> Glasses aren't really fun to wear when you use a monitor. If you're
> short sighted, you should take off your glasses. If you're long
I have the problem of not being able to see the screen if I take off
my glasses. (My vision is quite horrid, without the aid of my glasses,
my vision is limited to about four inches..)
> this distortion increases towards the periphery of your vision.
> If you sit further back, more of the monitor is in the centre of
> your vision and you get less distortion.
The distortion can be countered by having glasses with a large
surface area relative to one's eye.
> you are running at a lower refresh rate, or simply the fact that
> there's more screen space means that your brain gets tired of
> looking at such a large, flickery picture for a long time.
Low refresh rates have been verified to cause high stress in ergonimic
studies. The industry standard is around 75hz, but >80hz is recommended.
I've found that dark backgrounds are helpful in dealing with the problem
of flickering screens. (I'm a student, and condemned to use public-access
X-terminals in labs.. )
--
_|_|_| S. Gwizdak -- http://www.caughq.org/~wazm
_|_|_|
_|_|_| main(x,y){for(;x++;)for(y=2;x%y;)printf(++y/x+"\0%d\n",x);}
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