Hi,
very helpful article, thank you!
I am trying to figure out the origin of my terrible eyestrain and almost instantaneous cervical pain upon using certain devices, pc monitors, laptops and now, unfortunately, phones.
I have had a Samsung Galaxy On5 smartphone for nearly 2 years. I have never suffered of any condition. I can use the phone to read e-books for hours. Very recently I bought a Freetel Kiwami 2 which mounts a 5.7" OLED display and immediately developed severe symptoms. Besides the feeling of eyes filled with sand, the soreness and the difficulties associated with focusing on different objects close to and far from the device, my visual discomfort would quite immediately turn into cervical pain, which I find puzzling because I clearly do not assume a different posture to when looking at my Samsung Galaxy On5.
I now wonder whether the reason for my disturbs is PWM. However, I see none of these phones has been reviewed. Is that correct?
I have a couple of other questions/comments. I am sorry if I incorporate a lot of topics but I am quite desperate and I really want to dig out some helpful information from experts in the field and people suffering of the same problems. Indeed I have not found any competence nor interest at medical / optometrist level. I start with my queries...
I see that the top ranked phone as to Response Times PWM Frequency is the Nomu M6 and at the bottom of the standings there are devices with zero frequency. Assuming I suffer of PWM-induced symptoms, shall I opt for a smartphone with the highest PWM frequency or with zero frequency? If I understand correctly, zero frequency means that PWM is not employed so brightness dimming is attained without turning the backlights on and off. Could you please clarify?
On a different note, I do not see the MacBook Air (13-inch, Early 2014) in the list, probably it is a bit old. Can anyone comment on PWM with regard to this laptop? Is it very different to the 2017 MacBook Air present in the rankings, scoring a PWM frequency of 58K Hz?
Furthermore, I would like to ask if the display resolution can affect the PWM frequency. I would think it is two separate things. However, historically I noticed that my disturbs would disappear by changing the display from native to a lower resolution. As an example, in 2006 I bought a Lenovo ThinkPad T60 and I could not handle the display from the eyestrain. Then I lowered the display resolution to 1024 x 768, and I could comfortably use the laptop, staring at the display for 15 hours a day without any collateral effect. Someone could argue feature miniaturization under native resolution could be the reason of my eyestrain. However, I would develop symptoms even if I did not read, just by staring at the display. If at the highest resolution of my laptop I increased the zoom considerably to make the features of the same size as with the 1024 x 768 resolution, I would still have issues.
At lower resolution my eyes do not seem to detect all those pixels flashing in the background. Does it make any sense?
I used the same "trick" with a Dell Latitude more recently, I forgot the model, and with some monitors.
Another point I would like to ask about is the impact of the graphics card on the display and on eyestrain. I read some posts about some graphics cards, specifically from one manufacturer, generating eyestrain in a minority of people. I am sorry I am not allowed to post links as a new user...
I found myself quite in good agreement after checking which computers were tougher on my eyes. They all had an Intel card, but I am very cautious with this. Could it just be a coincidence?
What leaves the doubt is that in a couple of occasions I had to use two different pcs in the same laboratory connected to the same model of monitor. One would give me absolutely no problems, the other monitor would drive me crazy. Graphics card was the only difference I could tell between the two setups.
Another potential evidence. I talked about my Lenovo Thinkpad T60 and how I worked around my eyestrain by lowering the resolution to 1024 x 768. The laptop mounts an Nvidia card. Well, a few months ago I had the bad idea of upgrading from Windows XP to Windows 10. I struggled finding online a driver for the graphic card. Is it correct that if the Invidia card does not get to work properly because of a lack of driver, there is a sort of basic card taking its place? I may be saying a stupid thing...In any case, I lowered the resolution of the display to 1024 x 768, and the eyestrain is very strong. It is the same laptop, and the same resolution!
Any thought?
Thanks so much for any comment, and sorry for the tons of questions! Hopefully it is not too difficult to get thru my post.