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Poor Vision? There's an App For That

necro81 writes "Researchers at MIT's Media Lab have developed a smartphone app that allows users to measure how poor their vision is (myopia, hyperopia, and astigmatism) and receive a corrective prescription. The user peers through a $2 optical adapter at the screen of a smartphone. The app displays lighted bars, and prompts the user to adjust the display until the bars line up. Repeating this with bars in different locations and orientations allows the vision distortion to be determined to within about 0.4 diopters using a Nexus One. The iPhone 4, with its higher-resolution display, should be able to improve that to 0.28 diopters. This could have broad application in the developing world, where experienced opticians and diagnostic equipment are hard to come by."

5 of 146 comments (clear)

  1. App for that by TheKidWho · · Score: 4, Funny

    Is there an app to bite my shiny metal ass?

  2. So.... by abigsmurf · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This is great for countries that lack opticians with basic equiptment yet somehow have lots of people with large screened smartphones?

  3. Re:Which developing world? by DWMorse · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Nobody said a steady 3G connection was required for this sort of use, or that for every person using the app, they had to own the device.

    Even an iPhone 4 is a ton more mobile than a phoroptor, and a lot less expensive, since phoroptors clock in around $5,000 and take a trained professional to use.

    A sole traveling, untrained, non-optometrist Peace Corps kid with an iPhone 4 and a box of donated used glasses could make a big damn difference.

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    There's a spot in User Info for World of Warcraft account names? Really?
  4. Re:Not just great for developing countries by Chris+Burke · · Score: 5, Funny

    It's great for those of us in countries like the USA, Canada, Easter Europe

    It's really not needed in Easter Europe; they all have good eyesight, what with being bunnies... who eat lots of carrots... which are good for your eyes...

    I'll show myself out.

    --

    The enemies of Democracy are
  5. There... Fixed that for you... by denzacar · · Score: 4, Interesting

    A sole traveling, untrained, non-optometrist Peace Corps kid with a box of donated used glasses could bring a box of glasses.

    You almost had it there. You did (almost) stumble blindly on it (no pun intended), but still...

    1 - Based on the "Developing countries can't be choosers" axiom, it is not really THAT important to people living there if the eyeglasses really fit their prescription 100%.
    Particularly, if the glasses are free.

    2 - Based on 1, there is a much simpler way of testing for the right prescription under those conditions (choosers not too picky, choice rather limited anyway...).
    It consists of the "patient" trying out several sets of glasses until he/she finds the one that works for him/her.
    You know, like you would with a pair of sunglasses.

    And, based on my own day-to-day observation from what you might call a "developing nation" (Bosnia) that model works perfectly well even for the paying customers.
    E.g. people who can't really afford money to visit a private optometrist or they lack time or health insurance for a visit to a government one.
    All of those cases mostly resulting from the case of being employed "off the books".

    Only thing is... There is really no need for donated eyeglasses cause Chinese ones are dirt cheap.
    Like, plastic sunglasses prices. Often sold side by side on the same stand.

    Sure, if you have a rather specific need (different prescription for each eye, or a relatively rare case of visual impairment) you are probably not gonna find what you are looking for "over the counter".
    Then again, chances of finding EXACTLY what you need in a "box of donated used glasses" with or without an eyePhone (Get it? EYE-PHONE!) are far lower than that.

    Oh... and one more thing.
    While there are plenty enough iPhones here (just today I saw one "barely used" 3G 16GB being sold for ~320$) - ALL of them are jailbroken.
    Also, you can forget using the app store directly from it even if you have somehow gotten your hands on an actual "virgin" iPhone.
    Cause even if your iPhone is perfectly legal, with no cracking/jailbreaking attached - your money is no good.
    So, that "non-optometrist Peace Corps kid" should better get all his app-needs before going on his "mission of mercy".
    If any of those apps need to "call home", well... sucks to be him in the "developing world".

    Again, this is one of those inventions that are pitched by people who have either never been outside of a developed "1st world" country, OR who have only ever been to some village in the middle of the African jungle so they base their understanding of every "developing country" on that one experience or on what they see on CNN. Or in the movies.
    Invention is then being pitched as intended for developing countries - where in reality there is no demand or need for it.
    On the other hand, hypochondriacs and "I_am_my_own_wikipedia-diagnostician"-people will probably love it.

    --
    Mit der Dummheit kämpfen Götter selbst vergebens