Don't forget, reading in low-light causes eye strain too and people do it all the time. At least the iPad is lit.
Simply reading at book distance causes eye strain if you get right down to it. To read anything at a close distance forces focus muscles to contract as the relaxed state is looking into the distance. It gets harder and harder to focus closer as you age by the time you are in your 40's you probably will have lost enough focus ability that you will need reading glasses or bi-focals.
Now that is an actual identified mechanism for eyestrain that effects any close reading.
So reading is eyestrain if you want to get pedantic, but IMO it is only relevant if you actually feel strain while doing it.
No one has identified an additional eyestrain mechanism for an the LCD screen on the iPad that none of you have seen.
Considering massive swaths of the population spend 10+ hours a day glued to LCD with extremely few complaints, indicates that LCDs have no real increase in perceived strain issues.
A device like an iPad with a high quality IPS screen (no odd viewing angle issues) and a back-light that lets you match conditions, should really make it fairly comfortable.
At least an iPad doesn't need one of these to read in low light:
http://www.periscopelight.com/store...fuse=detail&prod_id=Kindle 1&catname=Products
http://www.amazon.com/Mighty-Bright-XtraFlex2-Kindle-Version/dp/B000TXZIDM
The more I see of e-ink the more I think it is some kind of cyberpunk oddity. Low contrast dark on gray, the near one second refresh rate where the screen flashed while changing, the need for weird add on lights. It looks like something from the 1980s, not 2010.
I am so glad we are in the midst of a tablet explosion so I can get a decent all round screen instead of one of these oddities.
No one has identified an additional eyestrain mechanism for an the LCD screen on the iPad that none of you have seen.
I wouldn't say that. The refresh rate and backlit nature of LCDs do ause additional eye fatigue. We all do use LCDs, but heavy readers are not accustom to that level of usage.
There are many cons to e-ink, but on this specific point, e-ink wins.
It is really only outdoor/sunlight where e-ink has the advantage. I concede that advantage, but I think it a very small advantage.
I tested this out using the Classics app on the iPhone, just to see what it might be like reading with iBooks on the iPad. Before I knew it, hours had passed and I was many chapters into Pride and Prejudice. Hopefully this is a good indication that I don't need e-ink to comfortably read on a portable device.![]()
No, it doesn't. The problem is switching back and forth from a light field to a dark field that fatigues the eye muscles. When you look at one website that's light-on-dark and then do 15 other things on your computer in the standard dark-on-light, the thing that's different is what causes the problem.It is hideous. I'm taking a web developing class right now and putting white text on black background is a big no no because it causes eyestrain.
Sorry to resurrect an old thread, but this wasn't worthy of a new one. I've been having what I assumed was eyestrain, probably from too much computing, for about a year now, and have shied away from ebook reading on the iPad. And whined about eyestrain in some of these threads.
Well, just got back from the eye doctor. Turns out my glasses rx was wrong for both eyes and I have astigmatism in both that was not being corrected for. I won't speculate on whether my prior doctor from a year ago screwed up or if my eyes changed so much in 11 months (since prior exam), but thought I'd drop a PSA in: if you're having unusual levels of light sensitivity or eyestrain, get your eyes checked or even get a second exam.
You prior doc most likely didn't screw up. Was this your first Rx?