jmward01 2 hours ago

I wonder if this has implications for custom home chips/prototyping. I'm sure a big issue is vibrations but something like this could remove the need for masks at least. (again, not my area so I am clobbering terminology I am sure). It may open up home fab capabilities.

  • volemo an hour ago

    I think abusing a write-off electron microscope to side step the need for masks is also an interesting idea, however, I believe acquiring wafers of sufficient quality and depositing layers to be etched could be the bigger challenge here.

    • jacquesm 30 minutes ago

      And the clean environment as a whole. That's a massive investment and there are a million ways to mess that up.

antimatter15 2 hours ago

This reminds me of the original patents that Magic Leap had, which involved pumping light through a single optical fiber that was wiggled by piezoelectrics into a spiral to project light (https://kguttag.com/2018/01/06/magic-leap-fiber-scanning-dis...).

  • nomel 4 minutes ago

    Seems what it is, but with a "waveguide" instead of an "optical fiber" wiggling about. Seems like a sneaky use of the word "projection" though, since the "surface" the image is "projected" onto is just what the flopping waveguide head traces.

kylehotchkiss 3 minutes ago

Sounds like this will have interesting fiber-optic implications?

CoolThings 2 hours ago

This might be relevant for Augmented Reality headgear.

dmitrygr 4 hours ago

What is this, a movie theater for ants?

  • chihuahua an hour ago

    It has to be at least 3 times bigger than this!

  • m3kw9 3 hours ago

    We can finally say yes to this question

cubefox 2 hours ago

> The chip projected a roughly 125-micrometer image of the Mona Lisa.

This may seem small (barely visible as a dot to the naked eye), but that's also the geometric mean of the Planck length and the diameter of the observable universe. So average size actually.

  • jacquesm 26 minutes ago

    I really can't follow your comment and I've been trying. Would you mind a longer explanation of what you're getting at here?

cordwainersmith 3 hours ago

How do you even fit a video projector onto something that small, the physics feel like they shouldn't cooperate.

cyberax an hour ago

This is actually getting close enough to manipulate the _phase_ of light! And doing that would allow creating true holograms.

Or alternative true augmented reality glasses that are not limited to one focal plane.

darfo 5 hours ago

Oh wait. It does have the correct title. My fruit flies are cheering.

darfo 5 hours ago

Cool. Now I can show videos to my fruit flies! /s

Srsly title should be "MEMS Array Chip the Size of a Grain of Sand Can Project Video"

not

"MEMS Array Chip Can Project Video the Size of a Grain of Sand"

  • projektfu 3 hours ago

    It is actually about a 0.125mm projection, not the size of the chip. But more about steering lasers, which is really what they wanted to do.

gurumeditations 2 hours ago

This is revolutionary. No other way to put it.

  • topspin 2 hours ago

    It certainly looks like something that will find novel applications.