I am shopping for a high-quality tablet PC, and I was wondering if they are
better suited for reading documents on them vs. CRT monitors. Sometimes I spend
3 or 4 hrs. a day reading these technical manuals, so I need a bright screen
with a high refresh rate. I noticed some of the newer laptop screens seem as
good as the best LCD screens, so I am hopeful that tablet screens are close to
this quality.
Which screens are the best?
"TJM" <t...@nospam.com> wrote in message
news:3758rgF...@individual.net...
--
Charlie.
You are human. EVERYBODY experiences eye strain after reading a few
hours, no matter what the device. But I have found some things to help.
(I have a Gateway, but I think it wouldn't matter.)
(1) You can read the pages in the PORTRAIT orientation to begin with, then
switch to WIDE and zoom in more, as you need to. Good thing they are
PDFs, which maintain high type clarity.
(2) But I would turn OFF the text smoothing (anti-aliasing), as I think blurry
text makes the strain worse-- others disagree; but I generally dislike
ClearType and any such attempts to "fix" type edges. There's a setting in
Acrobat prefs itself, as well as the one for the system.
(3) Sometimes I can actually see better with LESS light coming from the
screen, when I'm tired. Try different settings with the backlight brightness,
and with ambient room lighting.
(4) If it's mostly text, you can take a vision break by letting your system read
the text to you for a while-- even 15-20 minutes with your eyes closed,
listening, will really help. I'd do that every couple of hours, once you start to
wear down. The Microsoft voice vocab has some ideosyncratic blips now and
then, but you kind of get used to it.
--romy
"romy" <anon...@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:0bf901c5114b$e09556b0$a501...@phx.gbl...
> Very good suggestions. Since you mentioned ClearType, it reminded me there
> is a "tuner" for the display shown in the left panel under ClearType:
> http://www.microsoft.com/typography/WhatIsClearType.mspx Remember, though,
> because of the way the red/green/blue pixels are displayed, the real
> advantage is seen by tuning for Landscape mode only. In either Portrait
> mode or Secondary (upside-down) Landscape, the pixels are displayed sideways
> or upside-down, so ClearType loses some of the intended clarity.
There is a new "power toy" : a local cleartype tuner. Install and it adds
an icon in your control panel. It runs the same routine as the online
tuner. I sometimes find a need to readjust cleartype and find it very
useful to have it available whether I'm online or not online.
http://www.microsoft.com/windowsxp/downloads/powertoys/xppowertoys.mspx
--
Sharon F
MS-MVP ~ Windows Shell/User