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View Poll Results: Which electronic reading format is easiest on the eyes? | |||
E-ink |
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295 | 76.62% |
Color LCD |
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14 | 3.64% |
Both are equally easy on my eyes |
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76 | 19.74% |
Voters: 385. You may not vote on this poll |
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#121 |
intelligent posterior
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...but you're still talking about screens about ten times brighter than an LCD tuned for reading, not to mention constantly flickering with video. Ascribing your discomfort to the fact that the light is transmitted rather than reflected, and not to the actual qualities and sheer abundance of that light, hardly follows.
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#122 | |
Guru
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Quote:
I can buy flicker arguments, except that there's no flicker on LED-backlit LCD panels like Kindle Fires and Apple iPads rendering static text. I can buy sheer brightness level concerns, though that means you're not configuring your device properly. I can even buy issues when reading black-on-white (switch to night mode, already, even for daytime reading). But all of that just means you're not using your device properly. It'd be like complaining that you can't read a paper book because it's dark out and you didn't turn on a light. The problem is with the user, not the medium*. * Note that there is one source of problem with the medium that can't be adjusted by the user, and that's ppi (pixels per inch). The only way to solve that is to buy a better device. Luckily, 150ppi is generally a good threshold above which reading is comfortable on an LCD device, and the Kindle Fire, Nook Color/Tablet, iPad 3, and most smartphones are well above that. iPad 1/2, other Android tablets, and pretty much every desktop or laptop monitor are well below that, often significantly (like 100ppi or less). That is why reading on a PC is uncomfortable Last edited by toddos; 03-20-2012 at 09:21 PM. |
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#123 | |
Wizard
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#124 | |
Geographically Restricted
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I use CAD software a lot during the day (civil engineer) but the moment I start reading static text, my eyes tell me how much they hate it. If I do not take note of my eyestrain, I suffer the consequences big time. E-ink ereaders never cause this issue. |
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#125 | |
Guru
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Read eink if you like. I do, sometimes. But telling people to avoid LCDs because of misinformation is wrong. |
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#126 |
Wizard
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Of course, everybody has to try before they really know. I guess most people have LCD/LED screens with different resolutions all around them, including the ubiquitous iPhone 4+, so they can get a pretty good idea if they can adjust to reading on a backlit device.
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#127 | |
Guru
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It doesn't help that the default configurations for LCD readers are optimized for store displays and fancy demos, where white-on-black text and high brightness helps sell the unit. If someone pulled out their iPad while in bed with the lights off and got blinded by default iBooks, I wouldn't blame them for not wanting to read on an LCD. But if they took the time to reduce the brightness (below what the auto-dimming does) and switch to a night reading mode, more often than not they'll find that they can read quite comfortably for a long time. Or at least until they fall asleep ![]() |
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#128 | |
Wizard
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#129 | |
Guru
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I love reading on my phone (480x800 4.3" device, so equivalent to many Android devices), yet I hate reading on my Touchpad or my wife's iPad 1. But then I was perfectly comfortable reading on my old iPhone 3GS, so obviously I have magic eyes. But I always read white-on-black, with the brightness adjusted correctly for the ambient lighting (dim when it's dark, brighter when it's not). If I thought my only option was to read black-on-white with high brightness, I'd hate LCD readers myself. |
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#130 |
Geographically Restricted
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I d not care how high or sharp the resolution of a backlit LCD device is. I get headaches caused by eye strain when using them to read lots of static text.
I only care about what backlit LCD does to me, thus the solution is e-ink for lengthy reading. Choice of LCD or e-ink is a purely personal choice. No one is right or wrong in this matter. |
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#131 |
Fledgling Demagogue
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Toddos:
I've posted here more than once stating that the iPhone 4's resolution was comparatively easy to read but that the original iPad's resolution hurt my eyes after an hour of reading. It isn't merely a question of setting the brightness and contrast correctly. Friends who use other LCD screens have made the same exact complaint I did about the original iPad, which is why I've been saying for the past year that I'd consider buying an iPad the day it had a retinal display (and now it does). The original iPad was noticeably more difficult to read than the screen of my main laptop, which also uses an IPS panel. You'd think that the dpi you've mentioned would be optimal for any device, and yet there are variables. With all due respect, you remind me a little of the objectivity fanatic on Head-fi who kept repeating that double-blind testing was the only reliable determiner of quality. They did this until they were banned from the forums and the subject ruled forbidden. You can insist that people who report an improved reading experience with e-ink are incapable of understanding how to set an LCD for optimal reading, but a user's experience is their own. It would be truly misinformed for e-ink users to take your word for it, shrug and get rid of the readers they'd used comfortably, only to squint at LCDs because they believed there had to be no perceptible difference. And as often as I agree with Taosaur, I was disappointed to find him doling out the same computer eyestrain advice we've all read and heard before. Of course you tune the brightness and contrast of the screen; of course you focus on a distant object periodically when reading anything in any medium save a billboard or traffic sign. That doesn't change the fact that e-ink is easier for me to read than nearly every LCD screen I've used with the possible exception of the iPhone 4. If I do break down and buy the new iPad a year or so from now, then I'll have the chance to compare the reading experience between devices over time. Last edited by Prestidigitweeze; 03-23-2012 at 04:10 AM. |
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#132 | |
Cynical Old Curmudgeon
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Quote:
And I'm in the camp of those who get eyestrain and need, be it CRT or LCD, at least 70Hz vertical refresh to be at all comfortable reading high-contrast text - which is the vast majority of it on computers, especially on the Web where bright white backgrounds are the norm. Even then I need to take frequent breaks from reading and go watch a video or play a game to rest my eyes. |
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#133 | |
Gadgetoholic
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Quote:
But, as Prestidigitweeze pointed out, this might very well be because I do have eyes bad enough to stop me from reading many paper books, and that probably makes me more sensitive. |
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#134 |
intelligent posterior
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I'm not saying people who find eink more comfortable are 'fooling themselves,' just that scapegoating backlights may not be warranted, and other factors in your reading experience (and/or in the display technologies) may be at work.
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#135 |
Zealot
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Device: Kindle 1, Kindle 3, Kindle Fire w/Aldiko
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I used to prefer e-ink, then I got a Kindle Fire. Now when I read on my Kindle 3 the e-ink screen annoys me...not enough contrast in anything but very bright light.
I suspect it's all what you're used to. And there's nothing wrong with that...fortunately, there are both kinds of screens out there, and we all have choice. Win-win. |
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