with a matte or glossy display. The glossy, glass displays are meant to look brighter and crisper, but they also can act like a mirror because of the reflection caused by the glass.
The days of dealing with a very reflective glass panel may soon be behind us, though. Nippon Electric Glass has used the FPD International 2011 conference in Japan this week to show off its new “invisible glass” panel.
What NEG has done is added an anti-reflection film to both the front and back of the glass that are only nanometers thick. By doing this luminance reflectance is only diminished by 0.1% over a more typical sheet of glass. But the real benefit comes in how much reflections are reduced.
Look at a typical sheet of glass and you will see about 8% of the light reflected off of it. With NEG’s anti-reflection film in place, that is reduced to just 0.5%. However, one question that this anti-reflection technique does raise is how well it would work as a computer display? Would the anti-reflection film cause issues for the light emitted by the display making it through the glass, or would it actually help and make the output even crisper?
As you can see in the image below, the glass on the right really is nearly invisible to the naked eye. It could drastically improve the viewing experience of displays in the future as well as in other situations where glass is used, such as for windows.

Life Enjoy

" Life is not a problem to be solved but a reality to be experienced! "

Get in touch

Social

© Copyright 2013 - 2024 KUDO.TIPS - All rights reserved.