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Machine Prints Lights In Sheets
General Electric in upstate New York has created a trailer-sized machine that prints out OLED light sheets.

(Printing sheets of light)
The size of a semitrailer, it coats an 8-inch (20-centimeter) wide plastic film with chemicals, then seals them with a layer of metal foil. Apply electric current to the resulting sheet, and it lights up with a blue-white glow...
You could tack that sheet to a wall, wrap it around a pillar or even take a translucent version and tape it to your windows. Unlike practically every other source of lighting, you wouldn't need a lamp or conventional fixture for these sheets, though you would need to plug them into an outlet.
The sheets owe their luminance to compounds known as organic light-emitting diodes, or OLEDs.
This invention reminded me of several science-fictional ideas. For example, consider the illuminum tiles used for illumination in Richard Morgan's Altered Carbon and the video wallpaper from Vernor Vinge's A Deepness in the Sky.
Update 13-Mar-2012: See also the wall-lights from Isaac Asimov's 1953 novel Foundation and Empire.
End update.
From New machine prints sheets of light; thanks to rob for writing in with the tip on this story.
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