|
Post by reden on May 20, 2021 5:55:06 GMT
|
|
|
Post by noizy1234 on Jun 8, 2022 13:27:27 GMT
Ive noticed some of this a bit. If my TV is on and Im sitting on the couch, I tend to fall asleep really easily. Or I feel my awareness goes down, kinda like being hypnotized like you said. Its easier t fall asleep on the couch with the tv on for me, than when Im in bed. Ive been watching less TV nowadays, barely any at all. I like watching sporting events occasionally.
|
|
|
Post by AnthroHeart on Jun 8, 2022 14:01:57 GMT
Yeah I do believe TVs to be low vibrational. I just have one small battery operated on in case of emergency, but never really watch it.
News would be worse as they would be hypnotizing you with negativity.
But come to think of it, it flashes at like 30 Hz, which is Beta.
|
|
|
Post by noizy1234 on Jun 8, 2022 14:13:02 GMT
I stopped watching news completely. I just hear stuff from my friends about what's going on. I am curious to know if the same applies to other types of screens? Like your phone or computer? Might be the case maybe to a lesser extent
|
|
|
Post by reden on Jun 8, 2022 15:33:19 GMT
I stopped watching news completely. I just hear stuff from my friends about what's going on. I am curious to know if the same applies to other types of screens? Like your phone or computer? Might be the case maybe to a lesser extent All electric lights such as lightbulbs flicker at 110/120 Hz due to some sort of signal doubling. Computer screens most often refresh at 60 Hz. But they are not meant to flicker. They only flicker when they're cheap enough to have PWM (research this, particularly in laptops), or if they're OLED (particularly in phones). PWM is to turn the screen off, then on, very quickly to simulate brightness states beyond on and off. All OLED panels have relatively low flicker frequencies, "or example of 200 Hz, which gets lower (worse) when you turn the brightness down. It's how that technology is.
|
|
|
Post by reden on Jun 15, 2022 2:49:19 GMT
I found the following information about a phenomenon that seemingly only causes discomfort and eyestrain:
Temporal dithering (FRC – Frame Rate Control) FRC (Frame Rate Control) or temporal dithering, as explored by Lagom, describes rapid alternation between a very slightly lighter and very slightly darker variant of a given shade. This is done where the shade itself can’t be displayed, for example if the monitor does not have the necessary bit-depth to display that shade. The GPU may also add its own dithering stage, so even if a monitor is free from dithering (e.g. ‘true 8-bit’ rather than 6-bit + 2-bit FRC) there may be some dithering visible. It is therefore very difficult to achieve a viewing experience entirely free from dithering, but it’s certainly minimised if the monitor itself doesn’t use dithering. This can be thought of as a form of flickering, although it is very different to the flickering you get from PWM whereby there are extreme brightness changes of the entire backlight. This is a minute luminance change that affects certain shades, so most users will not find this problematic even if they are sensitive to PWM usage. Some users still take issue with dithering usage and prefer that it is taken out of the equation, or at least minimised.
|
|
|
Post by reden on Jul 31, 2022 18:20:05 GMT
You can stay abreast about PWM in www.notebookcheck.net and other sites. They are one of the very few, if not the only, site(s) to check screen subpixel array, colours and deviations, pwm, speaker hz responses, and more. Truly detailed
|
|
|
Post by justinw728 on Aug 8, 2022 16:30:30 GMT
|
|
|
Post by AnthroHeart on Aug 8, 2022 16:52:35 GMT
I think regular orgonite can do that too, for cheaper.
|
|
|
Post by reden on Aug 12, 2022 23:45:46 GMT
TVs brainwash console players with the violence many games have.
|
|