New Display Technology Corrects For Vision Defects
rtoz (2530056) writes Researchers at the MIT Media Lab have developed a new display technology that automatically corrects for vision defects without requiring glasses or contact lenses. This technique could lead to dashboard-mounted GPS displays that farsighted drivers can consult without putting their glasses on, or electronic readers that eliminate the need for reading glasses. The display is a variation on a glasses-free 3-D technology: a 3-D display projects slightly different images to the viewer's left and right eyes. Similarly, this vision-correcting display projects slightly different images to different parts of the viewer's pupil.
Did you leave them in the car, again?
Tommy
This would be really nice in the personal computer realm, be it laptop or desktop, assuming that it fits in those form-factors.
I barely need glasses to drive, for distance. I can read books held in my hands without glasses. Laptops and desktops are every so slightly too far away to usually be able to do that. I would love to be able to ditch the glasses when at my desk at work.
Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
Simply press "+"
...but sometimes I really wonder how disconnected from reality people are that think a reader featuring this display is going to replace a ten-buck pair of reading glasses you can get at the drug store, or thinks that by the time this gets cheap enough to put in a dash-mounted GPS display that those will even still be a thing. In-car dash-mounted GPS devices have pretty much already been replaced by cell-phones and built-in displays. Criticisms of the possible uses in the summary aside, seems like this would be good for computer displays (especially laptops) and TVs, and would definitely have military applications.
Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.
-- Arthur C. Clarke
my GPU fell off the bus. Now there's a vision defect.
I suppose use cases like people reading over my shoulder or sharing a screen are bound to be plentiful. Whose vision will it adjust to if it is automatic?
but if I need those glasses for the rest of reality, wouldn't I need to take them off just for looking such a screen so that the glasses aren't duplicated (hence negating) what the screen cover does?
"Win treats sysadmins better than users. Mac treats users better than sysadmins. Linux treats everyone like sysadmins."
"This technique could lead to dashboard-mounted GPS displays that farsighted drivers can consult without putting their glasses on"
#seriously?
Um - These drivers still need their glasses to.... Um....DRIVE. What problem do we think is being solved here?
This would be great for HMD's too. You could design them to be worn without having to accommodate glasses.
I need my glasses to read detail - the only way I am going to be able to see is with giant letters. Putting some software on to a box on my dash doesnt change distance from eyes to the dash, thus the focal length is the same. No amount of pixel shifting is going to allow my eyes to focus on it and resolve the image sharply. this might work for people who are only very slightly farsighted.
Could this technique be used to build wearable displays that you don't have to focus on? Like a collimated HUD without a projector. Combined with an eyetracking cam it could even follow your focus.
I ride the PCI express sometimes. The bus driver can be a bit unstable sometimes, and he's been known to kick all the passengers off if anyone tries to enter or exit before the bus reaches a complete stop.
Slashdot reminds me of just how ignorant and yet unjustifiably arrogant and egotistical most tech nerds are. It sickens me to see so many people without the slightest degree of empathy or ability to understand that their limited experience is not (can not) be the be-all-end-all of reality.
There are a large variety of vision problems. Many make it difficult to change focus quickly or at all. How something as basic as this can escape so many people would be funny if it weren't so indicative of a general trend of horrible education and willful ignorance.
I know. If it weren't for idiots and trolls then /. wouldn't be /.. But if your traditions suck, then maybe you should really try to ditch them.
can a pure software solution create an alternative to hardware/software combination to improve vision defects?