I have heard a relatively small percentage of people (like yourself) for whom
eyestrain does not seem to be an issue on LCD screens.
Not exact matches
Wear your glasses or contact lenses and don't read «naked eye» as it could cause
eyestrain.
The Installation of task lighting is the normal solution for giving you the level of light that is necessary to help you carry out your work in the best conditions and it will help to reduce
eyestrain when it is
done right.
Wearing it, you don't even catch a glimpse of Google's vision (though you might get
eyestrain trying to read about it on the Glass website).
The LED lamps are specially designed to reduce
eyestrain and glare, allowing you to
do what you love longer.
The battery lasts days, books can be read in full, bright sunlight and doesn't cause
eyestrain, and the refresh is fast and doesn't bother me at all.
If not, why
does an LCD suffice for most computing activities (including reading), but is then suddenly inappropriate for reading?I look at an LCD perhaps 8 hours a day with no
eyestrain, as
do millions of office workers.
I also have a Kobo h20, not so much because it's waterproof, more because it doesn't have the bluish backlight of recent Kindles, which I found causes me as much
eyestrain as a tablet.
I'm not sure what Anonymous is talking about when he says tablets don't cause
eyestrain.
Many people don't like reading on LCDs because they can cause
eyestrain and the battery only lasts a few hours.
However, Kindle for iPad takes steps that iBooks doesn't to alleviate
eyestrain by letting users change the display to a black background with white text (which some may find easier to bear).
I don't experience inreased
eyestrain from the screen; it makes the reading easier for me.
Because in the One - nine - eighties, pages didn't glow, and
eyestrain was a sign of wealth!
Fortunately, there doesn't seem (to me anyhow) to be any
eyestrain with the light on.
While for a while that
did create a debate about
eyestrain but other companies are looking to catch up to the color.
As a result, it
does not cause
eyestrain even on long reading sessions.
Kindle reads like printed words on paper because the screen works using real ink and doesn't use a backlight, eliminating the
eyestrain and glare associated with other electronic displays.
When we asked William Lynch, Barnes & Noble's CEO, about the potential for
eyestrain with Nook Color screen, he said the company had
done extensive research on displays and discovered that
eyestrain with LCDs was not the huge issue many people were making it out to be.
How someone in QA didn't realize the ridiculous amount of
eyestrain one would have to go through just to read crucial pieces of game information is beyond me.
According to many doctors, computer
eyestrain has less to
do with backlight and more to
do with the way you work on computers and e-readers.
Although we originally intended to upgrade the bias lighting on both the HDTV and workstation after establishing that bias lighting relieved our
eyestrain and other issues (which it absolutely
did) we've found our simple DIY solutions have worked well enough that any major upgrades or enhanced DIY projects are now more a matter of cosmetics and perfectionism than necessity.