Skip to main content

TCL’s 17-inch ‘Scrollable’ display is still science fiction, but we want to believe

TCL’s status as a major display manufacturer is only growing, coming from the top-down with its brilliant TVs and from the bottom-up with its growing smartphone business. But it isn’t resting on those technologies, it’s pushing forward with new form factors and display tech. At a CES 2021 press conference, TCL had two rollable displays to show off: One in a vertical-rolling smartphone-like display, and another in an insane 17-inch “scrolling” tablet display.

tcl csot
TCL/Youtube

The 6.7-inch rolling smartphone concept is something I’ve seen many times over, even from TCL itself. This one’s slightly different because it’s a vertical-rolling display, showing a small near-square display expand out to a “normal” smartphone shape. That’s in contrast to earlier TCL concepts, and LG’s just-teased rollable, which start as a normal smartphone and expand out of one long side to a tablet-like design.

The concept certainly looks neat, and we can see the pathway for this technology making it into real smartphones in the not-too-distant future. On the other hand, there was another announcement right after it that looks like pure science fiction: A 17-inch “scrolling” display.

tcl csot
TCL/Youtube

The extremely futuristic (and completely computer-generated) promo video shows how the huge screen can open up like a scroll, with the main components of the device on one side and a simple grab handle on the other to expand the display. The screen can roll up tightly into one side, and when expanded give you an incredible 17-inches of display space.

The display is actually a printed OLED panel, which is interesting in its own right and is just 0.18mm thick. The release likens it to a piece of paper flapping in the wind, and if that sort of flexibility is truly possible, there’s no doubt that it would be able to roll up into a tight scroll as was shown. The problem is, the rest of the device — it’s incredibly difficult to get a fully-functioning mobile device fit into that sort of a tube form, on top of the mechanism to scroll the display in and out. That’s why this is effectively still science fiction, not reality — but we want to believe.

tcl csot
TCL/Youtube

These announcements technically came from TCL CSOT, which isn’t the TCL we know. It is a separate company owned (in part) by TCL that manufactures displays, and not the proper TCL that releases name-brand products. This is an important distinction because TCL today also teased that it will be releasing a foldable smartphone in 2021 — that’s most likely to be a traditional one-fold phone like the Galaxy Z Fold 2 or Motorola RAZR 2020, and not a rollable. But TCL CSOT technology can easily make its way upstream to a TCL product, as well as head out into the market for another company to use the display in its own mobile device design.

The future will look like this, we just don’t know when.

Editors' Recommendations

Andrew Martonik
Andrew Martonik is the Editor in Chief at Digital Trends, leading a diverse team of authoritative tech journalists.
TCL Wearable Display squeezes a giant HD TV into a pair of sunglasses
TCL Wearable Display

Not too much time was necessarily spent coming up with the current working title for TCL’s wearable display, the, err, TCL Wearable Display, but make no mistake: This is no rushed attempt to bring a pair of smartglasses to market.

Formerly known as TCL Project Archery, this wearable -- which promises a virtual screen the equivalent size to a 100-inch television -- has been shown off in various stages for the past couple of years. At this year’s virtual CES, however, the company responsible for it has finally gotten around to showcasing the wearable in something approaching a market-ready form.

Read more
These tunable eyeglasses let you adjust focus on demand
ces voy tunable eyeglasses eyewear vision voy1

One of the downsides of aging is you often find yourself fumbling in your pocket or purse for reading glasses or holding a menu at arm’s length just to sort the mulligatawny from the minestrone. A new set of tunable glasses, rolled out at CES, is hoping to do away with those inconveniences -- but early users say it still has a way to go.

Voy glasses let the wearer adjust the prescription on the fly, via a small wheel hidden in the front of the frame. Originally designed for people with presbyopia (a $3 word that’s slightly easier to confess in public than saying, “I need bifocals”), the glasses now aim for a wider audience, including drivers and athletes.

Read more
TCL TVs at CES 2021: 6-Series goes 8K, 85-inch XL line debuts
TCL 2021 6-Series 8K TV

TCL put itself on the map in the U.S. when it launched its first 6-series TV in 2018. Along came its 8K mini-LED series in 2019, then it dropped another bomb last year when it brought mini-LED to its 6-series -- meanwhile, other brands still hadn't come forward with their own mini-LED sets. I think it’s fair to say the stakes are pretty high for TCL this year at CES 2021. Can they score another first?

Spoiler alert: Yes
What's new for TCL 6-Series
Let’s start with the 6-Series. In case you don’t recall, TCL brought out the 6-Series in 2018 and it was a hit. In 2019 the 6-Series got quantum dots and performed even better. Then in 2020, TCL gave it mini-LED backlight technology and it took another big step up. All the while, prices for this hot TV series stayed low. So, what’s new for the 6-Series in 2021? One number followed by one letter: 8K

Read more