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Monitors for People with Poor Eyesight?

tuxbeej writes "Just recently I've been told that I may be developing keratoconus, a non-inflammatory eye condition in which the normally round dome-shaped cornea progressively thins causing a cone-like bulge to develop (thanks, NKCF!). As a result, my eyesight will get worse and it's getting harder to see on a 15" monitor. Being 22 years old and studying MIS, I've been hoping to keep my eyesight for a long, long time. Anyway, I was in the market for a new monitor and I was curious to know if anyone has done shopping for a monitor intended for someone with bad eyesight? Are there any recommended sizes, features, brands? It seems like a generic question, but I'm curious to know if certain technologies have any advantages over another or if there is a site out there that handles info like this." We had an older article about CRT's vs. LCD's.

258 comments

  1. Why not one of the big LCD projector dealies? by corebreech · · Score: 4, Informative

    Yeah, it's 1024x768, but it covers the whole wall. Nice contrast, no flicker... hard to see how there'd be any eye strain with that if you have it set up right (proper distance from projector to wall, and between you and wall.)

    Of course, the things make a racket.

    1. Re:Why not one of the big LCD projector dealies? by h4l0 · · Score: 2, Funny

      on top of that playing quake 3 on one of those projector dealies is a blast!

      --
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      --
      Any Spelling Or Gramatical Errors In This Post Are There On Purpose.
    2. Re:Why not one of the big LCD projector dealies? by keiferb · · Score: 0, Redundant

      mmmm... wall-sized counterstrike.

    3. Re:Why not one of the big LCD projector dealies? by acrhemeied · · Score: 3, Insightful

      But the bulbs cost ~$300 a pop... this would be an expensive display device to keep running. I don't think they're designed for continuous use in mind.

      Does anyone know how often LCD projector bulbs need to be replaced?

    4. Re:Why not one of the big LCD projector dealies? by skt · · Score: 2

      It depends on the model, they are rated for a certain number of hours.

    5. Re:Why not one of the big LCD projector dealies? by fleener · · Score: 5, Informative

      Contact your local blind support group. They will have computer resources/referrals for people with "low vision." You may not consider yourself visually impaired, but you are. They can help.

    6. Re:Why not one of the big LCD projector dealies? by 56ker · · Score: 3, Informative

      Or to save you the expense of a new monitor - there are various programs that magnify a bit of the screen for you - if you're running Windows check out the acessibility options in Control Panel.

    7. Re:Why not one of the big LCD projector dealies? by mstrjon32 · · Score: 2, Informative

      Most bulbs last 1000 hours, which is nothing. Thats about a bulb every month and a half if you burn it 24/7. Not very cost effective, although fun for Quake and DVD's =)

    8. Re:Why not one of the big LCD projector dealies? by bleckywelcky · · Score: 1


      I've imagined being able to play CS, Q3, or other variant thereof on a wall with a projector. How does it feel? Are there any problems with a delay between your actual game play and what is being displayed? How about display rates on the projectors themselves? I'm not entirely sure how the projectors function; since they are usually used in presentations and what not, I would imagine that if display rates had to be worked on, they would not develop them too much as presentations don't require high rates. All in all, anyone care to share their experiences playing FPSs on projectors? Some economy models are coming out in the $1k range too, anyone know how those compare too higher quality ones for playing games? We need some sort of in-depth review in this area.

    9. Re:Why not one of the big LCD projector dealies? by Steev · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The "1000 hours" estimate is based on normal use, which burning it 24x7 is not. The bulb would last significantly longer if it was on all the time.

    10. Re:Why not one of the big LCD projector dealies? by packeteer · · Score: 3, Interesting

      get a matrox card it is SOOOOO worth it...

      get a dual moniter one too... i know you wanted a new moniter but a new vid card is good too... anyway matrox cards are by far the clearest sharpest cards out there...

      it will reduce eye strain AND their dual moniter cards have the option for low visibility functions such as a magnifier for the second moniter and the first one is the actual screen... anyway i would advice dual lcd's on a matrox G550 dual dvi

      --
      unzip; strip; touch; finger; mount; fsck; more; yes; unmount; sleep
    11. Re:Why not one of the big LCD projector dealies? by AndyChrist · · Score: 2, Informative

      It's okay. I had trouble as I was a little too close to the wall. About comparable to playing on an LCD.

    12. Re:Why not one of the big LCD projector dealies? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Anothe, less expensive option...

      http://shop.store.yahoo.com/tcclub/olfmd250w.htm l

      (cause of a Google search for )

      --TE

    13. Re:Why not one of the big LCD projector dealies? by Afrosheen · · Score: 2

      This is true, the 2d on the Matrox cards is second to none. However, avoid these cards like the plague if you ever play 3d games, they're horrible for that.

    14. Re:Why not one of the big LCD projector dealies? by Cplus · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      I entirely agree with you about subway's new cut. ALthough the wonderful thing is that most of the time they'll do the old cut if you ask for it. Although I have to think that at some point we'll have run out of Subway staff members who remember the old cut and then what shall we do?

      --
      "Share your knowledge. It's a way to achieve immortality." -- Dalai Lama
    15. Re:Why not one of the big LCD projector dealies? by nostriluu · · Score: 1

      I bought a "big LCD projector dealy" almost a year ago to use all the time, an Epson 700c (6lbs, 1024x768, 800 lumens). The bulb is rated for 2000 hours. Contrary to what you've said, the contrast is not that great, though you don't notice it most of the time. The screen can be "too big," causing neckstrain, and it is noisy and creates a lot of heat in a room (though there are quieter models).

      It is much more difficult if not impossible to have "correct" posture and therefore avoid body pain with this kind of arrangement, so I still use ye olde desktop display for many computing sessions.

      It's lots of fun for multiple people sharing a computing session, excellent for films, and if you set it up right with a good couch, it can be a very nice slacker monitor. However, I have a friend with very poor vision, and he still had trouble seeing the display on a wall.

      By the way, projectors, depending on the model, can display a variety of resolutions.

    16. Re:Why not one of the big LCD projector dealies? by Big+Jason · · Score: 1

      If the Matrox cards are so superior, why don't they support 1600x1200 through DVI? ATI and Nvidia can.

    17. Re:Why not one of the big LCD projector dealies? by FleshWound · · Score: 1
      If the Matrox cards are so superior, why don't they support 1600x1200 through DVI?
      "If that car is so fast, why doesn't it have a 10-disc CD changer in the trunk?"

      *eyeroll*
  2. Monitor by malcolm2r · · Score: 2, Informative

    A large LCD would probably be the easiest on the eyes, if not on the wallet. If you can afford a large lcd monitor, I would go for it. Otherwise a large CRT would have to do. That said, any flat screen large monitor is kewl.

  3. From my experience... by Latent+IT · · Score: 5, Informative

    It's not just the monitor, but the environment the moniter is used in. I'm 23, and if it weren't for corrective lenses, I'd be legally blind. Now, what works best for me is a nice, flat, 21" monitor.

    The flatness of the monitor works very well, since it cuts down on glare. And the nice size of the monitor lets you put some distance between you and it. If you run that big bugger in 1280x1024, you'll be doing fine.

    Make sure you don't use the monitor in a darkened room often, that'll cause you problems, and if you wear glasses, it has a pretty good chance of giving you a headache. And if you sit near a window, you might want to get an anti-glare screen. Having bright spots, (either the monitor in a dark room, or glare on the screen) can cost you some vision, given enough time.

    1. Re:From my experience... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny
      LatentIT writes:
      I'm 23, and if it weren't for corrective lenses, I'd be legally blind.
      Kid, I hate to preach, but you're just gonna have to stop playing with yourself.
    2. Re:From my experience... by Latent+IT · · Score: 2, Funny

      Hell, I'm on the ass end of that joke, and I think it's funny. ;p

    3. Re:From my experience... by sharkey · · Score: 1, Offtopic

      I remember one time, my Dad caught me behind the barn doing something I shouldn't. He told me, "Son, if you keep doing that, you're gonna go blind."
      So I said, "Dad, I'm over here!"

      --

      --
      "Outlook not so good." That magic 8-ball knows everything! I'll ask about Exchange Server next.
    4. Re:From my experience... by FleshWound · · Score: 1
      I'm 23, and if it weren't for corrective lenses, I'd be legally blind.
      Except for the fact that the definition of "legally blind" stipulates that you must have a certain level of vision WITH corrective lenses. =)
  4. Sony FD Trinitron by PoiBoy · · Score: 5, Informative
    I have always found monitors with FD Trinitron CRT's (with the flat surface) to be especially easy to look at for extended periods of time. I have had a 19" Dell P991 monitor for well over two years, and it still looks great.

    Do not be tempted to just run your video at low resolution. I would instead suggest running at a higher resolution, and use better fonts at a larger scale to read; this way they won't look so ragged. Also, anti-aliased fonts might be easier to look at as well.

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    1. Re:Sony FD Trinitron by xcomputer_man · · Score: 1

      They have some of them humonguous monitors at my school's library marked for people with disabilities. I don't get it though, the keyboards have braille dots on them, but the monitors are running at high resolution and very fuzzy at that ... I keep wondering if it was somebody's cruel idea to spite blind people!

    2. Re:Sony FD Trinitron by jameslore · · Score: 1

      Agreed. I went and bought a (rather expensive) Sony G420. It's worth every penny, and then some.

    3. Re:Sony FD Trinitron by Slashdot+Fool · · Score: 1

      I'd second both points here, and add that Mitsubishi Diamondtron-based monitors are great too. These are mainly branded Mitsubishi or Iiyama and I believe they are technologically similar to Trinitron (presumably Sony's patent must have expired).

      I have a 17" Mitsubishi Diamond Pro 87TXM dating from I think about 1996, and it's still better than a good 85% of the monitors I see, Trinitron included. If I ever get a job, I'm getting a 22" Diamondtron *immediately*.

      Steff

  5. Xmag by beta21 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I thought this was what Xmag and magnifier was for.

  6. old adage... by tongue · · Score: 4, Informative

    Despite whatever nonsense the latest women's rag is spouting off...

    BIGGER IS BETTER.

    go for at least 19" and use 1280x1024 res... 21" would probably be better if you can afford it. I seem to be able to read better off my laptop if the text is antialiased properly (a big "if" on linux, unfortunately--the new kde is awesome for this), but i haven't had the chance to compare to a flat-panel monitor that was worth a shit. I think part of the laptop's appeal (aside from portability) is that the screen is much easier to tilt and has a wider range.

    1. Re:old adage... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I'd say that the old adage is to take a 5-minute break every two hours to reduce eye strain, blink your eyes often (to minimize dryness/irritation), reduce glare, sit-up straight, etc.

      And ever since I have been diagnosed with CVS (Computer Vision Syndrome), I quickly got off a CRT and bought myself a nice LCD screen. My eyes can't thank me enough. ;) Anyway, here is a link to a CVS test I found while searching Google.

    2. Re:old adage... by thogard · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Bigger is better to a point.
      I find that with a large color monitor (or LCD) and my glasses I get a very anoying spherical aberrations which cause the colors to appear as if they weren't converging on the edges of the screen. I used to deal with this problem with a very large Blit like terminal (letter sized, black/green, high res, designed by Pike & crew). Now I have a 1024x768 15" LCD.

      I've found the best thing to keep my eyes sharp is long drives in the country where I can focus a long way away or flying around in small planes.

    3. Re:old adage... by paulcammish · · Score: 1

      I have the exact same problem, and it used to drive me mad with the old CUB monitors on the BBC Micros - especially with colors such as Magenta, which was really distracting.

      As far as i can work out (feel free to correct me anyone) its because I suffer from an Astigmatism and Nearsightedness, which along with doing some mad realtime-picture-ratio-adjustment (ie 4:3 stretched to 16:9) as I look up and down, causes color seperation.

      Lots of fun, but a real bast when I change my prescription and keep falling down stairs which look 3" deep but are 6".

      Right now, im using a 17" Dell monitor with a Trinitron tube, but due to the incredibly small space of my flat, im looking for something like a 15" Panel, so i can push it right back on the desk and then sit up properly on the chair.

      Ah, the torture we suffer as geeks, huh? Eyesight failing, and now Posture problems!

      -- Paul

  7. hmm by AnimeFreak · · Score: 5, Informative

    I beleive the ultimate solution is to talk to an optometrist about your situation.

    I was visiting one just a few months ago and I saw various information on computers and bad eyesight. They might be able to give you information of what you should look for and maybe they might have something that will help you use your computer.

    I wouldn't mind a monitor that would fix my slight colour-blindness. :)

    1. Re:hmm by sparrow_hawk · · Score: 1

      PC Magazine's Jim Seymour has periodically advocated special PRIO computer eyeglasses. ("The Civil Workplace") Apparently eyestrain is due to standard eyeglasses being tuned for a printed page, which doesn't refresh like a CRT does. PRIO's explanatory page goes into further detail. I don't know personally how well this works, but it might be worth a shot.

  8. another thought by cuyler · · Score: 2, Informative

    I have definately noticed that an LCD screen is much easier on the eyes. Less strain - more relaxing. Not sure if that would have anything to do with bad eyesight but with an LCD screen you can sit closer to it more comfortably and look at it for longer periods of time.

    And bigger is always better...except for dot pitch...small is better there.

    On another note with respect to bad eyesight...does anyone really use the high-contrast theme that comes with windows (the white on balck theme)?

    1. Re:another thought by Latent+IT · · Score: 3, Funny

      Oooh, oooh! I do!

      Actually, on one computer at work, I use the high contrast white scheme. Because the poor 2000 server happens to have a B&W monitor. ;p

    2. Re:another thought by afedaken · · Score: 1

      Not that it's topical, but I use the extra large, high contrast theme under win98 on the PC I've got hooked up to my TV to play divx anime fansubs and the like.

      With the rez being so bad on my card (a sis 6326m which only outputs at 640x480 to Tv...), nothing else is readable due to blur. On the positive side, with the inherent blurring of a TV, atrifacts in the video are much less noticable. :)

      --
      If there's a castle floating upside down in the sky, then there's a castle floating upside down in the sky.
    3. Re:another thought by Steev · · Score: 3, Funny

      Better yet, does anyone use the old "Hot Dog Stand" color scheme that came with Windows 3.1? :)

      Man, that thing was ugly.

    4. Re:another thought by einTier · · Score: 2
      It was all about "Plasma Power Saver".


      Seriously though, I think I was the only person in the world that liked "Black Leather Jacket".

      --
      -------------------------------------------------- $665.95 -- retail price of the beast.
    5. Re:another thought by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      God, that takes me back! When everybody else had left the office for the evening, I use to set up Hotdog on all the machines. A man's gotta have a hobby, right...?

    6. Re:another thought by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, you're not alone. I also had a penchent for BLJ...

    7. Re:another thought by Grab · · Score: 2

      Definitely. Having used an LCD monitor, I don't ever want to have to switch back to a CRT. Absolutely zero glare, so even if you're working opposite a window you have no problems seeing. And the difference in picture sharpness is not even worth discussing - there is no CRT anywhere with as good sharpness as an LCD.

      Assuming you're running at the LCD's proper resolution, of course. There's a guy at work with a 1280x1024 LCD who runs it at 1024x768 and then complains about the picture quality! Well DOH! ever hear of Moire artifacts? apparently not...

      Grab.

  9. Photons are just photons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Every screen display device does the same: emit photons at (x,y)-coordinates on the screen. The only way to change *something* is to use a projector and a big screen. The angular resolution from your seat will be roughly same (same number of pixels/degree), but the photons are coming from farther away so your eyes' focus will be different.

  10. Digital Ink by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    My eye sight became worse rapidly due to LCD screens. Passive matrix LCD was much worse to your eyes than TFT( active matrix ) LCD.
    However, LCD has a light bulb behind it, and CRT monitor is also something like an light bulb.
    Thus, you are basically looking at light bulbs when you use your monitors. As a result, your eye sight gets worse.
    I used computers more than 15 hours/day.
    So, I also hope new display technology which is not so bad for eyes.

    I think this ( http://www.southern.com/natasha/stories/story_digi nk.html ) would help the situation.
    You can read texts with same size on paper as those on CRT/LCD screens, can't you?
    So, the digital ink would be helpful. Because it doesn't have any light bulb thing in it.

    I hope that device could be introduced next year with inexpensive price tag. :)

    1. Re:Digital Ink by Steev · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I have used computers (with CRT displays) for at least 4 hours a day (more like 8+ hours/day now that I actually work in the industry) since I was 14. I'm 25 now, and I still have BETTER than average vision.

      I'm always sorry to hear about people losing their vision, but I really don't think it's because of staring into monitors. I've only used a computer with an LCD screen when I was given a laptop by work for a week-long business trip, so I really don't think CRTs are doing the damage.

  11. Be positive! by MulluskO · · Score: 5, Funny

    Don't think of it as bad vision, think of it as bio-hardware-accelerated antialiasing.

    So spend that money that you would have spent on a GeForce 4 and buy a large, flatscreen monitor.

    --

    Too busy staying alive... ~ R.A.
    1. Re:Be positive! by leviramsey · · Score: 1

      Of course, it could be difficult to buy a GeForce4.

    2. Re:Be positive! by drix · · Score: 2

      "Dissecting humor is like dissecting a frog. Few people are interested, and the frog dies."
      -- E.B. White

      --

      I think there is a world market for maybe five personal web logs.
    3. Re:Be positive! by Osty · · Score: 1

      Only if he's buying a new computer with the GeForce4 pre-installed. (Next time, read the link you post. It explicitly said that distributors to OEMs were having a hard time getting stock, because nVidia is pushing them hard in the retail channels. That means cards from Hercules, Elsa, Visiontek, and others will be easier to find because less stock is going to OEMs and more to store shelves.)

      More importantly, do not get suckered into buying the GeForce4 MX, as it's not a GeForce4 at all. The GeForce4 is the nv25 chipset, while the GF4MX uses the nv17. In other words, the GF4MX is little more than a GF2 (the GF3 being the nv20, the GF2 GTS being the nv15, and the GF2 Ultra being the nv16). Thus, the GF4MX is a GF4 in name only.

  12. English response by ksb · · Score: 2, Funny

    Go for the special foriegn language monitor for english tourists... it will help buy just SHOUTING what you want SLOWLY and CAREFULLY in the hope you finally UNDERSTAND ;)

  13. Envision by kermit1221 · · Score: 1

    I don't recommend monitors by Envision. I bought a 17" one and keep getting eyestrain feeling headaches from it. My old 14" Sony Trinitron never did that to me (finally had to retire it when the red died...). I've also never had any problems with my wife's 15" Acer (54e, the only one I know the model number of).

    1. Re:Envision by gotr00t · · Score: 0

      I really hate CRTs now that I have a modest sized LCD. It is much easier on the eye, and although more expensive, you do get a great deal. As for gameplay, I haven't really expierenced any problems with the screen not getting updated enough, as many have said was a problem due to the LCD's natural slow-response nature. I have had the red die out out of 2 monitors now. I had to take apart one (don't do this without proper insulation and possibly gloves, these things, even while off, can give off a nasty shock) and fiddle with the electron gun in order to reactivate the red. On the other one, it turned out to have a bent pin in the connector, which prevented it from going into the socket where it's supposed to go.

  14. I have it too. by certsoft · · Score: 5, Informative
    I was diagnosed with keratoconus in my early 20's as well. I'm now 45 and still programming. I use 17 inch screens at 1024x768 and I normally do use a larger font to make it more readable.

    I first tried hard contacts (to try to flatten the cornea) but just couldn't handle them, so I've stuck to glasses. I'm going to get a new perscription after I move (next month), after 4 years I definately need them. In my case at least having a lot of light helps.

    1. Re:I have it too. by schwatoo · · Score: 2, Informative

      Me too... My specialist told me that the rigid contacts dont actually flatten the cornea as such (which is what I thought too) but rather combine with the cornea and the tear fluid inbetween to act as a sort of super-cornea

      Luckily I dont contact lenses at all yet (the cone caused by the KC is below the center of my cornea and so doesn't affect my vision yet).

      --
      I have trouble with passwords among other things.
    2. Re:I have it too. by MsWillow · · Score: 5, Informative

      Ditto. I was diagnosed about age 17, and I'm now 42. The hard contacts work for me - they slowed it waaaay down. I've had one cornea transplant, and that eye is now, with contacts, at 20:15. The other, with contacts, is about 20:100, and without, it's 20:400 - I can't really read the "E" on top of the chart.

      I use a Hitachi SuperScan Pro 15" monitor, at 1280x1024, large fonts, and do rather well with it. A bigger monitor would be nice, but not necessary.

      Hang in there. Keratoconus is not a death sentance. It's more an annoyance than anything else.

      --

      Lemon curry?
    3. Re:I have it too. by alext · · Score: 2

      I'm very similar (possibly excluding the goddess bit :-) )

      Do persevere with gas permeable contacts. I went to a normal optician/optometrist from teens onwards, he spotted the keratonconus (both eyes) and gave me soft lenses. 13 years later thought I'd give GPs a try and the difference was amazing. Not only can I see the bottom line but they're more comfortable and easier to look after. In fact, I wonder if these soft ones, particularly the disposables, aren't something of a con...

      Anyway, back to computers... I use an ancient 21" Dell screen, and (thanks to the link you gave!) I realize why I don't like the brightness cranked up... I used a dual LCD monitor setup at work for a while but didn't notice any improvement.

      I sincerely hope that you don't have to struggle too much with reading aids - I was lucky in that I was sent to the best eye hospital around here (Moorfields in London) with a dedicated KC unit - and that once my hormones calmed down the condition didn't get any worse. Well, not so far (going on 39 now), fingers crossed eh?

  15. Keep monitor farther away by sunhou · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I find that my eyes are less fatigued if I can be farther away from the monitor. That's hard to do in most office situations, and in my small apartment. Ideally I'd like to have a table behind my main desk, to hold the monitor, about 4 feet away from me (and just use a slightly bigger font so I can still read everything).

    One thing I did was to get a short-depth monitor. I have a Viewsonic PS790, it's a 19" monitor but the front-to-back size is about that of a 15" monitor, so I can push it farther back on the table. Unfortunately they're not making them any more. Anyone know of a similar monitor still being made? (Eventually I'll go with an LCD, which I'll be able to push way back.)

  16. you _might_ find some info/links off surgicaleyes by muddy_mudskipper · · Score: 2, Informative

    due to my foolishness, i'm in a simlar situation (but mine is man-made - i underwent a controversial eye surgery in the late 1980's and messed up my vision pretty bad)
    i have found the website http://www.surgicaleyes.org to be a good (although somewhat scary) source of info for all sorts of visually-impaired folks - ranging from surgically-induced blindness to keratoconus to corneal transplants.
    check out the site - and the bulletin board - and dig around for some links on keratoconus sites and PK (corneal transplant) information.
    there is a consensus that keratoconus can be put-off with a good pair of Rigid Gas-Permeable Contacts for quite some time.
    also keep in mind you will bump into information about up-and-coming treatments for keratoconus - things like Keraform (an enzyme being developed to re-shape the myopic cornea) and other strange stuff.
    anyhow, check it out (and dig around on their message board for strings like 'keratoconus' as well)
    good luck!
    (and by the way, i'm using RGP contacts to help read a 21" monitor set to about 1280x1024 - so don't rule out the well-fitted contact lens solution!)

  17. increasing the font by oliphaunt · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I use excel and word at work (don't come after me with the anti-m$ stick, i just downloaded OpenOffice and I'm switching over) and when I've been staring at the screen all day, I end up viewing documents at 150%, then 200% as my eyes get increasingly tired. Sure, it's kind of a pain to judge the format of a page when you can only see 1/8th of it at a time, but it's much easier on the eyes.

    This page provides a demo of a font designed to be easy to read on TFT screens. I haven't used it extensively, but the demo seems to be a pretty clear improvement over arial 12-point.

    --




    Humpty Dumpty was pushed.
    1. Re:increasing the font by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      (don't come after me with the anti-m$ stick, i just downloaded OpenOffice and I'm switching over)
      Aw man... *puts-the-leash-back-on-mr-goatse*
  18. Kerataconus by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    Six years ago I was diagnosed with Kerataconus, when I was 21. It degenerated rapidly in one eye and I was required to get a cornea transplant - the symptoms in the other eye seemed to slow their degradation.

    Anyway, since the transplant I have had to make adjustments to my computer using environment in order to keep my eyes sane - the single biggest improvement is using really, really big fonts that are anti-aliased. For some reason, I've also found that varying the hue of things (dark green text against beige backgrounds, etc) seems to make things easier to read. Also, though I'm sure this won't be an entirely popular suggestion, ever since I switched to Mac OSX from Linux, my eyes have improved dramatically. I have attributed it to the entirely antialiased environment, but it could easily be coincidence.

    Good luck.

    PS. The good news is that cornea transplants are among the most successful of transplant operations, with an average success rate of 92%. (should you need one).

    1. Re:Kerataconus by ZxCv · · Score: 2

      I'll second this. My eyesight has never been really bad, but because I sit in front of a computer for 12 or so hours a day, I used to get up 2 or 3 times during the day simply because my eyes needed a rest. In the 6 months or so since I've used OS X as my primary OS, I notice I have to give my eyes a rest a lot less. Things are tons easier to read (most of the time), so I typically sit farther from the monitor. That, I imagine, is what is making it easier to sit in front of the monitor.

      --

      Perl - $Just @when->$you ${thought} s/yn/tax/ &couldn\'t %get $worse;
    2. Re:Kerataconus by rossdee · · Score: 1

      Sometimes even if the graft is successful (ie not rejected), there may be other problems arising from the operation.

      In my case the pupil of the eye dilated, and didnt go back yo normal, so it lets in way too much light. Also the new cornea eye combination was longsighted, and I couldnt read (except realy large print) with that eye, so I didnt get the other eye corrected.

      Of course that was over 20 years ago, things may have improved.

    3. Re:Kerataconus by v9 · · Score: 1

      Seeing green clearer on your monitor basically means that your eyesite is still hyperopic. An updated refractive correction will probably change that so that you see green as clear as red and things again will look better in their normal spectrum of colours. This occurs because green light is on the short wavelength side of light and refracts more than red light or the longer wavelenths. Since shorter wavelenths of light refract more, they become more converged on passing through your the lens system of your eye (than longer wavelengths of light) and are seen clearer because of a weakness of power in your cornea from keratoconus. Any optometrist will be able to demonstrate this to you using a duochrome chart. I recommend that you have your eyes checked again.

    4. Re:Kerataconus by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So an Apple a day keeps the doctor away?

  19. or you could by oliphaunt · · Score: 1

    just print everything out and use one of these

    --




    Humpty Dumpty was pushed.
  20. Brightness adjustment is important, too! by King_TJ · · Score: 5, Informative

    It's sort of a pet-peeve of mine, but it also relates to monitor clarity.

    I can't stand when people crank the brightness control up all the way on their monitors, thinking "brighter is better".

    To get the maximum clarity and contrast possible with a given monitor, I recommend turning up the contrast control to around 100%. (Some monitors will draw small fonts a bit too thick or blocky like this. If so, back it off to 95% or even 90%, but probably not any lower than that.)

    Then, when you have an image on your screen, you want to turn down the brightness control just far enough so the border around the image appears to be black/not lit up at all.

    This combination should be much easier on the eyes. (Especially important when you're at the command line on a full screen text mode, where there's lots of black background.)

    1. Re:Brightness adjustment is important, too! by DennyK · · Score: 3, Informative

      Odd...personally, I find that the brighter the monitor is, the easier it is to read the text. Obviously, too much brightness is bad (when blacks look washed out, that ain't good... ;) ), but on most monitors I've used, I have to turn up the brightness most or all of the way to get a decent image that I can see well, and even then I occasionally wish it was better. Maybe that's just cause I spend too much time on old/crappy monitors... ;)

      To the original poster: As for advice on monitors...well, first I'd suggest checking with your optomitrist, as several others have said. They're best equipped to tell you at least how to avoid things that could strain or damage your eyes more than neccesary. Beyond that, I'm not sure how much advice I can give you, since I don't suffer from your particular condition.

      Personally, I suffer from pretty serious nearsightedness. I'm not legally blind, but my vision is pretty bad without glasses. Anything up to a foot away is fine, after that, it degrades pretty quickly. I can read my jumbo alarm clock from across the room if I squint right. At work, I wear glasses when on the computer, but at home, I usually do without and just sit closer to the screen. Eyestrain has never been a problem for me...dunno why, though.

      I have a 17" monitor (TTX 1787 for those who care ;) ), and I run at 800x600 at 100Hz. I can't use any higher resolution on a 17" screen (even with my glasses; they make everything about 25-30% smaller than it really is, which makes high res even worse ;) ), and my monitor doesn't support 100Hz refresh rates on higher resolutions anyway. (I happen to be one of those who are very sensitive to refresh rates; any static images below 85Hz will give me a headache after a few hours, and below 75Hz is intolerable for even a short time. Even at 100Hz I can still see the flicker sometimes...)

      Another oddity I've noticed is that I cannot stand dark screens. Most people I know like darker screens and say that brighter monitors make their eyes hurt. I've always been the opposite way; dim monitors give me a headache, but bright ones are just fine. Go figure... ;) The other things I can't stand are antialiased fonts. They look awful, and make my eyes hurt trying to read them. To me, they don't look sharp and crisp, but blurry and out of focus. Maybe it's just my eyes or something, but I've always preferred well-defined fonts with a few jaggies to smooth but blurry antialiased fonts.

      DennyK

    2. Re:Brightness adjustment is important, too! by j3110 · · Score: 1

      WHAT? I thought the linux console had a gray background! Maybe that's how those scientists came up with a beige universe. Infinite black averaged with anything finite is always going to be black. They just had the monitor brightness set up too high. Now it's salmon, so I'm assuming they've got there color set to 6500K instead of 9300K that they had it set to before.

      --
      Karma Clown
    3. Re:Brightness adjustment is important, too! by BoneFlower · · Score: 2

      On that note, the Hewlett Packard Pavillion mx70(and probably the other mx monitors) have two preset Brightness/contrast modes, one for text, one for video. It helps alot, without the trouble of fiddling around to find your ideal setting. Of course, manual setting will have better results, but the auto settings do help.

      I don't know if these monitors are available seperately from the HP Pavillion PCs though.

  21. Re: sorry - but I just couldn't resist by 56ker · · Score: 1, Offtopic

    I've also never had any problems with my wife..the only one I know the model number of. :o)

  22. Look for hardware magnifiers by Inode+Jones · · Score: 2, Interesting
    I'm not sure what visual defects are associated with keratoconus, but if you need magnification, look into hardware devices that do this.

    Back in 1990-91, I had a co-worker who had no central vision whatsoever. He had a special setup: a special card that magnified the image on his monitor. The output of a CGA card (remember this is 1990) went into the magnifier card, and the output of the magnifier card went to the monitor. The system included a document camera, which could display a magnified image of whatever document was placed under it, on the monitor.

    He used two mice on the computer - one for the normal use of a mouse, and another mouse to control the magnification and panning of the hardware card. (Configuring the IRQs for the two mice, serial port, parallel printer, and two video cards was a bitch. Even more so to get Windows 3.0 to run in CGA!)

    Today, of course, this system would need to be modernized - a minimum of 1024x768 is required for business, and any magnifier card would need to cope with the increased video bandwidth.

    I can't remember what the system was called. Being over 10 years old, it's likely no longer in production in a usable form anyway. However, similar systems may exist. I would do a web search for speciality computer equipment for the visually impaired.

    1. Re:Look for hardware magnifiers by Spy+Hunter · · Score: 2

      Heh, instead of getting a hardware thingy to do this, you could just run XFree with a virtual display size larger than your resolution, and use big fonts. When your mouse reaches the edge of the real screen, XFree will scroll the virtual screen for you (really fast!). You can see this behavior if you start XFree with a high resolution and then use the Ctrl-Alt-+ or Ctrl-Alt-- key combos to switch to a lower resolution. The only difference with the hardware solution you describe is that there's only one mouse, but I don't think this is a big disadvantage. You can set the virtual screen size in the XF86Config-4 file.

      --
      main(c,r){for(r=32;r;) printf(++c>31?c=!r--,"\n":c<r?" ":~c&r?" `":" #");}
    2. Re:Look for hardware magnifiers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mqny Windows video card drivers suport this, too. And no config file editing or rebooting needed!

  23. Corrective lenses make things worse by sunhou · · Score: 3, Troll

    I started becoming nearsighted about 11 years ago when I started working at a computer company. It was worse after spending a lot of time in front of the computer. I was going to get glasses to correct it, but someone suggested I see a particular doctor, I think he called her a "behavioral optometrist".

    Often when you get corrective lenses, they compensate for the near-sightedness (or whatever problem you are having) by making things appear closer. But that usually makes the problem worse. Most people I know with glasses say they got more and more nearsighted over time.

    Anyway, the doc I saw gave me the opposite prescription -- lenses that made everything appear farther away (basically, reading glasses). I only wore them while reading or using a computer, or looking at stuff up close, but not at other times. My nearsightedness gradually got better, and eventually cleared up. My next eye test came up 20/20. Now, all these years later, my vision is still perfect. But if I ever forget to wear my reading glasses and use a computer or read a book for a couple of hours, my eyes get fatigued and I become nearsighted for a few hours or so. (And as I mentioned in my other reply, keeping the computer monitor farther away from my eyes also helps).

    So a therapeutic approach may be better than a corrective approach, at least in some situations. (Probably not with the condition the submitter has, although I know nothing about that particular condition.)

    1. Re:Corrective lenses make things worse by sunhou · · Score: 3, Funny

      Oh yeah, I forgot the ironic punchline of my little story -- I wear glasses so that I won't have to wear glasses.

    2. Re:Corrective lenses make things worse by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have this particular condition and I can tell you that contact lenses are one of the best options for slowing the deterioration of eye sight. The only other widely accepted (and available) treatment is a corneal transplant.

    3. Re:Corrective lenses make things worse by WildBeast · · Score: 2

      aha I always suspected that my lenses where actually making things worst. And now you come and confirm my suspicions. Darn optometrists, anything for a buck.

    4. Re:Corrective lenses make things worse by schwatoo · · Score: 2, Informative

      I've got the same condition the article submitter has. With KC the treatments are either rigid contact lenses or cornea replacement surgery. Obviously the former is preferable to the later. (I actually got lucky and dont need any treatment yet). Glasses wont do a thing and you'll end up changing your prescription every other month.

      Lots of good information (including a great forum) at www.kcenter.org but of course take everything you read online with a pinch of salt

      --
      I have trouble with passwords among other things.
    5. Re:Corrective lenses make things worse by sudog · · Score: 5, Insightful

      what the heck are you talking about? You have a cure for nearsightedness? That's odd. Why doesn't the rest of the world know about it?

      Look, whoever asked this question--Slashdot is the LAST place where you should be getting medical advice, especially about something as critical as your eyesight. There is no fact here, no medical truths--a high moderation does NOT mean that that advice is better than any of the other crap on here.

      Here's some advice you can really use: Get a second opinion and see as many eye specialists as you can. They're the bloody experts--not Slashdot's armchair doctor population who have little to no medical training and pure anecdotal "evidence" to prove that their methods work!

      Run, don't walk, away from these comments if you value your eyesight at *all* and are having problems.

      Shame, Slashdot--suggestions in here may do damage to your weaker-minded readership. Please don't run stories like this.

    6. Re:Corrective lenses make things worse by Witchblade · · Score: 2

      I do have the same condition. I was diagnosed when I was thirteen. I wore glasses for about two years, then moved to soft contacts for a few years. Originally it only showed in one eye, but then both lenses became noticably affected. So i was switched to a combo soft contact with a rigid center type of lens. I was still assured that I would eventually need a transplant or accept being blind.

      When I got to college I was lucky that the university optometry program had specialists studying this disorder. They wanted to switch me to just a regular gas permeable lens. My God, what a difference! Without the contact lenses I have to hold a newspaper centimeters from my nose to read it, but wearing contact lenses I have almost perfect vision. And as an astronomer I'm damn careful with my eyesight. It's not exactly 20/20, but it's better than most people who only need reading specs.

      In short my advice is to talk with your optometrist and strongly consider getting regular, run-of-the-mill hard contact lenses and spring maybe $100-$200 before you invest in specialized technology for people with less easily corrected conditions

    7. Re:Corrective lenses make things worse by sunhou · · Score: 1

      Anyone who takes what they read on Slashdot as authoritative medical advice is gonna have problems in life at some point.

      My story is just my story. Someone may read it and think of asking around in their area for a similar optometrist. I found the one I did by posting a query on Usenet (that was back in 1991 when it was still more useful), and someone posted their story, which was similar to one I just posted. It was helpful to me.

    8. Re:Corrective lenses make things worse by echosilex · · Score: 1

      Along with this follow-up post comes karma that wouldn't have been earned otherwise. I'm sure sunhou didn't have this in mind when he was writing his original post, but you karma whores around here can learn something from this unintentional abuse of the moderation system.

      Offtopic, but don't kill me, mods.

    9. Re:Corrective lenses make things worse by redhatbox · · Score: 2


      "Shame, Slashdot--suggestions in here may do damage to your weaker-minded readership. Please don't run stories like this."

      Ummm... that would be *the reader's* problem, not the editors'. I think you forgot to note the simple fact that the story was posted by the the editors, but "comments are owned by the poster."

      This is a forum designed to allow people to swap experiences in all arenas related to technology, science, etc. This is not a censorship-prone environment, and people generally understand it's okay to speak your mind (at the risk of moderation, of course). Anyone who would take comments in this story as actual medical advice are about as idiotic as those who interpret a discussion regarding law here as "legal advice." In other words, if you're dumb enough to do that, you deserve what you get.

      If society filtered all our information for us, and delivered it in neat little pre-digested packages for our consumption (oh, wait, AOL...), we'd be much worse off as a whole. Instead, we strive to break down communications barriers, allowing each person to decide for him/herself what's right and reasonable. Please keep this in mind before encouraging censhorship in the name of "protecting people from themselves."

    10. Re:Corrective lenses make things worse by TuxBeej · · Score: 4, Informative

      I've already seen several optometrists and opthamologists about my condition, including an optician in Edmonton who is well-known in the community for handling people with keretoconus. With over 30 years of experience, I trust him for helping me make good decisions about my eyesight. Unfortunately, he had no suggestions about display technologies that are easier on the eyes.

      My interest here is *not* in asking people for medical advice - that's why we have doctors. I wanted to find out if anyone had seen studies or had suggestions for display technologies that would be easier on my eyes. Since I had not found anything on my own, I posted the question here, since I believed there's probably a lot of people in the tech community who are young, have bad eyesight, and are seeking the same kind of solutions I am.

      You're aboslutely right, though - don't take any medical advice from a forum. Always take that advice to your doctor and get their opinion. Then get *another* opinion. Especially when it comes to your eyes. We only get two, and we don't get any more.

      --
      Brendan "Beej" Dery "Only in Canada, eh?"
    11. Re:Corrective lenses make things worse by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      The statement in the title may seem controversial
      but is very in the line with my experience over
      years wearing the eyeglasses.

      Obviously, one cannot generalize, but to certain
      extend, the lack of exercising of eyes (prolonged
      work in similar conditions, like reading or
      watching the screen) contributes to weakening
      the sight ability.

      The whole concept of the "See Clearly Method"
      is based on training to correct missing abilities.
      I have ordered it recently and believe it may work
      for me.

      However, I cannot commit right now to systematic
      exercises, so will begin with it later in the
      future.

      • -z
    12. Re:Corrective lenses make things worse by sean23007 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You know, he isn't asking for medical advice, he's asking for advice on what kind of monitor would be better for him. Obviously, he wouldn'y ask us for a prescription for new eyeglasses, he'd leave that to his doctor, but can he trust his doctor to know anything about computer monitors? No, he can't. So, logically, he gets his doctor to help him with whatever falls under the doctor's personal expertise, and comes to the Slashdot readership for questions relating to technology.

      By the way, I use a Compaq V720 17" monitor, and it works pretty well. Nice flat screen, good performance.

      --

      Lack of eloquence does not denote lack of intelligence, though they often coincide.
    13. Re:Corrective lenses make things worse by jminne · · Score: 1

      I agree with the original post. I do not know if corrective lenses actually make eyesight worse, but I do know that preventative(Like the first post said they make things seems farther. So when you're looking at close things, it's as if you're looking far, and your eye muscles don't get stiff in the close focus.) glasses are available from optometrists - if you find a good one. They are not just regular reading glasses. I think they have a very high "prism", around 2.5 if I remember right. I don't know what that means optically, but that may be the only difference between them and regular reading glasses. My optometrist told me that he prescribes them often to lawyers. (I just think that's because there aren't alot of computer jobs in my home town.) If I don't use the glasses eye become temporarily near-sighted after a session of close-viewing. I believe I would already be permanently near-sighted if I did not get the prescription preventative glasses 4 years ago.

    14. Re:Corrective lenses make things worse by j3110 · · Score: 2

      This is only true for some cases of near-sitedness. Most are caused by the eye ball not being round like it should. The submitter's is much much worse in the fact that his lens is not good :) No ammount of compensation by muscles can cure either of those cases. Some people are now developing nearsitedness from reading and computing. These are caused by strain, and may be repairable by those means. I read somewhere once that they have a method of surgery using lasers(it was the discovery channel, all about lasers!) to replace the lens of a human eye with that of a fish. The best advice has already been given though. See lots of qualified people. /.ers are techies. They may help find a way to replace your eye with a camera, but they aren't going to give you any good advice except to see many experts :) Not one, not even two, not even three in your hometown, but many. I would try to go to at least one new place, because they are probably more up to date on eyecare. Most old optomitrists seem to be unaware of alternatives much past glasses or contacts. They've been doing their thing for 30 years, and why fix something that isn't broke? (hehe crazy old people... some day I'll have a garage of then, antiquated computers and say "If Nasa can go to the moon with 32K, then why do you have a problem going there with just 256M." But they'll just stare at me and ask, "What's a kilobyte? Is it bigger than a exobyte?")

      --
      Karma Clown
    15. Re:Corrective lenses make things worse by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Strange...I am just slightly nearsighted, and have been using computers 6-12 hours a day for 10 years and there has been almost no change in my vision.

    16. Re:Corrective lenses make things worse by Stween · · Score: 1

      "what the heck are you talking about? You have a cure for nearsightedness? That's odd. Why doesn't the rest of the world know about it?"

      What sunhou said is similar to what happened to me,

      Although I've never been seriously short sighted, I did get glasses a couple of years back. I wore them while I was getting driving lessons, because although on a clear day in good light I was well within legal limits, if it were dull I had to wear the glasses.

      After that I moved the monitor as far back on my desk as I could and sat further back. I regularly look away from the monitor, focusing at distance out my window. Whenever possible i'll try to focus on things farther away than closer to me.

      I didn't think there had been much of a difference made to my eyesight, but when I went for another eye test under a year ago, my eyesight was significantly better, and as a result I have weaker glasses.

      My eyesight isn't perfect, and reading for a while stresses my eyes and i can't focus too well at distance. Shutting my eyes for 5-10 minutes fixes this though.

      What the optician told me was that short-sightedness is often inhereted from the parents. Heavy computer work (or anything where you focus close up at length) can merely aggrevate the condition and make you aware of it far earlier in life. Whether that's completely true or not I don't know, i'm no expert.

    17. Re:Corrective lenses make things worse by Bake · · Score: 1

      So, I'm really just imagining things when I recall it being about 5-6 years since I got my last prescription?

      I started wearing glasses when I was 12 and got a new prescription at the ages of 14 and 17. I'm now 23 years old and am still using the same prescription I got when I was 17.

    18. Re:Corrective lenses make things worse by BoneFlower · · Score: 2

      I wouldn't go that far... Hearing what has worked for people in the real world, in addition to professional medical advice, is valuable. It will give a little more meaning to the doctors medical jargon. Of course, he shouldn't select a treatment option based solely on slashdot comments, but he could say

      "Doctor, I heard about treatment X, what do you think of that?"

      Doctor says: " Hmmm... that might work for you, lets run some tests"

      After tests doctor says: "That will work best... lets set the date"

      Granted, it may not trun out like that, but it cannot hurt for the patient to take even some unofficial knowledge, so long as he understands that only a doctor can determine if that information is applicable to his specific case.

    19. Re:Corrective lenses make things worse by Tony-A · · Score: 2

      He has mild myopia. There are two valid and opposite ways to treat the condition.
      One way is to use glasses to correct the myopia. Using these glasses while reading will increase the condition.
      The other way is to use glasses to increase the myopia. Using these glasses while reading will decrease the condition.
      Which one is right? Well .... they both are.

    20. Re:Corrective lenses make things worse by sudog · · Score: 1

      That's all fine and dandy, but there's a serious flaw in your "logic": this is a fundamentally medical discussion and has nothing to do with "news" or "science". You're trying to tell me that a discussion about a man's eyesight and what is or isn't good for him is news?

      It's not a question of censorship or filtration--it's a question of common sense. Something may seem innocuous when in fact it may do actual damage and play up to a reader's pride.

      News and science have a worth to a readership--incorrect analyses and false advice not only have no use, they can be damaging. Saying that people who are so stupid they "get what they deserve" when following advice here is idiotic itself.

      So pray, tell me how this discussion is useful, or that missing out on it would somehow be violating your first amendment rights? Finally--pray tell me how this kind of discussion helps someone form an opinion when there is no basis in empirical data--or even what you might call common sense--whatsoever?

      And be careful how you judge "intelligence'. Someone smarter than you make take it as a free ticket to let you "get what you deserve" too.

    21. Re:Corrective lenses make things worse by sudog · · Score: 1

      Good--that's good you're seeing your eye doctors. However; if they have no advice on what kind of displays to use they aren't the doctors you should be seeing. If he honestly has no suggestions for you I'd find a new doctor--regardless of his "well-known" status--since it sounds like he's not being very helpful.

      At the *least* he should be sending you to someone else who might be able to help you. It's the least he can do, don't you think?

      I realize that you don't think you were asking for medical advice--but here's a newsflash: You asked the Slashdot readership "I'm curious to know if certain technologies have any advantages over another". What's that? Did you mean to ask them what the best way to walk your poodle is?

      Perhaps it would have been more useful to ask for specific studies and references for display technology. As it is, you should've realized that all you'd get is a bunch of people describing how they "cured" their near-sightedness with glasses of the wrong prescription and how their "behavioural optometrist" was some kind of god-send.

    22. Re:Corrective lenses make things worse by sudog · · Score: 1

      Uh. Yea. He is asking for medical advice. He's asking Slashdot readers what monitors would be best for *his specific condition*. Come on now--that's not medical advice?

      And if you think being a computer geek qualifies you or anyone else to make a medical decision as to what's good for someone's eyes that you haven't even examined, there's something far more insidiuous going on here than simple well-meaning intentions.

    23. Re:Corrective lenses make things worse by Shardis · · Score: 1

      Preach on!!! :P

      Hrm, why is it that asking for advice is so naughty around here? Like *anything*, such advice should be taken with a grain (or bargeload, which ever you prefer) of salt, but isn't that what these forums are about? The exchange of information? I think it's pretty widely thought that you never learn if you don't ask questions, so why blast people that are only trying to find a helping hand or a guide to more information about a subject?

      Score: -5 Offtopic, but it really bothers me when someone tries to stand in the way of someone else who is only trying to learn or better oneself.

  24. Browser by GigsVT · · Score: 2

    I don't have a monitor recommendation for you, but I do have a browser one.

    In Opera, all versions I have used, you can just hit + or - to make the whole web page larger or smaller. As soon as I load pricewatch I always hit plus three times, to bump it up to 130%. Where do they get off using tiny fonts anyway?

    This works on all web pages, it's insanely great. It will even enlarge flash animations, images, everything. Well, almost everything, scroll bars stay the same size, but buttons, checkboxes, and radio buttons all get bigger. It doesn't mess up the presentation most of the time. Text just flows to fit the screen correctly, so no sidescrolling necessary (except on text/plain pages)

    --
    I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.
  25. Go with the CRT by BWJones · · Score: 2

    I would find the biggest flattest screen CRT display you can get from Sony (or whoever) and run it at around 1024X768 or so. This will give you a much better image than going with a big LCD that will have a native resolution much higher. The problem with the CRT of course is flicker etc..., but running it at the lower resolution should help. Also, make sure that you design the desktop for minimal eye strain with large icons and text. As far as which OS to use, OSX is the nicest desktop on the eyes I have seen with beautiful anti-aliasing for the text and adjustable icon sizes etc..., so you might want to look at it. My experience with desktop themes for Linux has not been good as far as recommending them to our patients who are loosing their sight, but Windows does have some accessibility features that might ease the squinting some. The Windows solutions are a bit clunky, but if you use Windows, make sure you take full advantage of the ones provided early in the corneal thinning. More profound progression might neccesitate the use of specialized software.

    Also, as everyone should do, pay very close attention to your work environment and ergonomic setup.

    --
    Visit Jonesblog and say hello.
    1. Re:Go with the CRT by Loligo · · Score: 2

      >This will give you a much better image than
      >going with a big LCD that will have a native
      >resolution much higher.

      So what?

      Run at the higher resolution. Most GUIs have a way to control the size of things.

      Yes, it IS possible to run your screen at 1280x1024 and still have icons and text that are as big as an 800x600 screen. The difference is that your text will be MUCH sharper, especially with antialiasing.

      I demonstrated this on my dad's system - he was running at 800x600 despite having a very nice 19" monitor and 32 meg video card (his eyes aren't what they used to be). I kicked the resolution up to 1280x1024 and bumped the sizes all of his objects and desktop text items up a few notches.

      End result: Same usability as far as spotting the icon he wants and reading the text on things, but it's a much sharper screen now. The only time he needs to kick the resolution back down is sometimes looking at web pages with small images. In this particular case I set up a theme that he can switch to - goes back to 800x600 and the sizes go back to default. Everything looks the right size, the pictures are "bigger", but the text is a little blockier.

      -l

    2. Re:Go with the CRT by BWJones · · Score: 2

      The only time he needs to kick the resolution back down is sometimes looking at web pages with small images

      I am not sure I understand why you are making this argument when one has to be switching resolutions back and forth, especially in Linux distros and Windows that tend to loose track of where you place your icons after switching your resolution. The reason I reccomend to our patients that have varying degrees of vision loss to go with a larger CRT monitor and a lower fixed resolution is so they don't have to switch resolutions back and forth. It's easier on them. However, that said, there are some great new LCD's out with very bright screens and contrast ratios never before available in reasonably priced solutions that may work at higher resolutions for may folks with vision loss. The problem here is that they are still rather expensive to get the highest quality ones.

      --
      Visit Jonesblog and say hello.
  26. I second the 21" suggestion by Com2Kid · · Score: 2

    My grandmother (who has Cataracts amongst other eye problems) is able to view things on her 21" monitor just fine.

    So go for a 21 incher, pretty much any one will do as long as it has a good .pitch and the focus is good. Go Trinitron for that matter.

    Baring that, I am sure that these people may be able to help you. :)

    A good on screen text dictator is a plus, I have known of people who were almost compleatly blind and managed to use a computer just fine with a good text dictator. I find the damn things highly annoying myself (being a speed reader I would keel over if I lost my ability to read efficently. :( :( :( ) but many people swear by them.

    *COUGH* *COUGH* Windows (any version) tends to have excellent text dictation support, as it does other features for the visualy impaired. (built in magnifing utility and such).

    Also, learn how to type with your eyes clsoed, it can save a lot of wear and tear on them. :) (useful advice in general. :) )

    Use a good video card, I recommend a Matrrox card of any sort. They Rock. Period. :)

  27. Monitors and vision by Renraku · · Score: 2

    I've used different monitors since I was like 7 on computers (am now 19). My eyesight is still pretty good, I'd say its still 20/20 (haven't had it checked in a few months). Last time I got it checked, they said I was like 8/20 or something, but that was after heavy computer use (a few hours MUDding). However, the next day I had it tested again at the same place, and they said it was 20/20 now. The only eye problems I really have is a lazy eye (left) after reading a lot and being tired, and my eyes burn if its early in the morning and people are smoking heavily.

    --
    Job? I don't have time to get a job! Who will sit around and bitch about being broke and unemployed then?
    1. Re:Monitors and vision by GigsVT · · Score: 1

      8/20 isn't a valid measurement.

      20/8 would mean you had eyes like a hawk, literally.

      --
      I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.
    2. Re:Monitors and vision by bgeiger · · Score: 1

      Maybe he means 20/80?

      ObVision: Mine's technically 20/20, but I see halos and weird crap around lights and some objects. I'm scheduled for a trip to the optometrist's office soon, though.

      --
      o/~ All God's children shall be free in Pirates of the Caribbean, when we reach that Magic Kingdom in the sky... o/~
    3. Re:Monitors and vision by Renraku · · Score: 1

      Err. Not 8/20. It was really, really bad though. I think it might have been 20/80 or something. Point is, I used the computer all day, my eyesight sucked (though I couldn't tell it sucked alone) I get up the next day, take the eyetest, my eyesight is fine.

      --
      Job? I don't have time to get a job! Who will sit around and bitch about being broke and unemployed then?
  28. somewhat related by CmdrTaco+(editor) · · Score: 1
    One of my friends was trying to use my computer the other day, and he kept complaining that the flickering of the monitor made his head hurt. I couldn't tell what he was talking about, so I switched from between 60, 75, and 85 Hz. The higher refresh rates still bothered him a little, but not nearly as much as 60 Hz.

    Then I pulled out my notebook with a 13.3 " TFT display, and he said it didn't bother him at all. So I think LCD displays are easier on the eyes that CRT, even if they are less accurate.

  29. I have KC too by Bladerunner2037 · · Score: 2, Informative

    I'm using a ViewSonic flat screen,17" viewable and I'm able to see okay to do work. Of course for details in graphics, I occasionally have to get REAL close to the screen, but it seems to be working for me so far. My vision is 20/400 uncorrected in the eye that is affected. I do take A LOT of breaks, as teh brightness gets to me after a while. Opera's magnification features are a godsend. Other apps, I have set to use larger fonts, and the fairly generous screen realestate is helpful..I'll probalby shop for a larger monitor in the not too distant future...but the 17" viewable is doing me good for now.

    --
    -- oodabadabaY
  30. Just as a general 19" CRT suggestion: by RyanFenton · · Score: 2


    The LG Electronics Flatron 915ft (plus) is a the monitor I've recently chosen to purchase. For around $315 after shipping, it allows 1600x1200@85hz (my major consideration), it's truly flat, compares well against the other top-rated 19" monitors in terms of color, and those that have had problems with the monitor, it has had the best record in terms of returns.

    A set of Epinions reviews.

    It uses a different mask type than any other monitors, from what I've heard, called a "slit mask" - and it does look good. The only real notable feature other than looking good and being really flat is that it avoids the "2 horizontal wires" of the trinitron type monitors.

    One final note about the warranty - it's a three year warranty - however, not all the years of it's terms are equal. The two months, you get the traditional swap&replace returns for a new monitor. For the rest of the first year, you get a refurbished monitor back. For the two years after that, you have to mail the monitor to the service company, then wait for the repaired monitor. After that, you've pretty much got to get a new monitor. So, although they have had a good reputation as far as customer service goes so far, know what to expect.

    I like it so far, and find it a very good replacement for my last 19" monitor, and worth the extra cash over a 17" or a lower quality 19".

    :^)

    Ryan Fenton

  31. How I fixed my problem... by kikta · · Score: 4, Informative

    I'm only 24, but looking at a monitor for too long makes my eyes burn. It's gotten worse and worse in the last few years. Finally, I traded in my 17" Sony Trintron 17sfII for a 19" ViewSonic ViewPanel VG191. It's is so much better. The strain on my eyes is considerably less. Whether it's daylight or under the crappy flouresent lights in my dorm room, I can see it better. I don't know if it the fact it's an LCD or what but I can work for a lot longer and my eyes no longer ache afterwards, even running at 1280x1024, which hasn't made things any larger. The problem is that it costs about $1000, but I must say - it was worth every penny.

    P.S. I also upgraded my video card to a GeForce3 Ti 500 with a digital output. The picture isn't drastically different, but I can honestly say it is easier on the eyes than analog (I think it has to do with the way the colors are presented).

  32. Steve Gibson's ClearType-like demo by smithmc · · Score: 1
    This page [grc.com] provides a demo of a font designed to be easy to read on TFT screens. I haven't used it extensively, but the demo seems to be a pretty clear improvement over arial 12-point.

    It's not a font, per se, that Gibson is demonstrating, but an alternate means of performing font antialiasing that takes advantage of the subpixel geometry of LCD displays. It's similar in concept to the "ClearType" rendering available in MS Windows XP (and possibly elsewhere, I don't know).

    --
    Downmodding is the refuge of the weak. Don't downmod, make a better argument!
  33. Simple by Corporate+Troll · · Score: 1

    Buy a Mac (running OSX)....the anti-aliased fonts are great. I only have a 12,5" iBook and I have much less trouble reading it than any of my x86 workstations (2 with TFT at 15", 2 with CRT at 15" and 2 laptops...one with 15" TFT and one with 10" TFT...all Running W2K, Linux or OpenBSD).

  34. Contact your local Lions Club by Diamon · · Score: 5, Informative

    Contact your local Lions Club odds are you'll find people there who have went through what you are going through and know what worked for them. Also their experiences may be of use in other non-technical topics also (such as optometists, business opportunities you might qualify for as visually impaired, etc)

    You probably much better off asking there than on /. Different vision problems need different solutions, size isn't everything sometimes contrast means more.

    1. Re:Contact your local Lions Club by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This guy is right. Also check out your insurance, as visually impared the government/medicaid/your health insurance may pay for a lot of the expenses for corrective equipment / bigger monitors / etc. If you can get your health insurance to spring for a plasma display why not. :-) There are also a lot of organizations that help with the visually impaired and attempt to match philanthropy. That way you don't go broke buying the tools you need to maintain your life.

  35. for some problems, bigger is not always better by Spiral+Man · · Score: 1
    my mother has RP (Retinitis Pigmentosa). which is a desease in which the cells in her retina are dying (essentially), and for her, bigger is not always better. the problem is, her field of vision is considerably smaller than normal, so after a certain size screen, she cant see it all at once, and the size doesnt matter anymore. its also harder for her to see in low light situations, so a higher contrast color scheme works better. also, sans-serif fonts are easier to read than serif fonts, and a large, high-contrast cursor is better. she has also found that bold fonts are easier to read.

    just my 2c

    --
    "we demand rigidly defined areas of doubt and uncertainty!" --Douglas Adams, The Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy
  36. From one blind guy to another by Platinum+Dragon · · Score: 2

    I'm legally blind without thick glasses. I may be legally blind *with* glasses. I'll never drive, because I'll fail the eye test. So, I kinda know where you're now coming from:)

    Large monitors are good. I find that magnifiers don't feel 'natural' to look through, and software magnification that makes you scroll the screen around your work area is an added headache you don't need. Size, size, size.

    I currently have a 20" (18" viewable) ViewSonic from about 9 years ago, and I'm getting an 18" (17" viewable) ViewSonic LCD this coming week. Flicker and too much brightness can do a real job on your eyes; blurriness will increase, your head will ache somewhat, the usual you can expect from overtaxing your eyes.

    Crank the font size in your web browser, and get used to the overall look and placement of icons and menu items. You don't have to see everything perfectly if you know where things should be placed in relation to others.

    Even with all the tricks, you'll never be completely comfortable with your monitor and desktop setup. Get used to looking closer a lot at times, and be sure to take breaks when you need it. Shut your eyes for a while.

    This is all general stuff, but I hope it helps.

    --

    Someday, you're going to die. Get over it.
    1. Re:From one blind guy to another by Xerithane · · Score: 1

      They have some pretty hefty advancements with lenses -- the thickness is not really a huge concern anymore. I saw a comparison at my last eye doctor, "This was your lens 20 years ago" and he held up a piece of plastic about 1/2" thick. My glasses now are thinner than when I first got them (at about 20/80 or so years and years ago, and I am now at 20/475 uncorrected, 20/40 corrected)

      Without my glasses I can't see anything, I'm totally useless but they have some pretty good things going on for people with really bad eye site. I'd check around to a bunch of different optomotrists (If you are in the bay area, I can recommend one in Mountain View) -- I have a relatively rare eye condition, and it took a long time to just find an eye doctor who knew what it was.

      --
      Dacels Jewelers can't be trusted.
  37. Monitor Options by Tibe · · Score: 1

    I have been looking at flat glass CRT's for ages and I got one about six months ago. There great! After seeing a Sony Triniton 17" Flat CRT I decided I had to have one. After seeing the price I decided I didn't. However Philips who are just as good as Sony have made an equivilent I have had both a Sony and Philips, Flat CRT 17" (16" v.i.s) sitting next to each other, there is no differece between them other than the price tag. Everyone has complimented the screen even my Mom who always has problems looking at screens could easly read the fonts. Also the ClearType to round font edges in Windows XP really helps. I have a lazy eye and find it hard to focus on books some times. But have no problems with this combo. And I had some extra money for my graphics card.

  38. Some experience by Jucius+Maximus · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Having worked with various people over the years with different degrees of eyesight impairments, I have seen these trends in monitors:

    1. For CRT displays, bigger is better. If something is bigger, it is easier to see. There are many packages out there that allow you to enlarge a portion of the screen (and some of this basic functionality is built into windows,) but in general, bigger is always better.

    2. When it comes to software aides that 'enhance' the screen image or read things out through speech synthesizer, there is a lot of software available for windows, but I don't know if there is as much for Linux (because I have never before needed to check.)

    3. For some people who have problems with reflections 'within' the eye (i.e. something in your peripheral vision appears to be in front of you) laptop TFT displays tend to be easier to see than CRT displays. I do not know why this is true, but it is true in my experience.

  39. High Contrast by Firehawke · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I don't use the Windows version, but I have a custom one that's easier on my eyes. (for me, white flickers like crazy on monitors, even at good refresh rates.) I generally use white on black or grey on black, with darker blue for gui elements.

    It really has made using Windows a lot easier on my eyes over the past 6-7 years.

  40. I Fight With This by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm just barely legal to drive, with glasses. I've got some retinopathy and cataracts from the retina operations. I use a 21-inch with Windows set to large fonts (not the accessibility option, just large fonts in control panel ... display ... settings), 800 x 600, and the screen about a foot from my face. That the rest of the world is going to higher and higher resolutions and using software that universally gives smaller text with higher resolutions is agonizing to me.

    The real butt pains come from the 10% or so of software and websites that don't like this. Some require or just about require higher resolution, others assume standard (small) fonts. Like the sites where the 'submit' button shows up off the bottom of the screen with no way to get it back on. At least with Windows, you can Alt-spacebar to move the Window around, usually.

    Another problem is trying to work cooperatively with someone else, where we both have to look at the same screen. This is not easy, particularly if I'm in a cube that doesn't seat two and I have to find some way to work on someone else's machine with them.

    Another difficulty is figuring out how to apply for a job. Am I disabled, requiring 'reasonable accomodation'? How can I be disabled if I'm legal to drive? Will this make me more or less likely to get hired? What happens if I don't check this and I get a job and find out that the employer requires a standard config of a 15-inch screen at 1024x768 or worse?

    Size is everything. I bought my 21" monitor for about $600 at Fry's about 3 years ago. So it's not a big-name brand type. But it works just fine.

  41. Little Experience by gmhowell · · Score: 2

    Wife and brother-in-law have RP. To echo another poster, bigger is better. She has a 17" monitor, and runs in DOS or Linux bash-prompt as much as possible. BIL has a 19" monitor.

    If you can get the taxpayers to pay for it, get one of those ginormous LCD screens. Make sure it goes bright enough.

    Really, owing to the individualized nature of many disabilities, your best bet is to be prepared to do lots of shopping. And if the condition is dynamic, be prepared to replace parts frequently as conditions change.

    Also, I'd look into emacspeak. I would have done this for my wife, but her hearing is bad also. (BTW, that isn't the easiest page to read. Default font size too small:)

    --
    Jesus was all right but his disciples were thick and ordinary. -John Lennon
  42. lucky by LiquidPC · · Score: 2

    Consider yourself blessed, you can now just sue companies that dont hire you and blame them for discriminating against you for having bad eyesight, then get a 5 million dollar settlement check from microsoft. Crazier things have happened in matters like that. Everyone is a victim nowadays, evidently.

  43. LCD by brandonsr · · Score: 1

    I'm probably the most near sited person on slashdot so I can honestly say it's great to get an LCD screen. Before I had a 21" viewsonic, and people can say I'm crazy all they want but I'd trade it in any day on my 15" LCD screen. I think it's really a case of quality over quantity, the LCD screen I have is very sharp, which makes it incredibly easy to see.

    But that's just my opinion. There's not going to be one univeral solution for everyone.

  44. don't skimp by Gumber · · Score: 2

    For one thing, try and buy your monitor locally, so you can easily examine the merchandise for yourself.

    I find a 19" is good at 1152x768. 1280x1024 is generally too much for me at that screen size.

    A CRT will generally give you the biggest screen size for the price. But a nice LCD will be very crisp, and the crispness won't deteriorate over time. If you get an LCD, shoot for a monitor and video card combiniation that will will allow you to use a digital connection.

    If you go for a CRT get one that will support high refresh-rates. Some cards are sharper than others too, as I recall, this is a ZDnet review criteria.

    Lighting, of course, is important. Arrange things to avoid catching glare of the monitor.

    Finally, get a monitor with workable controls. It doesn't matter how many settings the damn thing has if you can't configure it to get a good picture. And look for uniform picture quality across the display.

  45. Me too! (Always get a 2nd opinion). by schwatoo · · Score: 1

    I was diagnosed with KC less than a month ago by my optician. He told me that I'd need to get fitted with rigid gas-permeable contact lenses.

    Anyway I decided to get a second opinion and managed to see an opthomoligist later that week - apparently not everyone with KC needs treatment. The 'bulge' in my cornea is currently below my field of vision and that I don't need any contact lenses or anything

    Things might change (and I can't rub my eyes in fear of affecting things) so I need to get my eyes checked up on even more regularly in case my situation changes.

    Guess i got lucky. Anyways - if you haven't already - get a second opinion - you might be lucky too

    --
    I have trouble with passwords among other things.
  46. I know this problem first-hand by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I had a poor CRT display for my Windows box, and my friend came over and looked at it. He said, "Dude, you need to get a sharper monitor." I, on the other hand, couldn't notice that it was blurry. Then, one day, I used the Windows computer for about 4 hours straight. When I was done, I looked at a coin on its edge. To my surprise, I saw two coin edges! One of them was real, the other I could put my finger right through! That's when I realized that I needed a clearer, sharper monitor and bought my nice LCD screen.

    Just my dime/5.

  47. A possibly useful tidbit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I use these when at the computer: http://www.uvex.com/Astro3000.html (Uvex has *lots* of other styles of frames - some with interchangable lenses like the Astrospec3000's - and you can see them at: http://www.uvex.com/eyewearindex.html)

    But I get the "SCT blue" lenses: http://www.uvex.com/lenschart.html And here's the details of the blue specs: http://www.uvex.com/pdf/LensChartSCTBlueLens.PDF

    I'm sure it probably sounds silly to a lot of you, but they really have been working very VERY nicely. No more migranes at the computer.

    No I don't work for them, I'm just a customer who's been *very* satisfied with them over the years.

  48. Things to try by hickmott · · Score: 2, Informative

    There are three basic things to try:

    Figure out just how far you sit from the monitor. Ask your ophthamologist to write you a prescription for glasses optimized for that distance. Explain exactly what you're using them for; he may have a better idea of what to use.

    If you're having problems with chromatic aberation, which shows up as red, green, and blue colored bands around letters, get a monochrome monitor. It isn't enough to set your software to display in black and white; this has to be done in hardware.

    Get a big monitor. You may want to run it at a lower resolution than it's rated for. This is especially true if you have a hard time seeing thin lines. Many programs will insist on using one-pixel thick lines; it helps if the pixels themselves are larger.

    Good luck!

    --Andy Hickmott

  49. Retinal Degeneration Vs. Focusing problems by Kirkoff · · Score: 2

    I've got RP too, as does my brother and my mother. I've seen some of the leading researchers in the world (I was lucky to live where I did for a while...). Indeed, High Contrast is important for RP. Being careful in low-light/dark situations is important too. I'm able to just say to someone "I need you to lead me, it's too dark in here." That can be a good thing if you're with a girl... At the moment, my vision is good enough that I have not restrictions on my driver's license. (And just to answer the question, No, there isn't a viable surgery for RP)

    I'm also very farsited and slightly astigmatic, unrelated to the RP. The set of things to deal with light-focus problems in the eye are different than the ones for RP. For problems focusing, bigger is most often better. It's also an area where high-contrast is very helpful. Myself, I find serrifed fonts easier to read, but it's something you can check out. Dispite what people say, if there is a physical defect in your cornea, not using your glasses WILL NOT MAKE YOUR EYES STRONGER. I know people who's eyes have gotten somewhat worse from extended comptuer usage. Mine have gotten slightly better over time and I spend an inordinant amount of time at the geekbox. If it's a defect, it's a defect and must be worked with. The Topic poster sounds like he is very interested in doing the right thing this way. I've had pretty darned bad eyes since I was 3, probably earlier. If you tell people your restrictions, and work on finding what helps you see (high contrast? Serifed fonts? closer/farther?) then your life won't be too dificult to deal with.

    Just a word of warning, you'll get the occasional jerk who won't believe you have an eye condition that's as bad as it is, or doesn't care. It can be dificult to stay calm with these goons. Just remember, they're an idiot.

    Good Luck

    --Josh

    --
    There are exactly 42,935,718 letter sized sheets in a square mile.
  50. Browser settings by Lalakis · · Score: 1

    The feauture you describe is in every browser I have seen. A more clean solution to the problem (and recommended anyway) is that you select a nice/big default font for your browser and tell it to NOT allow documents to use other fonts.

    1. Re:Browser settings by GigsVT · · Score: 1

      I don't think you understand. Opera will make everything bigger, flash applications, graphics, everything. Not just fonts.

      --
      I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.
  51. monitors by Scholasticus · · Score: 1

    I recently bought a 17" LCD monitor, and have found that for most uses it's far superior to a CRT (the exceptions are gaming and video). LCDs have improved greatly in the last few years (and are much less expensive). I would recommend an LCD for anyone who sits in front of a monitor for long periods, and even moreso for anyone with vision problems. I myself suffer from eyestrain and headaches very easily, and have had a much better time with the LCD. One caveat: though the prices have come down, LCDs are still quite a bit more expensive than CRTs.

  52. Sad News... Queen Mother Dead, Age 101 by Lethyos · · Score: 1, Offtopic

    I just heard some sad news on talk radio - Elizabeth, Queen of England was found dead in her Windsor lodge this afternoon. There weren't any more details. I'm sure everyone in the Slashdot community will miss her - even if you didn't enjoy her politics, there's no denying her contributions to popular culture. Truly an American icon.

    --
    Why bother.
    1. Re:Sad News... Queen Mother Dead, Age 101 by kaiidth · · Score: 1

      Lethyos: You idiot.

      As a matter of fact, the Queen Mother (no, the Queen and the Queen Mother are in fact separate people) indeed died on Saturday. Also as a matter of fact, you're not funny.

      English royalty may not mean a very great deal to your average slashdotter but I would sincerely hope that you could manage a little bit more respect than a Stephen King Is Dead troll lookalike.

      I should imagine a number of people will indeed miss her, yes.

  53. bad idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Informative

    Unless you use the same lighting at home as they do in the store.

  54. Dear fella KCer.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I was diagnosed with keratoconus (KC) 16 years ago already but probably I have had it for much longer time. KC is bad but is not the worst vision disorder out there. As for computer monitors everything depends upon the mode of correction of the eyesight that is most suitable for you. As far as myself I am relying on hard contact lenses for driving and other everyday operation and I use glasses when I work with a computer. The problem with hard contact lenses is that my eyes soon start watering and I have to take lenses out and switch to glasses. I have this problem only with CRT displays and I can work very long hours with LCD. Possible explanation is that static electricity from the CRT display causes contact lenses to dry out. So for most time I am using my notebook computer with an LCD.

    It may help posting this question on the KC-link that is a moderated mailing list for KC patients.

  55. Just use a TV by Mr.+Sketch · · Score: 2

    Why not just get a video card with a TV out and use a large TV? At my college we had a special setup with like a 30" TV at 640x480 that was freaking huge for people with bad eyesight. I don't see why you couldn't do this at home except maybe with a smaller TV like 19-25" or so. After all, it's usually easier and cheaper to get TVs at larger sizes than computer monitors. There are obvious desk space considerations to take into account, but I think this could be a good option to mention.

    1. Re:Just use a TV by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The resolution on the ntsc signal sucks.. but larger hdtv's are becoming more affordable.

  56. Phased Image by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why not adjust the image that is produced by the monitor for the appropriate perscription of the user; by compensating at the signal?

  57. that's silly by mmusn · · Score: 3, Informative
    Training nearsightedness away is right up there with various devices to increase the size of certain private body parts, or spot exercise to remove fat deposits. It may make sense to you, but it doesn't work. At best, someone can perhaps learn to get by a little better with the fuzzy image they are seeing. If someone who needs glasses doesn't get them, he'll just miss out on a lot of things.

    And by the time you reach your 40s, you'll invariably need reading glasses anyway; there is no escaping it. Sorry, eyes just aren't built to last.

    1. Re:that's silly by sunhou · · Score: 2

      No, I don't think it's the same as increasing penis size, etc. It's more like exercising an actual muscle to make it bigger (or maybe helping a muscle to relax so that it doesn't tense up).

      In my case, the doc said that doing up-close reading was fatiguing the muscles in my eyes that allow me to focus at various depths, or something along those lines (it's been a long time, I forget the details). She said she'd seen many people with a very similar problem. At the time, she said at least hopefully it would slow down the progression of nearsightedness, but she tried not to get me too hopeful. It worked really well for me. I'm sure many peoples' nearsightedness may have other causes.

      Haven't you ever stared at something up close (a few inches from your face) for a bit, then noticed that when you look away, your eyes take a while before they will focus at a farther distance again? Why is it hard to believe that muscles around the eyes can get tired?

    2. Re:that's silly by mmusn · · Score: 2

      People are nearsighted because their eyeball has grown too long for their cornea. You can't reverse that through exercise (conceivably, you might be able to prevent it in children somehow). There is no muscle involved. And the muscle that you use for focussing needs to relax in order to focus at a distance, so "strengthening" that wouldn't help you with nearsightedness.

    3. Re:that's silly by Skeld · · Score: 1

      I've heard something to this effect too. There are small muscles in your eye that contract and flatten the lens of your eye, allowing you to focus. If whatever you're focusing at is just on the edge of your focus range, those muscles get tired fast.

      Nearsightedness is when the muscles become too strong, and are warping your lens too much, and farsightedness is when your muscles are too weak.

      This is why nearsighted people tend to end up really nearsighted, and farsighted people get totally blasted vision, because their muscles are weakening (and eventually wither up and die, or something).

      Anyway, this is all conjecture, but it seems to make sense, so that should be good enough for Slashdot.

      -Skeld

    4. Re:that's silly by sessamoid · · Score: 2

      >>but it seems to make sense, It may seem to make sense, but it's completely false. The earlier poster had it correct, in that nearsightness is an aberration of the length of the "eyeball" in relation to the maximum focusing power of the lens. Nothing to do with the muscles at all. The muscles in the eye can't change the fundamental limits of the anatomy. G.N. M.D.

      --
      "No, no, no. Don't tug on that. You never know what it might be attached to."
  58. Cataracts were my problem... by SwedishChef · · Score: 2

    and after the surgery replaced my lenses with implants I found that seeing small fonts on the monitor got more difficult. I had a 17" Viewsonic which I traded for a 15" LCD panel and the difference was amazing right off the bat. I would never recommend anyone with any vision problem buy anything but an LCD screen and preferably one with the best contrast ration you can find. In my opinion a 15" LCD is better than a 17" CRT.

    --
    No one ever had to evacuate a city because the solar panels broke!
  59. Please Mod The Parent Up by vanguard · · Score: 0, Redundant

    I was going to write the same thing. Let's leave the medical advice to doctors.

    --
    That which does not kill me only makes me whinier
  60. Ditto the ViewSonic VG191 recommendation by Brian+Stretch · · Score: 2

    I have a ViewSonic VG191 19" LCD and a Sony G500 21" FD Trinitron hooked up to my ATI Radeon 8500 dualhead card at home, and a Sony M81 18" LCD at work. The VG191 has *almost* as much viewable area as the G500 (remember, a 21" tube has slightly less than 20" of usable screen), and hooked up to the DVI port it's razor sharp and very easy to read at its native 1280x1024 res. The VG191 is noticibly larger than the Sony 18". Alas, ViewSonic hiked the price by $300 a few weeks ago (a few days after I bought mine, when's the last time that happened?), so you'll spend at least $1200 to get one. It comes with DVI and analog cables though, the Sony M81 only comes with an analog cable(dumb!). One irritation with the ViewSonic: text mode (BIOS startup, etc) chops off the lower right section of the screen when using the DVI port (everything's fine via analog). The KDE desktop displayed on the VG191 via DVI is unbelievably cool.

    Sony's entry level 21" FD Trinitron is ~$500 (the better G520P is ~$750), so if funds are tight, hey, you won't suffer too much. I use my G500 for HDTV video more than anything else these days, which no affordable LCD can do (Apple's HD Cinema display will, but it's $3500). But given a choice, LCD via DVI is the way to go.

    1. Re:Ditto the ViewSonic VG191 recommendation by kikta · · Score: 2
      One irritation with the ViewSonic: text mode (BIOS startup, etc) chops off the lower right section of the screen when using the DVI port (everything's fine via analog).

      Hook them both up at the same time - that's what I do & everything's fine. If you're already configured that way, maybe the monitor (or the video card) doesn't like your BIOS.
    2. Re:Ditto the ViewSonic VG191 recommendation by Brian+Stretch · · Score: 2

      I did that, but it's annoying. My home machine (Epox 8KHA+ KT266A chipset) with Radeon 8500 and my work machine (Epox 8KHA KT266 chipset, about to be replaced by an ASUS A7V333-R) with a Radeon VE (aka Radeon 7000 with dualhead) both lop off the lower right section of the screen on the VG191 DVI. The Sony M81 via DVI doesn't have this problem. The Sony is more polished than the VG191, but I sure do like the extra real estate of the ViewSonic.

  61. New laptop screens... by GeoNerd · · Score: 1

    While I do not have any degenerative eye diseases, I have very bad vision (uncorrected, like 20/400, but the 20/? system breaks down at my level). It's corrected to 20/20 right after an eye exam, but over time, it gets worse.

    This causes bad posture while working on computers. I generally lean forward while I'm working, to get closer to a monitor. I have used a lot of CRT's, both good and bad, and haven't really noticed any difference between them in terms of vision, but some are better in terms of overall appearance quality.

    Now for the punchline. I just bought a Toshiba 5105-S607, with a UXGA+ screen. This is the first screen I have ever used where I can really lean back and read/see what's going on. This may be due to anti-aliased fonts in WinXP, but I think it also has a lot to do with the screen. Drop by a store and scope it out, I think you'll be impressed. I'm really enjoying using a screen I can actually read text on at 1600x1200!

  62. I have keratoconus too... by Argyle · · Score: 2

    I have found that the important thing is not so much the monitor, as how your vision is corrected.

    Using a good flat screen 17" CRT monitor is probably a good idea. Make sure you have good lighting in the room you are looking at the computer screen.

    My keratoconus is bad enough that glasses can't fully correct my vision without giving me double vision. The general glasses I use around the house work to about 20 feet and give me a headache if I wear them for more than a coupl eof hours.

    I wear Softperm (sorry I couldn't find any good links) contact lenses. They are hard lenses in the center and soft on the outside. Much easier to wear than straight hard lenses, but you get excellent vision from the the rigid center.

    With my lenses on, I get 20/20 to 20/30 vision, depending on how tired my eyes are that day. IMHO, the standard toric & other soft lenses are all shit compared to these Softperms.

    The main advice I would give to you is to take breaks from the computer. Ever hour or so, get up and wander around. I find it makes a big difference to take time away from the screen.

    --
    nuclear iraq bioweapon encryption cocaine korea terrorist
  63. Wonder about lawsuits by interstellar_donkey · · Score: 2

    I'm responsible for buying all the hardware for my company, and I won't pick up anything smaller then 17"

    At one point, my boss asked me why I was always going for the larger monitors. My response: "Because 15" (or 14", which we had at the time) was just too small. In a few years people with bad eyesite are going to blame it on their monitors if they are too small"

    This will happen. The question is'nt if somebody will sue because their company gave them a small CRT (or LCD), but when. I sure as heck don't want to be there.

    --
    The Internet is generally stupid
    1. Re:Wonder about lawsuits by sessamoid · · Score: 2
      It's a good scam to convince your boss to buy larger monitors, but it isn't true.

      The story that squinting at small text or monitors, sitting too close to the tv, etc. can cause poor vision is an old wives' tale. There is no convincing medical evidence that any of these activities decrease vision in anything but the very short-term (hours). They do not cause near-sightedness, blindness, far-sightedness, or color blindness. At worst they will cause some fatiguing of the muscles in the eye making it difficult and irritating until those muscles are rested.

      I realize people can sue for anything, but the moment they try to hire an ophthalmologist as an expert witness, they'll get nothing but laughter in their faces.

      --
      "No, no, no. Don't tug on that. You never know what it might be attached to."
    2. Re:Wonder about lawsuits by ElderKorean · · Score: 1

      I've got congenital cataracts, and have my own fun from them. My vision is 6/12-1 for both eyes. But things are apparently out of focus, but I don't notice as this is how it's always been.

      I've worked with monitors up to 17inch and have found the larger ones are far easier to work with. LCD's don't seem any better for me. LCD Projectors are fun to play with but not that good for regular work.

      For me CRT 17Inch at 1024*768 works best, sitting just under a foot away from the screen. Gets strange looks from the workmates, but good for me. Never had eye strain problems. Not full brightness but high contrast.

      While with my opthalmologist one day, asked about vision problems with computers. He said that computer monitors are tending to highlight problems that people already have but have never been diagnosed.

  64. Do some eye exercises! by PotatoHead · · Score: 2

    Your condition is a problem in that the image presented to your retnia will be distored, but your lens muscles can adapt quite a ways from the norms.

    I had some vision problems a while back. Was developing astigmatism. Went for glasses, and the doctor basically told me that if I used the glasses, I would quickly become dependant on them.

    His solution was simple once he learned what I was doing most of the time. Subject my eyes to a variety of visual problems each day. Focusing near medium and far often during the day. This has worked well for me in that after a few months, the problems went away.

    So it can't hurt in your case, and might help you retain lens flexibility and muscle development that will enable you to see well as your condition develops.

    1. Re:Do some eye exercises! by YogaDude · · Score: 1
      There is an article in Yoga Journal from March/April, 1999, about using Yoga eye exercises. The guy featured in the article, Meir Schneider, saved his own eyesight. See the following references from the article:
      • Schneider, Meir. Self Healing: My Life and Vision. Penguin, 1989.
      • Schneider, Meir and Maureen Larkin. The Handbook of Self-Heling. Penguin/Arkana, 1994.
      • Schneider, Meir. Meir Schneider's Miracle Eyesight Method. Audiotapes from Sounds True, 1996.
      What I do to avoid simple eye fatigue is every twenty minutes or so I take a break from the screen and keyboard and do some reading and taking notes. Also looking off into the distance from time to time helps. Remembering to blink frequently is freshing, as well. Good luck to you!
  65. High Res LCD works for me by peterdaly · · Score: 2

    I don't know any details about the posters condition, so this may not be relevent.

    Over the past few years my eyesight has started to get worse. I can have a slightly weak right eye, which has been getting progressivly worse with time. about a year ago, after hiting an insane deadline for a project, my boss got me what was at the time the top of the line Dell laptop (C800). The machine has a 15" LCD which I use at 1600x1200, which makes everything very small, but razor sharp. Not only is it razor sharp, but there is no refresh rate, which is something that gives me problems.

    Anyway, since getting the LCD, my right eye has bothered me less and less. I almost never even notice the problem now. Everyone that looks at my screen tells me I am going to go blind, and I just have to kind of chuckle, and tell them my vision has improved.

    Now when I use a CRT for any length of time, I can actually feel my right eye starting to get stressed again. My experience may not be true for everyone, especially if you have a real vision problem, other than the standard bad vision, like I believe the poster does.

    I highly suggest getting a high resolution LCD if you are just starting to get vision problems from using an CRT all day long. For me, using a CRT is a killer, even at 85htz refresh. I have a 21" Sony Trintron at home, and that gives me problems as well, although other people swear by them.

    Try things out and see what works best for you.

    -Pete

    1. Re:High Res LCD works for me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A friend with macular degeneration uses an Apple Cinema Display (the 22" model). There are a couple advantages here unless you have solid (rather than prejudicial) reasons for not going Apple:

      [1] It's beautiful, light, doesn't waste deskspace, runs cool, is flicker-free, can be seen from extreme angles, fills more of one's visual field, etc.
      [2] OSX has handy icon magnification and other niceties he uses 100% of the time. If I had the money ($3500--OUCH) I'd do the same, even though my vision is merely blurry.

      Right now I use FreeBSD/Intel on a 1600x1200 19" monitor. It's a beautiful monitor, but I would trade in a heartbeat for the new 23" Cinema Display at the same pixel count. Since OSX is more or less BSD under the covers, I can still compile unix software, so it's not much of a sacrifice, and becoming less of one with every passing week.

      Eric

  66. get something bright by mmusn · · Score: 2
    You'll probably need bigger fonts, but whether you go with a bigger or smaller monitor is your preference. Some great work has been done on 80x24 CRTs.

    The only thing that probably makes a difference as far as buying a monitor is concerned is to get a monitor that's bright. A bright monitor will make it more likely that your pupils are small, and that makes the images you are getting sharper. I think bright, sharp, and big are more difficult to get in the same monitor, so perhaps a smaller, lower resolution, but brighter monitor is a better choice overall. Paying attention to office lighting probably also helps a lot.

    My personal impression is that light-text-on-dark-background also improves readability, but that's something you can experiment with afterwards.

    Also, think about the software you will be using. Interfaces will lots of buttons and tiny, fixed-size dialog boxes will not be your friend, while a command line at which you type succinct commands works no matter how poor your vision gets. While Windows has some low-vision hooks, aiming for working on a command line system may be a better career move.

  67. may I suggest meditation as a supportive strategy? by pedro · · Score: 2

    Meditation as a lifestyle has as a major side benefit; the 'grounding' of the organism that one inhabits. It (our Meat representation to the world) then calms down, and functions with optimal performance.
    I've also had vision difficulties recently that can totally be traced to stress.
    Stress can boost one's intraocular pressure (aggravating our friend's problem) as well as confusing the image processing areas of the brain.
    Try being Here and Now and see if that helps.
    (Zen skill acquisition is left as an exercise for the reader)
    I'm betting that it will. Worked for me!

    --
    Brak: What's THAT?
    Thundercleese: A light switch.. of TOTAL DEVASTATION!
  68. Assistive Technology (AT) by jpsc · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Hi tuxbeej,

    Fundamentally you should probably be looking into Assistive Technology (AT) -- a screen magnifier or a large font theme or a high-contrast theme, just to name a few possible solutions. A larger monitor might be used in conjunction with a screen magnifier or a theme. Just buying a different or larger monitor and getting "one of the big LCD projector dealies?" may not be an option at your work or home, is certainly not portable, and may actually not help that much or at all.

    Do you use Linux or Windows or Mac OS?
    If you use Linux, you should check out the Linux Accessibility Resource Site (LARS) at http://trace.wisc.edu/linux/ If you use Windows you might want to search google for the terms ZoomText, JAWS, or just Windows Accessibility. I'm sure you'll find something useful. If you use Mac OS X, try searching for OS X Accessibility, there's a web page at apple.com about what it can do; more accessibility solutions also exist for OS 9. Please e-mail me (jpsc@users.sourceforge.net) if you have further questions and I'd love to talk to you more about solutions that exist for your particular platform.

    I feel I have to comment on the way in which Slashdot continues to cover the topic of accessibility. I mean no disrespect to your question, it is indeed a very good one. The way in which the question was framed, however demonstrates a general lack of familiarity with accessibility on the part of Slashdot editors. The editors continuously reject stories (I and I'm sure other of my colleagues have submitted) about substantive accessibility news and assistive technology software for Linux, Unix, and OS X and instead pick stories that turn the complex issues of accessibility, disabled computer users, low-vision access, etc. into an invitation reccomend monitors.

    This is really missing the point about what Assistive Technology is and can do. I would LOVE to talk to the Slashdot editors (or anyone else) about these issues and be thrilled to see an "Accessibility" topic added to Slashdot.

    Editors, if you're reading, e-mail me, I'll be glad to call you or correspond on IRC or e-mail. This is a very important issue that deserves to be framed the right way. Among other things, under Section 508 of the Rehabilitation Act Amendments of 1998, software used in the US federal government, INCLUDING Linux, must be accessible (see http://www.access-board.gov/sec508/508standards.ht m for more information). Making GNOME, KDE, X, and Linux accessible is a HUGE effort that involves dozens of full-time engineers at Sun, in Germany, China, and Ireland, yet Slashdot has never done justice to the topic.

    Again, Slashdot editors PLEASE contact me. Tuxbeej, feel free to do the same.

    Best,

    --JP Schnapper-Casteras

    Organizer of the 1st and 2nd Linux Accessibility Conferences

    Creator of the Linux Accessibility Resource Site
    Founder of the KDE Accessibility Project
    Maintainer of the Free Desktop Accessibility Working Group
    Founder and co-admin of Project Ocularis

    http://trace.wisc.edu/linux/
    http://ocularis.sf .net
    http://accessibility.kde.org
    http://www.spe echinfo.org/fddawg

  69. What to look for by phalse+phace · · Score: 2

    If you can afford it, definitely an LCD display would be best. Their speed, brightness, resolution, and color accuracy can't be beat.

    If an LCD is out of your budget, then when looking for a CRT, make sure it's got a low dot pitch. The smaller the dot pitch, the sharper the image and therefore less strain on the eyes.

    Also, make sure the monitor has a high refresh rate for the resolution you'll have it set at. The higher the refresh rate, the smoother and more flicker-free the display will be, also having the effect of reducing eye strain. Look for something with an 85Hz refresh rate or better would be best.

    And of course, the bigger the monitor the better. But that goes without saying.

  70. Montior lizards by beta21 · · Score: 1

    I think monitor lizards from people with Moore yesi ghit doesn't make sense to me

  71. Cheaper Solution -- At Least For Web by candot · · Score: 4, Informative

    A company called ION Systems makes browser plugin designed to make Web browsing easier for people with vision impairment. It's called Web Eyes. It won't help you program, but it'll make reading /. a little easier. (That, and the threshold filter...)

  72. Goggles by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I remember seeing a highly blind guy on TSS who dealt with fiber optic cables think he was an IT or something and he used a pair of "goggles" over his head that improved his sight. Not sure if these would be in your budget but they might help. =)

  73. Re:may I suggest meditation as a supportive strate by /dev/trash · · Score: 1
    Meditation as a lifestyle has as a major side benefit; the 'grounding' of the organism that one inhabits. It (our Meat representation to the world) then calms down, and functions with optimal performance. I've also had vision difficulties recently that can totally be traced to stress. Stress can boost one's intraocular pressure (aggravating our friend's problem) as well as confusing the image processing areas of the brain. Try being Here and Now and see if that helps. (Zen skill acquisition is left as an exercise for the reader) I'm betting that it will. Worked for me!

    I highly doubt being Zenful is gonna bring his sight back....

  74. I knew a guy with a similar problem by AndyChrist · · Score: 2

    I had a supervisor who had a similar problem...his optic nerve was badly developed from birth. Legally blind (he couldn't drive...and in AK, that is not fun), when he needed to see something on the monitor, he just had his face about 6 inches from the screen, and squinted a lot. Well, worked for him.

  75. I thought I was the only one. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I use a Sony 20" Trinitron @ 1024x764 at 100 Hz. Any higher resolution is ridiculous. (Come on guys, it's uneeded!) The higher Hz the better. (I actually had a "pro" tell me people can't tell above 75Hz. Huh huh. Suuuuure.)

    Good luck, I thought I was the only one with this problem.

  76. Kids by KDENCE · · Score: 1

    I saw somewhere (Parents MAgazine) that kids can damage their eyesight by prolonged computer use. I would think that this can easily transfer to us. So my suggestion is not in regards to the kind of monitor, but the time you spend in front of it.

    Ok, monitor advice! Use the biggest resolution possible. I use 800X600 on a 19 inch Flat Screen NEC.

    Entertain the Brutes!

  77. Lower res on larger monitor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My wife suffers from severe keratoconus (she actually had to have a corneal transplant at the ripe old age of 28, as her vision in that eye was no longer correctable.)

    She seems to find that running a larger monitor (17+ inches) at lower res (say, 800x600) with a high refresh rate makes things easier for her. She also bumps font sizes up, to make things easier to read.

  78. www.aisquared.com by Gordon+Shumway · · Score: 1

    Try them for some reasonable windows based magnification software. Big Shot - $99. There is a difference between this and freebies, they have a 30 day demo available. You should really check into your local agencies. In our area, we bring in consumers to try the different types of software, monitors,cctv's, etc. We let the users experiment with font types, contrasts, see what works best for them. Because everyone's vision is different, it's best to try out as many technologies as you can. Lot's of stuff out there for the visually impaired, mostly windows based though.

  79. Sony GDM-F500R or GDM-F520 by cjsnell · · Score: 2

    If you can still find any of the GDM-F500R's, its essentially the same as the F520 but in different (2000 model year) packaging. I think I paid about $1300 for mine. These are the best CRT's that I've ever owned. I also like my SGI 1600SW flatpanel but you either have to live with the crappy video card it requires or shell out $500+ for their "multilink" adapter to hook it to something decent.

    Regarding resolutions, run whatever feels comfortable, but run the highest refresh rate possible.

    HTH.

    Chris

  80. Best current monitors are flat LCDs by kobotronic · · Score: 1

    I'm among other things a GUI developer and graphics designer. I've used many kinds of monitors but since 2000 I've done virtually all my work on LCD screens since now that I'm nearing 30 my eyes are slightly less good than they used to be, and the flatter a screen is the less stress on the eye muscles to refocus as you're looking at different portions of the screen.

    On traditional spherical or cylindrical (classic Trinitron) profile CRT monitors, the corners are 'deeper' in the eye's field of view than the middle, which requires of the eyes constant readjustment when looking from center to the edge of the screen.

    Aside from that, the LCD doesn't flicker and the new ones have virtually no cursor trails at all.

    There's only two real downsides to TFT LCD - one is that the colors in some cases are less bright than the phosphors on pro monitors like Sony's high-end screens. However, there's supposed to be some new types out using RGB LEDs for backlighting, improving the gamut and color accuracy tremendously. The other is that the pixel size is fixed, which means that all screen resolutions other than full will look slightly fuzzy.

    I hope in a few years there will be concave cylindrical or even spherical profile displays using perhaps OLEDs. Remember the cylindrical screens the kids are playin games on in the movie TOYS? The benefit to 'hollow' or wraparound displays is that the eye distance to the screen is even for the entire FOV, which should yield much greater clarity and reduce eye strain. I'd imagine such displays being popular with most people. For movie playback, a wraparound display might also make for a more immersive impression. A concave cylinder profile is therefore good and will quite likely exist some day. A spherical display would be better, but I could see some difficulties in manufacturing such a display since the inside of a spherical surface is difficult to "print" a circuit on. It might also look goofy, like some mutated blob of 1960s "organic" tech design. :)

  81. Pardon me, but I think you are mistaken. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    To some degree, I am more prone to take the position of sunhou for a number of reasons.

    In the past, many of the people I have spoken to who use corrective lenses do claim that their vision became worse after they started using lenses. This does not mean that lenses don't help one see better when worn, but that un-aided vision might actually get worse as one's eyes get used to (in other words, worse because of) the compensation that the lenses provide.

    Another thing that I can attest to is the fact that after my graduation from college and subsequent employment as a software engineer, I noticed that my vision which had always been perfect began to deteriorate as I spent longer and longer hours staring at my monitor. As someone who had always had perfect vision, I was shaken and worried to say the least. I immediately (and still do so to this day) took to alternately exercising my eyes (by repeatedly holding my palm close to my face and focusing on it, and then looking at an object as far away as possible) and taking breaks from the computer and closing my eyes to rest them. I also began to limit the amount of time I spent in front of any screen. And indeed, in my case, these measures have proven helpful and useful. My eyesight is now back to normal and I am a lot more aware of the dangers posed by our increasing use of modern devices.

    1. Re:Pardon me, but I think you are mistaken. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Of course, staring at a monitor will cause your "vision to deteriorate" in some sense. But that's not the same as myopia.

      The main danger to your vision from our modern society, btw, is that you will probably live to your 40s: you will need reading glasses, I guarantee it.

  82. I'm using a TFT monitor... by software_non_olet · · Score: 1

    ...it doesn't flicker, I can get closer and at the same time the eye (actually it's only one good eye left who has to do the work now) has less stress.

    When I have the money, I'll go for an 18 inch TFT monitor and adjust the font sizes to my needs. The monitors btw come in slightly different dot sizes - try out the different brands which yuite your eyes best, It's anyway important to pick the individual monitor yourself, a high contrast ratio is certainly important (should have at least 1:300) as well as the possible viewing angle plays a role. Hence I wouldn't buy the monitor just according to the technical specs, but have a 'close' look myself. And then I buy the very same monitor I found satisfying, because a monitor out of the box might have annoying broken pixels and still conform to the spec :(

    If you have not done so, I'd also recommend to learn typing with ten fingers (i.e. so called 'blindly'). Having to look to the monitor and then to the keyboard and then back to the monitor again etc. places additional stress on the eye muscles (including the little muscles which adjust for the viewing distance).

    Perhaps one of the X86-gurus is reading this also - may I ask you to implement different mouse cursor sizes, shapes and color/contrast layouts, which can be configured in one central place? That's certainly one of the points where Windows is better than Linux - although the X-Window system still needs to learn those tricks.

    Let's use the technology for us - using it against us we've done long enough, I think.

    About some things we cannot do anything - like pouring wine an inch behind the glass, when you have only one eye and no stereoscopic view .o)

  83. Me too (was Re:Corrective lenses make things worse by rdarden · · Score: 1

    I've had similar experiences.. I've been farsighted basically since birth, with a bit of a lazy left eye. Since my problem was caught at around age 4 I wore glasses morning to night. Sometime in high school I read somewhere that corrective lenses for near/farsightedness tend to make your eyesight worse over time (hence the new prescription every 2 years), so I decided to experiment with this.. I could always see without my glasses, it just strained my eyes a bit and things got blurry/crossed when I (or my eyes) were tired. Little by little, though, my vision improved.. It's been (um counting..) 8 years now since I regularly wore glasses. I used to wear them from time to time (when I was reading, etc) but for years now I've gone without.
    That said, over the past few months I've been working longer hours and forgetting to take breaks as regularly as I should so I'm thinking of getting some reading glasses. My eyes get fatigued when I overdo it but I don't get headaches.

    Anyway, YMMV, IANAD, etc.. Oddly enough, I still think of myself as a "glasses" person.

  84. Use ZoomText with a large monitor by GrumpyX · · Score: 1

    I have a friend with a similar problem and he uses a 21" CRT with ZoomText a magnification and screen reading program from AISquared

  85. Well. What can I say? by Chas · · Score: 1

    Most people have said it already.

    • Go for as large a monitor as you can afford.
    • Run at higher resoloutions
    • If your OS's GUI does font anti-aliasing, crank the
      resoloution up and then just increase the screen font size
      (as the font antialiasing will look better at high
      resoloution (and possibly be more readable) than a monitor
      set to a lower resoloution just to keep the default
      font looking big.
    • Look into larger LCD screens.

    And here's my contributions.

    • If you decide to stick with a large CRT(usually a MUCH
      cheaper (though heavier) choice than large LCD), DEFINITELY
      look into the professional-grade monitors (most consumer-
      grade monitors run their max resolutions at 60 Hertz, many
      of the pro-grade ones will run higher resoloutions (at a
      given screen size) than a consumer-grade will, and will do
      max resolution at 70+ Hertz).
    • Lighting. The fluorescent lighting used in many places
      is actually NOT ideal for computing areas. Reason, the
      fluorescent lights flicker. Usually it's fairly
      imperceptible. However, when combined with even a high
      refresh rate on a monitor, it can contribute to significant
      amounts of eye strain.

      Stay with standard incandescent bulbs. In some places,
      you can actually buy bulbs that are intended for use in
      computing areas. Otherwise, stick with the standard soft-
      white/readingbulbs.

      Avoid the halogen bulbs, since they tend to be a bit
      brighter than standard incandescent bulbs, and produce a
      somewhat harsher light. They also run a bit hotter than
      standard incandescent bulbs, and can pose a problem in
      lamps/fixtures intended for standard incandescent.

      Avoid those long-life or low-power "bulbs" that look like
      tubes instead of the standard bulb shape. Those are merely
      fluorescent lights.

    • TAKE REGULAR BREAKS AWAY FROM THE MONITOR/COMPUTER!

      Now many people (especially us computer junkies) tend to
      forget to occasionally get away from the thing for a little
      while (MY PRECIOUSSSSSSSS!) to give your eyes a rest.

      It doesn't need to be 2-hours on, one hour off or
      anything stupid like that. But every couple hours, get up,
      move around, and get your eyes off the screen for a little
      while. Get a Coke, take a leak, have a smoke, etc. Or if
      you're chained to your cubicle, turn the monitor off for
      about 10-15 minutes and just look around.

    • Visit your optometrist. Ask about eyeglass/contact
      prescriptions for your visual problems AND inquire about
      eyeglasses that are made especially for those working with
      computers (IIRC they use specially coated glass/plastic that
      helps reduce glare and minimized eye strain.

    Hope this helps you a little.

    This post formatted especially to avoid being stretched off
    the side of the page by morons deliberately trying to
    break the formatting on Slashdot.

    --


    Chas - The one, the only.
    THANK GOD!!!
  86. There is a serious problem with the Web by Shiny+Metal+S. · · Score: 2

    The problem with websites is often much more serious than with small monitors. It's easier to set up a text editor or xterm to display large fonts, but with websites things are much more difficult, thanks to incompetent web designers, that's why I'll focus on websites. There are thousands of webmasters out there, for whom a good website looks like this:

    ...
    <body>
    <font size="-1000000">
    everything goes here
    </font>
    </body>
    ...

    This is a serious problem. You can't set your default base font size to 1000 points, just to have 30 points fonts on most websites, because the correctly designed websites (i.e. those which use the default, user defined font size for main text) will have fonts larger than a screen. Sometimes even the website is nearly unusable when you're using larger fonts, because you have to horizontally scroll reading every line of text.

    A quite obvious solution would be to use text mode Lynx browser in xterm window (or dos box in MS-Windows), using 40x20 characters, with very large fonts, so the window takes the whole screen. Unfortunately, most of websites don't work in text mode, not to say about being usable using lines shorter than 80 characters.

    Read My own web design rules (my comment to What Makes a Good Web Design Slashdot article, which was not very popular when I wrote it, but is in my opinion very important), especially the points entitled:

    • Remember about people with disabilities
    • Fonts
    • User defaults

    Those are in my opinion the most important points to this discussion, but take a look also on:

    • Valid HTML
    • HTML is not a typesetting language
    • Remember about other browsers than yours
    • Colors

    If webmasters while making their websites were only following these few simple rules, there would be no problem. Even the 14 inch screen is big enough to display very large and readable characters using e.g. 40x20, or even 20x10 characters, full-screen windows. The problem is that most of the Web becomes completely unusable in 20x10 characters text mode.

    Let me quote to sentences of Tim Berners-Lee, inventor of the World Wide Web:

    • "The power of the Web is in its universality. Access by everyone regardless of disability is an essential aspect."
    • "Anyone who slaps a 'this page is best viewed with Browser X' label on a Web page appears to be yearning for the bad old days, before the Web, when you had very little chance of reading a document written on another computer, another word processor, or another network."

    Unfortunately, most of web designers don't understand that at all. They are one of the main reasons, why people with poor eyesight have to buy gigantic, expensive monitors.

    --

    ~shiny
    WILL HACK FOR $$$

  87. Re:There is a serious problem with you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Regardless how important your ideas are your pompacity and arrogance is repulsive. You will not go far.

  88. Apple Cinema Displays, CRT tips by tz · · Score: 1

    The best thing about Apple is probably the displays. I got a 22" Cinema display (the $500 rebate if purchased with a G4 expires today though, but they may cut prices). The pain in my pocketbook is more than made up for by the complete lack of eyestrain.

    The LCDs are 300:1 or 350:1 contrast ratio. There are some for PCs, but the cheapest "big screen" I know of is the Apple Cinema at $2499. PC screen with lots of pixels are well over $3000.

    If you must use a CRT, as someone else said DON'T TURN UP THE BRIGHTNESS. The best I've found is to have a dark work area. Most monitors blur when you turn them up. Also they tend to alias with any florescent or other lights. Also, there are sometimes moire effects. You want to stay at a slightly lower resolution at a higher refresh rate. (in your case you might want a bright work area with brighter monitor since your pupils would have a smaller area and thus maybe distort less).

    Also, always wear sunglasses out of doors. I don't know precisely how bad UV is, but my eyesight is still good.

  89. kc - rgp by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Diagnosed with keratoconus several years ago (most likely instigated by eye irritation). Been using RGP lenses since - can be fairly uncomfortable. Eyesight good enough with the lenses, but glasses aren't too useful. Use a 19" flat screen just fine (no special fonts, etc.).

  90. try ViewSonic's new 23" LCD by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Go for the Viewsonic 23" LCD. (www.viewsonic.com) It rotates, has all the things one needs, is silent, and yes, bigger iS better
    It's huge, gorgeous, and expensive, but will do what you want it to do

    figure on spending $4000+ for this one!

  91. Assistive Technology will help by pilsen · · Score: 1

    Assisitive Technology is not only for the blind. Assistive technology helps those people with low-vision, too. Screen reading technology and speech synthesis, for example, is always improving. AT supports users well enough that there is actually a sizable computer programmer population that is blind. Companies, such as Freedom Scientific, employ a number of blind programmers that actually produce screen-reading software!

    The government is also helping VIPs as well, by passing legislation. Section 508, passed last June, mandates that all federal agencies, including those receiving federal funds (e.g., universities, state governments, etc.) have their Electronic and Information Technology (E&IT) be accessibile to ALL. Corporations (though not legally liable) are also gettin in the mix. Most companies are willing to accomodate a those with special needs. Speaking from experience, VIPs tend to be *extremely* loyal to their companies, which is very desirable to companies.

    I realize that this is a difficult time for you, and I feel for you. But just remember, you are not alone, and you will not be forgotten by technology. You *still* will have career options.

    PILSEN
    Assistive Technology Specialist

  92. VIP = Visually Impaired People by pilsen · · Score: 1

    In response to my posting, and to clear up anything, VIP = Visually Impaired People

  93. You'd be best off seeing your opthamologist by dsgfh · · Score: 1

    My mother also suffers from keratoconus, has done since she was about 10 I think, and aside from requiring an anti-glare screen, does not have any trouble with a 14" monitor. I suspect that medical help would be more beneficial. She has used contacts to correct the shape of her eyes, as well as her glasses for the last 25-30 years. And about 5 years ago now, had 1 cornea replaced. If your vision has already deteriorated to the point where contacts are unsuitable, then a cornea transplant is probably your best option. Mum loves her new eye & is looking forward to getting the other one done.

  94. Experience from another weak-eyed geek. by cfish · · Score: 2, Informative

    I am a programmer. I too have extremely weak eyes. How bad? Two summers ago, I went to summer intern at a company that bought us brand new 17" SONY trinitron monitors and I ended up in the doctors'. I spend over 50% of my computer budget on monitors. (which is what EVERYONE should do.) I have spent a lot of time on this subject. Let me tell you what I find.

    1. Lighting is VERY important. make sure you have ambient light.

    2. the size of the monitor is also very important, but CRISPNESS is more important. You must make sure that the monitor is CRISP. You cannot really tell if a monitor is CRISP without looking at it. Two monitors with the same pitch distance can be very different when you actually look at them.

    3. You MUST get them with full 3 year warranty. Monitors are so fragile, that it may be already broken during shipment, before you open the box. Monitors, especially big ones, have an extremely high lemon rate. If you spend money on a monitor and you are not satisfied with the image quality, insist on taking it back. You must move it *very* carefully.

    4. LCD vs. CRT. Well. LCD technology is simply not there yet. When IBM shows me the 300dpi monitor I'll take a close look and maybe change my mind. The truth is, For the price you pay for a LCD with high quality digital signals, you'd be so better off with two beautiful 20" high end monitor. Another thing is, in Linux, you can configure 10 different resolutions, all the way from 1200x1600 to 400x600. LCDs cannot scale good. When a LCD is displaying any size that is different from it's own, it interpolates. This anti-aliasing kills your eyes because your eyes tend to think that it is out of focus.

    5. Video card counts. You must get a Matrox. Make damn sure that it doesn't get under 85MHz. Better get higher rates. Hand tune your monitor carefully.

    6. Monitor cables counts a lot, too. Best is high quality BNC cables, they are about $100.

    7. Do yourself a favour, use OPERA as your browser. you can zoom in any size you want with your numeric keypad. Right now I'm typing in half-inch letters.

    8. one thing great about two huge monitors is that you can set one of them at really low resolution, so when you switch to windows. *shame* like VC++ you can see BIG letters.

    9. Picking a monitor is likely shopping for fruit. You must hand pick yours. Even the exact same model have different crispness. Pick a good one.

    This is what my room looks like.

    My school have 20" Trinitron monitors everywhere, but they tire my eyes. If you set up your monitor configuration correctly, you are not likely to be tired for a long long time.

    What's the best CRT monitor? Well I really dislike Trinitron tubes because many of them actually flashes due to the little string that holds the grills turned lose. I heard many many good words about high end EIZO, but they are at $2000 range.

    I know that you are a student, and this sounds very expensive. You must sacrifice everything else to get a good monitor setup if you want to still see in 10 years. It's also a great investment because it last longer than any other parts of your computer, Good luck.

    Another huge earth quake hit Taiwan. Let's pray for them.

    1. Re:Experience from another weak-eyed geek. by cfish · · Score: 1

      Oh, i forgot to mention another thing: Monitors wear out. You cannot buy a used 10 year old 21" workstation monitor and expect it to be crisp. The chemicals on the screen will expire in a few years. Make sure you shut the monitor when you are not using it, to extend its life.

  95. LCD with DVI, et al. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Although any eyesight difficulties I may have are merely the usual age-related stuff (I'm in my fifties), I've switched to an LCD monitor and haven't looked back. It's a Planar 17.4" model (1280 x 1024) with DVI input. It arrived ahead of the DVI video card (one of the older GeForce models), so I tried it with the analog input for a couple days. It was okay -- better than a CRT, but not $800 worth. Once on the DVI card, though, the clouds parted and the angels sang. It's that good! The digital video, along with the 450:1 contrast ratio, make it possible to work all day without any of the discomfort the CRT gave me. Plus, I can see more stuff on the same-size screen -- or the same stuff more clearly. One feature this unit doesn't have that would be nice is the ability to rotate it into portrait position. 'Handy for those Acrobat files -- especially the ones with multiple text columns!

    Another thing you might consider is multiple monitors. Someone must have driver software that would let you use one as a zoom into the other.

    Another, purely software ploy is a feature I recently saw in a shareware GPS program: a virtual magnifying glass. Using the mouse, you could pan this thing anywhere in the application, and it would enlarge the view "beneath" it -- just like the real thing. Something like this on a system-wide level might be a real benefit to those with limited eyesight.

    As age takes its inevitable toll, I've come to appreciate all the more what a gift good eyesight is and how important it is to take care of it. I wish you the best in dealing with the challenges you face and hope that technology and medicine can both keep you ahead of the curve!

  96. Don't buy an LCD.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My girlfriend has a similar problem to yours and her sight is gradually deteriorating. The first thing I'd say is _don't_ buy an LCD. They're wonderfully sharp, but the problem is that they only give optimum clarity at a specific resolution. If, God forbid, your sight deteriorates further, then you may find that the resolution is too high (my girlfriend is totally unable to use my 17" LCD screen)

    We found that the best solution was an aperture-grille 21" CRT. Buy something with as high a refresh rate as possible - and don't be afraid to buy second hand if you have to. We bought a 3 year-old Viewsonic diamondtron-tubed monitor s/h, and it has made a massive difference for her over the 19" screen she was using previously.

  97. nice LCD helps by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ok first of all I should say go see a medical professional about this. We can suggest the nice technology but thats about it. That being said we can move on.

    My boss has very little eye sight left. We have been trying to help him for quiet a while, but he doesn't like spending money on computer equipment he doesn't need. We finally managed to get him a new LCD. Its a 20 inch with a max res of 1600x1200. We have tried to get him to use it in high res with big fonts, but the smaller pictures on websites and such make it too hard for him, so we set it back to his favorite resolution. 800x600.

    The LCD is wonderful for extended periods of time. It is MUCH clearer, and much much easier on the eye. The biggest reason for this is that it has no refresh. Have you ever noticed with a CRT that if you have the refresh fairly low and look away from the monitor for a while so that you can see it in the corner of your eye that it will give you head aches? Well the refresh will not only give you headaches but can really make your eyes tired. In my opinion LCDs are worth it just for that.

    Now if you do get an LCD I would suggest that you make sure and get a video card with a DVI output, and use that. The digital connection is really VERY nice.

    Anyway I hope my bit of advice has been helpeful. Good luck.

    Fox

  98. Mouse wheel and ctrl by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hold down ctrl and scroll the mouse wheel up or down. This will change your web font size and will probably end up being your most used quick key ever.
    Or of course(as I'm sure someone already said) set the default in the browser options.

  99. Re:News For Nerds. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But not the heathens like you, right? Just the other ones. Go get 'em tiger.

  100. Yeah, tell me about it! by John+Pfeiffer · · Score: 1

    I swore for a year or two that my little 15" monitor was making me go blind, so I saved up and went monitor shopping and just got the biggest SOB in my price range. I probably could have gone a little bigger, but monitor quality was also a concern, I ended up with Viewsonic E90 19" monitor that I bought from techonweb for $202 Not bad, text is entirely readable @ 1600x1200 and at that res I have enourmous workspaces in Photoshop and Lightwave ^___^ I should still probably look into glasses, but at about the same price I'd rather have the monitor :P

    --

    Friend: "The NIC is misconfigured..." Me: "No prob, I'll just telnet in and fix it." *Silence*
  101. get lenses by myspys · · Score: 0

    i found out that i have keratoconus, and i'm now testing out lenses. they will fix this weirdness with my eyes.

    so far everything is going very well indeed.

    try it

  102. any recommendations? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    why is there no good advice other than the one given by sudog (go to an eye specialist)

    even though i don't have major eye problem YET (i'm 26 and don't wear glasses) my eye feel irritated for using a crappy monitor, i value my eye and is thinking of buying an LCD but i see totally no good advice here

    btw last year i got a red eye, my eye was really painful when i try to open it, even though i'm okay now, i hate my monitor for causing my red eye

    fuck you monitor maker, my eyes are important, spend more time researching on monitor that are nice to the eye

  103. The Monitor-Eyesight myth by herko_cl · · Score: 2, Informative

    Thus, you are basically looking at light bulbs when you use your monitors. As a result, your eye sight gets worse. I used computers more than 15 hours/day. So, I also hope new display technology which is not so bad for eyes.

    I'll bite.
    As a M.D., heavy computer user, and having gone through eye surgery myself, I've put a lot of reading into precisely this. I get this kind of question asked on a daily basis.

    Short version: This is false. Monitors do not worsen your eyesight.

    Long version: Computer display devices do not have, and they are not, light bulbs. LCD displays carry a small fluorescent tube to provide backlighting. In a CRT, as probably all /. readers know, an electron beam is used to excite a phosphor coating on the tube, which then glows. This has nothing to do with the way a lightbulb works.
    There are, however, certain things that can give you the idea that your eyesight's getting worse. Your eyes naturally focus at infinity, which means that the muscles which stretch the lens for focusing rest when you look at a far-off point (20 feet away or more).
    As you grow older (and I mean from 15 years on), the lens becomes more and more rigid, and your focusing muscles must work harder to focus nearer. Ultimately, you just can not focus close enough to read (which is a normal condition) and must wear eyeglasses to do it (at 50 yrs approx).
    This means that, as time goes by, you have to strain more and more to look at the screen, will see it blurry from time to time when your muscles get tired and can't focus properly (and yes, they do get tired), and might get headaches from the effort expended.
    Is this is the case, an optometrist can provide eyeglasses to look at the screen with your eyes focused at infinity. Sitting farther from the computer will also help.
    --
    No .sig for you! ONE YEAR!
  104. Re:you _might_ find some info/links off surgicaley by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    also keep in mind you will bump into information about up-and-coming treatments for keratoconus


    as well as bumping into people, walls, lamp posts, etc....

  105. Phillips 107E or Trust precision excellence series by SyFryer · · Score: 1

    Hi,

    I also have bad eyesight, (not quite as bad as the posters though)and have spent some time looking into decent displays.

    I can recommend the trust precision view and the phillips 107E (17'', £100) for a budget option, that is what i am using now.

    I used to work as reviews editor for a pc mag here in the UK and snaffled a trust excellence series 17'', this was the best with the most depth i have ever seen (the phillips is better all round though).

    At the end of the day though, perhaps it isnt your monitor to worry about but your desktop and applications.

    Try looking for high visibility cursors and themes somewhere, my desktop carries an oil painting of buffy (the vampire slayer) and at 1024x768 (windows, 32 bit colour) i have no issues with readability or useability.

    I DO increase the text size from medium to larger in IE though.

    Sy

  106. A ligth from a single ring..... by Frank+Alcantara · · Score: 1

    First, excuse my terrible English.
    I was diagnosed to the twenty years and ever since, I am suffering with that disease, I am 38 years old and I continue in the branch, I use a monitor of 17 with 1024X768. However, it exists here in Brazil, in the city of Belo Horizonte, a doctor that developed a surgical method for the correction of the retina, he has been obtaining excellent results, I didn't still do for pure cowardice. But I am drifting for next year, then, perhaps, I can read a good book, with pleasure and not with pain. If you be interested the link of the doctor is; http://www.ferrararing.com.br/ This process is in use in china and in italy.

    I hope to have helped in some way.

    Frank Alcantara

  107. Some Advise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    I was 'diagnosed' with keratoconus about 5 years ago now, and i've had the same 15" monitor since.

    My eyes have been to hell and back, my right eye's cornea (top layer thing) tore and my eye went completly blue =), it healed in a few weeks(2 months) and now i have a small blue scar over my pupil (it's cool, but it sux). It only tore because i was 'knuckling' it vigorously for about 2 day. *hint*

    If you wear hard contacts (or any optical aids) your eyes become 'lazy', in a sense, they decide to not focus as much as they would without aid, hence becoming dependent on your aid... if you remember this and "practise" focusing (on the bus or when looking for loose change), you wont 'loose' your eyesight as fast.

    Also if your optometrist 'forgets', there are specail lenses for keratoconus; RoseK lenses... infact i believe there are many sites such as www.kcenter.com =D

    As for screens... i have my trusty beast 15" monitor, 75mhz, 30fps(in Q2)...and i have no probs with it(aside from the fact that it sux), althought when sight is concerned, general common sense applies... the more photons coming at your eye, the more that are going to hit the right places in your eye .. right?.... hence : bright screens and dark rooms are good :)

    Anyway, moral(s) of the story are "Shoot Foot If ABOUT To Knuckle", "Focus Son , Focus" and "instead of complaining about the flickering, see if you can keep up with counting how many times the screen flickers in a sec" ;)

    Peace Man

  108. 54e? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And I thought 36dd was big.

  109. Re:Wide page for poor eyesight! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My monitor is so big that PWP don't affect me!

  110. Monitor Suggestions by n8ur · · Score: 2

    I'm kind of surprised how many KC'ers have replied. It's not a particularly common condition and I've only met one or two others in person who have it -- but there's a large online community with a very active mailing list (kc-link@nkcf.org that has several hundred subscribers.

    Anyway, I have KC which reached the point where I've had (successful) cornea transplants in both eyes. I still have to wear contact lenses since the transplants, but I can now use relatively ordinary computer displays (e.g., 1024x768 on a 12.1 inch laptop screen).

    Prior to the transplants, I found that a 20 inch monitor running in 800x600 mode with "large fonts" selected in Windows worked well. For character-based work in Linux, a normal 80x25 text display on the 20 inch screen was really easy to read.

    Hang in there -- 90% of KCers get adequate vision with either glasses or rigid contact lenses; for the other 10% (like me), the cornea transplant has a 90%+ success rate.

  111. Dual Monitors and more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What about using multiple monitots? I use 2 monitots (2 screens, 1 desktop) and it works great! Just a thought.

  112. It's the Refresh Rate, stupid. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Low refresh rates are what causes eye strain. Get a better video card and a good monitor and up the refresh rate to 100hz or more and looking at your monitor will be almost like looking at a piece of paper.

  113. I have this eye problem: My solutions by CresentCityRon · · Score: 1

    I'll prob. get lost in the shuffle here....

    1.) See a "low vision" specialist. I found one by accident and he really helped me out. I now wear special contacts (hard) that work wonders.

    2.) Monitor size doesn't matter much for me - it is the contrast levels. I always have things on high contrast. Black backgrounds and yellow forgrounds or maybe green.

    3.) try every monitor - some LCDs work for me and others don't. I don't know why.

    Hope this is of some help.

  114. Consider two perscriptions for lenses... by cymen · · Score: 2

    I just got new glasses and the doctor suggested two perscriptions - a lower one for work on the computer (works great for reading too) and a higher one for driving, etc. I've only had them a week and while switching glasses is slightly annoying so far I'm happy. You don't mention if you are near sighted or far sighted but this might work for you...

  115. Thanks to all who posted... by TuxBeej · · Score: 1

    Greetings, eh?

    Thanks very much to everyone that posted. I figure since this story's moved off the main page, I'm probably not going to see too many more comments. In reading the comments, I noticed that a few people were wondering about my specific conition, so I thought I'd just quickly jot it down here.

    I have what I believe my optician called "asymptomatic Keretoconus", meaning that I exibit some of the clinical signs of keretoconus, but not all of them. I have severe astigmatism in my left eye, but just a small amount in my right. My opthamologist has confirmed this condition - ditto with two optometrists.

    I also have isotropia, which is a condition where I don't see through both eyes at the same time (thus I have no depth perception). Due to this, I can switch the eye that I look through and the eye I am not using will turn in to assist the eye that I am using. It's a fun trick to play at parties. ^)_(^ As a result, though, I've been told wearing rigid contacts may be "interesting"... I'll probably do it anyway, though.

    I currently have 20/30 or 20/40 vision (I can't remember my last eye exam) when I'm wearing my glasses. My ocular degeneration is proceeding fast enough that I need to update my lenses every three to four months. I'll probably look at getting rigid contacts to help the astigmatism and see if I can pair up glasses to reduce my nearsightedness... I have no idea if that is possible, though.

    I'm using a 15" Sceptre D54 as my monitor, with a Matrox G450 running at 1024x768 85Hz. My OS? Linux, of course. ^)_(^ It's getting harder to focus and I consistantly surf using Mozilla at 150% text size. I don't need images to be big - I can just Ctrl-Alt-+/- to change resolutions if I *need* to.

    I'm not a coder - I'm an MIS student almost out of university looking to do network admin and eventually move into being an IT manager. As a result, I don't have much money right now to purchase the best monitor out there, but I am looking at getting either an LG 995FT (like the 915FT+ but no USB) or an NEC MutilSync FE950+ BK (I've used them at school and I like them).

    Bottom line: my condition right now is not bad enough that I consider myself eligible for assistance from service clubs or NPOs. I'll still talk to the Lions' Club and the CNIB in Canada (where I live) for any help or advice they may have.

    I figured since I had not had any success searching on the Web for monitor reviews, display technologies, and the like with respect to the visually impaired, I thought the obvious place to go for tech advice from young geeks like myself would be Slashdot. Thanks very much to the Editors here for posting my question. I've got a lot of use out of the comments and it'll give me a few more things to research with my doctors.

    And again, thanks to all who posted comments or wrote me personal e-mail. Very cool stuff I received and I hope it'll be helpful to others out there with similar problems.

    Ja ne, eh?

    --
    Brendan "Beej" Dery "Only in Canada, eh?"
    1. Re:Thanks to all who posted... by CresentCityRon · · Score: 1

      my gas perms made a huge difference - though it took almost four months of trying different kinds. I would have given up except for the fact that my vision would be fantastic until either a lens fell out or the pain became too intense. So don't give up on that trail too quickly.

      There is also this funky method where they put a soft contact lens and then put a rigid on top. The soft acts like a shock absorber.

      (Plus the fact that my vision was going slowly downhill since I was 28 wasn't the best situation to be in.)

      I'm lucky that I bumped into Dr. Insler - someone who helped invent laser eye surgery and he pointed me to a "low vision" specialist. I was surprised that not all Ophthomalogists were the same. See the Louisiana State University Eye Center's website for more info.

      An odd side effect is that my night vision is so much better!

      All the best!
      -Ron

  116. Another example... by fm6 · · Score: 2

    ... of why "funny" shouldn't be a upmod option. Or if it is, then "tired old joke" should be a downmod option!

  117. Hello Darkness, My Old Fiend by fm6 · · Score: 3, Informative
    Make sure you don't use the monitor in a darkened room often, that'll cause you problems,
    Specifics? Links? Quotes? I'm not flamming you -- quite the opposite. I know lot of techies who prefer to work in darkened rooms. If they're all ruining their eyes, I need some documentation to show them.
  118. From the small well that is my expirience. by Streuner · · Score: 0

    I have a similar problem, and the local "Krankenkasse"(no idea how to translate that to english, it's a state department that manages public health issues) said the best thing for vision-impaired people are large TFT screens. I'm now a the proud owner of a 17" LCD flatscreen I haven't paid for (sic!) and I can say it works like a charm. It also doesn't stress the eyes as much as regular monitors by far. Of course the price is hefty, but it's your health we're talking about.

    --
    I have no karma and I must post.
  119. web diaries by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    My wife just had a cornea transplant for KC.

    One thing we noticed is that there are a lot of web diaries out there from people who've had the transplant. They just love to chronical it.

    Perhaps some of them mention monitor preferences, etc. FWIW, my wife uses a laptop in a darkened office, but I don't know if that's because it's easier on her vision.

    KC is a unique condition. Most of the advice here from people with other vision problems won't really apply. Good luck.

  120. Re:may I suggest meditation as a supportive strate by sudog · · Score: 1

    This is just awesome. Awesome to a degree I can't even comprehend.

    Since when did the Slashdot readership turn into homeopathic "holistic" healers who appear to be seriously suggesting that meditation can cure an eye problem?

    That's it. I quit. My (apparently) one-man crusade to counter idiots like this is now officially over. I lose by being overwhelmed.

  121. another KC website for you by waterbiscuit · · Score: 2

    I also have keratoconus, in its moderate-adanced stage. I'm 17. I haven't yet had a transplant but wear contact lenses which gets my vision up to 20/60. I've found theKCenter Website a real help- particularly the message boards.
    As far as monitors are concerned, well I'm not exactly full of money, so I just put up with having 640*480 res and I find that if you stop white being the default colour background for things it stops the double vision appearing quite so accutely.

  122. Retinal Scanning Displays by jordanda · · Score: 1

    There is some preliminary documentation showing that Retina Scanning Displays are a better display for those with low vision. This is currently being investigated by the Low-Vision group at the Human Interface Technology Lab at the University of Washington. Retinal displays are currently commercially available from from a company called Microvision. I'm not familiar with your condition but I can ask around to see if any of our test subjects had it.

    - Jordan Andersen

    You can track down my address and other information at www.hitl.washington.com. I don't want to post it to avoid spam.

  123. Making things more visible by dorky · · Score: 1
    I work with students who have disabilities, including blindness and low vision. Their suggestions include, in no particular order:
    1. Become a crusader for well-written cascading style sheets. Unfortunately, most of those people who fancy themselves "artists" and web "designers" don't realize that those teeny little font sizes that they're hard coding mean that huge numbers of people can't read their web sites. When you work with developers, tell them that instead of using hard-coded font sizes )12pt or 12px) they should use RELATIVE font sizes (.85 em) -- Point and pixel sizes remain fixed, while em sizes will scale based on the base font size the user has chosen. SOME day, web developers will win out over web "designers".
    2. Get the largest monitor you can afford. If your vision is bad enough, TFT or CRT doesn't seem to matter, as long as you can keep the glare down and the contrast.
    3. Of course, turn up your screen resolution. The greying of the web means more and more people are using a 800x600 screen resolution. If that winds up not being enough, you'll have to use Windows, and get adaptive software, such as ZoomText (for screen magnification) and/or Jaws 8 (for screen reading). One student recommends learning how to use screen reading software NOW, rather than trying to learn it when you don't have any more options, should that time come.
    4. Put Betsie on your server in some place you can access (but no one else knows about), so you can get better access to bozo-designed web pages.
    I recommend every web designer and developer use screen reading software such as Jaws and accseeibility parsers such as Betsie to get an idea how accessible your web sites are for people who are blind and have low vision.
  124. don't forget nutrition by o'bryon · · Score: 1

    While monitors and room lighting are important factors,the overall health of your eyes is an important factor. If your eyes are strong and healthy, they'll be able to withstand the stresses of poor monitor/light conditions. Personally, I suffered from dry eyes and severe eye strain after sitting in front of a monitor for 8 hours a day until I started taking an multi-vitamin formulated especially for eyes. I use this one. but there are lots of others with similar formulations on the market. I don't find it necessary to take the full Good luck with it in any case.

  125. My father has it, works on computer. by iamr00t · · Score: 1

    First of all, it's pretty bad, the only real way to fix it is operation that uses donors' cornea.
    On the other hand, the success rate is great.
    My father just had operation (not in US) on his worst eye in august, he is doing great.

    If you are interested, there's an keratokonus organisation in US, www.kcenter.org. But I bet you already know about them. They also have forums set up, quite helpful.

    Now, as for using computer. He is using internet for 4 years already. It's quite painful watching him doing it (and reading). He has to look from 10 cm and scan monitor with his head.
    Right now he is just using 14" monitor.
    And really, he doesn't need a bigger one.
    I was trying to set him up with large font/high contrast windows scheme, but it didn't seem to work. Keratokonus is not your average "bad eyesight" problem.

    I should note that in most cases it develops into problem by middle age, and by that time we will have direct feedback into the brain, so not to worry ;-)

    N.B.: I hope you are still reading, and I didn't waste air here...

  126. There are individual needs... by LadyLissa · · Score: 1

    It's difficult for one person to say what works best for another person's eyesight. A lot of it depends on the individual's condition, any secondary conditions, and in many cases the stage of progession.

    For instance... I'm legally blind from retinitis pigmentosa (a degenerative retinal disease). At age 23, I've been working with computers for at least 8 yrs. I now work in the industry and my employer has provided me with a 21" CRT. I've tried to run at suggested resolutions but have found that 800x600 is the smallest I can go. I use a 17" CRT at home with the same resolution, but I also sit a little bit closer to it. I also have a laptop with a 14.1" LCD that is very difficult for me to see. I have to run it at 800x600 with many of the disability functions turned on. I hardly ever use it other than watching movies while travelling because it tires my eyes faster than any other means of display.

    I have found that CRT's are easier to read than LCD's - at least for people who are light sensitive and need screens to be close-up. It can become quite frustrating never being able to get close enough to the laptop screen to see it clearly.

    I would suggest first talking to your opthamologist, getting in contact with disability/rehab services in your area (though they never did me a bit of good), and simply just trying various things. Walk into a store and look at the screens. In some stores they will let you try out the different displays (especially if you let them know of your disability).

    The bottom line is what works for some doesn't work for all others. Find out what works best for -you-.

  127. Re:may I suggest meditation as a supportive strate by pedro · · Score: 2

    Since when did the Slashdot readership turn into homeopathic "holistic" healers who appear to be seriously suggesting that meditation can cure an eye problem?
    d00d.. learn to READ..
    I never suggested a cure. Just that it helps. Empirical experience.

    --
    Brak: What's THAT?
    Thundercleese: A light switch.. of TOTAL DEVASTATION!