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Tsigulev Vitaly2011-12-03 15:04:33
Monitors
Tsigulev Vitaly, 2011-12-03 15:04:33

What monitor to take that would be less tired eyes when working?

I have definitely already decided that the diagonal should be no more than 19, I have already played enough with large toys.

I would like to hear advice from those who also worry about such a problem as eye strain and general fatigue after work, I will be glad to have any thoughts about the recommended parameters and specific models.

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9 answer(s)
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sdevalex, 2011-12-03
@sdevalex

I work with two 24" and 17". Big for work (IDE, terminals), small for browser/documentation. Eyes from more tired only the first week.
Are you sure that the eyes get tired precisely from the size? I was very tired of the high brightness and the lack of a lamp on the table at night. Now there are dark themes everywhere and the brightness is at a minimum ... everything is fine.

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tick, 2011-12-03
@tick

when people write about "gray on black", they are actually trying to achieve reduced contrast. the fact is that, by default, the backlight lamps of LCD monitors are made very bright - this helps to achieve low response times.
Usually monitors shine in the face somewhere around 200-300 candela per sq. centimeters, this is a lot, for the human eye it is optimal - 100-150, so the brightness should be lowered to the minimum comfortable value, this is especially important when working at the monitor for a long time.

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@sledopit, 2011-12-03
_

Perhaps the monitor plays a rather large role, but I found for myself that the color scheme of the working environment also plays a significant role.
Personally, my eyes are much less tired when I see everything in light gray on a dark background (it is important here that the text is not white on a black background, but light gray on a dark background).
Recently I tried again to work like everyone else (white background, black text. The experiment lasted a week): by the end of the working day, my eyes just fell out.
Perhaps this is purely individual, but I do not position such a solution as a panacea.

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p4s8x, 2011-12-03
@p4s8x

For the "eyes" see the matrices of the IPS family. I took care of buying a monitor half a year ago and chose NEC MultiSync LCD2490WUXi2 market.yandex.ru/model.xml?modelid=5062925
There are only pluses from the big screen. Yes ... the first week my eyes ran wide, then I got used to it.
Before that, there was Samsung with a TN matrix and the difference is colossal in terms of reducing eye strain.

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Vlad Zhivotnev, 2011-12-03
@inkvizitor68sl

Laptop - thinkpad x220, monitors - DELL 2007FP and its analogues of different resolutions (I have 1920x1200 at home - 2408WFP). Eyes live and rejoice. Well, yes - dim the brightness.
But in fact - any matte good monitor saves a lot. Basically, eyes get tired of glare and bad fonts (if you work with text). For example, my eyes get very tired in Fluxbox from fonts and stop getting tired when I run gnome-settings-daemon and xcompmgr.
Well, do not forget that the easiest way for the eyes to live is to read black text on a gray background. If you work in the console, then bring it to the appropriate digital scale. Default Ubuntu light theme in gnome 2 + gray tones in the console + muted brightness = 18 hours of quiet sitting at the monitor.
Approximately according to these principles, I sit (and I often had to for 18 hours in a row, I just quit smoking and eating), for 6 years my vision has not gone down. The first monitor was LG F730P, then matte laptops, the last 2-3 years at work I get matte dells. Everything is OK, vision has even improved a little in recent years.

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Killy, 2011-12-03
@Killy

I lower the brightness and use f.lux to control the color temperature.

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Genome_X, 2011-12-03
@Genome_X

It seems to me that there is not much difference in the diagonal issue. At one time (long enough to endure something for myself) I worked with a diagonal of 15 inches, and 17, and 22. My eyes never got tired on any monitor.
Not so long ago, they installed a 21.5-inch monitor at work (Samsung, it seems), in fact, after that, the eyes began to feel somewhat strange. Those. appeared premature fatigue (which hitherto was not), a feeling of "sand" in the eyes. The whole problem was solved by lowering the brightness of the screen, changing the color temperature to a warmer one, and other minor adjustments. So I rightly believe that in your case everything rests simply on specific settings for a single monitor. It’s just that you can work with some right away (everything is successfully selected during manufacture), some need to be completed a little for yourself.

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ValdikSS, 2011-12-03
@ValdikSS

It is very important to adjust the brightness and contrast. I used a 32 "Samsung TV for a couple of weeks, I sat a meter away from it, it was actually terribly convenient, I wish I could use it as a monitor again.
Another important detail is the backlight frequency. It is necessary that the eyes do not notice any screen flicker at all.

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LaraS, 2013-12-20
@LaraS

Whatever the screen, the eyes will still get tired if you spend a lot of time behind it. Therefore, overvoltage is inevitable. I worked at many computers and my eyes were always tired until I started using eye drops. The main thing is to choose natural and non-constricting vessels. For me, the ideal version of Aktipol drops. They are not expensive, natural, help quickly and for a long time and do not pinch.

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