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I spent 8 to 10 hours a day programming on my 13.3" laptop and developed symptoms like red eyes, blurred vision, dry eyes, pain and irritation. To understand the cause of problem I visited a eye specialist and he diagnosed CVS. Now he suggested some exercises, medication, right posture, correct chair height etc. in addition he advice having a bigger Computer display (for bigger font size.)
Buying a bigger screen was on my card for sometime and doctor's advice made it a immediate priority. So I started googling trying to understand what should I consider before buying a monitor.
I could only zero down on the size (20") and LED.
I am looking for suggestions from fellow programmers who spend considerable time in front of their screens what factors like resolution, pixel density, panel technology, display colors and so forth they have taken into consideration before making their choices.
P.S
- I am not looking for advice on CVS.
- I am looking for answers focused on best display technology (computer monitor) for programmers (people having prolonged exposure to display screen)
I'm not really convinced that this is NC. It isn't a "Is X better than Y?" or "What should I buy?" question. While it does involve an extended treatment of facts, its something thats fairly objective and involves discussion of tech that isn't gonna go away any time soon. That said, this and the other question I linked might make a great blog entry ;) – Journeyman Geek – 2012-09-18T00:11:29.897
2Mentioning your experience as Computer Vision Syndrome hides away the actual symptons and what else you have taken into consideration, drawing the simple conclusion that buying a new monitor is going to help you get lost of this condition is solely a guess. You are better off taking a rest every now and then, making sure your room lightning is well, making sure the air and ventilation is correct (aka, no direct or indirect air blowing in your eyes). As for the monitor; it's not about the factors, it's about how you use it. Go for a quality one and configure it well, so you don't have to worry. – Tamara Wijsman – 2012-09-18T00:22:52.983
The reason I have thrown in the last close vote on "not constructive" is because you're taking the bold assumption that "CVS" means "buy a new monitor", the American Optometric Association indicates no such thing. Read through that article to get an idea what's causing the symptons your experiencing and how to actually resolve them, configuring your screen is perhaps one part of it but carefully choosing which one to buy is not. Furthermore, if you research what the terms in the tech specs mean, you can fairly simply determine whether one is good for you...
– Tamara Wijsman – 2012-09-18T00:31:38.740Also, in the non-generic form (that doesn't have the XY problem present) this is a possible duplicate of Main differences to the eyes between LCD and CRT monitors (as indicated by Journeyman Geek) so it's worth checking that one out as it most likely answers your question. Also see How do you determine what a good monitor is.
– Tamara Wijsman – 2012-09-18T00:43:57.447Especially if you wear glasses, the height of the monitor is as important as anything. The top of the monitor should be above eye level. (This is a definite problem when using a laptop.) – Daniel R Hicks – 2012-09-18T12:19:39.763
2To me this is a medical question, not a technological question – Keltari – 2012-09-18T16:38:22.093
1I think this is off-topic for the simple reason that it's too localised. We are not medical professionals. This is a subjective question. Plus, correlation is not causation. If I could change my vote, it would be for "too localised". – None – 2012-09-18T16:45:01.920
3@codingcrow - I still don't think this is the right site for your question. It's fascinating, and I think it has merit, as I'm a migraine sufferer, but not here. Because it's very subjective, I don't think any editing is going to make it appropriate to the site. Personally, I have 4 computer screens with radically different resolutions and density, not to mention the Retina displays on my iDevices. Brightness and contrast, dot pitch, grey-to-grey refresh, it's all very subjective, and on some days, I can't look at one but I can look at another. Maybe I too have undiagnosed CVS, who knows? – None – 2012-09-18T21:51:27.447