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Product Description
Eye fatigue can be a serious problem for those in the workplace, and especially for gamers. That’s why the folks over at Arozzi—a Swedish company known for producing high-quality gaming seats—have thrown their hat in the ring of gaming optics Read More
You have to be ignorant if you think the whole 1,3billion chinese is all supplied by shitty products. And you have to be ignorant if you think theres no such thing as research on that region. FYI Hong Kong is also part of China and you can't say thats not a developed area. Your favourite brands all make products or order the internals from china. Open your eyes man.
trevor266True. But Some people dont wanna change the color settings when they can wear the glasses. Some have parents that also use that television that dont want it messed with.
jtdamanWhile this is helpful, it is not as fully effective as removing more or all blue light from what your eyes receive. Yes, it changes the Windows color scheme. No, it does not remove all blue light from the display or backlight. For those of us that sit at a computer 9 hours for work, and then come home and play video games, spending some money on glasses with blue light filters makes a lot of sense to protect our sense of vision.
jtdamanActually, its not because most of the blue light from screens comes from the screens back light. The night mode on most software just makes the screen more red.
Instead of paying extra for "gaming" or "computer" glasses...if you wear regular glasses, ask the eye doctor about a TechShield or similar coating. I just got a new pair of glasses and they filter blue light without the yellowish tint that these have. Granted, if you don't have glasses anyways, then these might fit the purpose.
ForralSo you're recommending getting a new pair of prescription glasses which can cost in the hundreds of dollars range over the $30 pair of glasses here.
LoqueRead what I said: You can add the coating to your existing glasses, which costs just about as much as these glasses and serves more than one purpose (assuming you already have prescription glasses).
If you have insurance and you're paying "multiple hundreds" for glasses...you're doing it wrong. I have to have special lenses because of the prescription in my left eye and even with those, plus the blue light coating AND the frame, I walked out paying a little over $200 all said and done.
To the people thinking that the software (like night mode or flux) does the same thing as the glasses are incorrect.
The majority of the blue light that causes eye fatigue and insomnia comes from the backlight of the screen. Most screens use a cool white light for the backlight. Cool white lies in the upper temperature of light or the blue range. Software's (typically) don't have access to the backlight because it's a subsystem of the monitor itself. The only way to change the backlight is by changing the brightness of the monitor.
The reason blue light causes insomnia is it inhibits the production of melatonin in the brain which is one of the primary hormones that makes people sleepy.
The glasses work by filtering out blue light wavelengths and reflecting them away. It is actually very easy to do using different chemicals in the making of the lenses. It just so happens that the chemicals that do it best typically show up yellow.
The only monitors that reduce eye fatigue and insomnia are OLED. That is why the creation of OLED is great. They require no backlight making the only blue light produced is from what's being display.
This is not a play for just this company, it's to show that computer glasses do work when properly designed.
My background in Physics, Mechanical Engineering and Applied Mathematics with an emphasis in experimental particle physics. I spend many of hours wearing these glasses while studying because they help a ton.
M.hall.MinesLCDs are made up of "sub-pixels" of red green and blue colors and they function by modulating how much light of each color goes through the LCD, regardless of the backlight technology (edge lighting, backlighting, LEDs) they all behave the same way and software night mode does decrease the amount of bluelight that gets through the pixels. It literally is the same principle as the glasses just less effective since it's not designed for that. But to say it does not work is incorrect. Most of the night mode just decreases the blue component and that causes the blue subpixel to let less light through (blue light specifically, since that pixel only allows blue light through).
"Most screens use a cool white light for the backlight", yes, all LCD screens (for general purpose) uses white backlight, because it needs to to be able to reproduce all the colors, since you cannot add colours with LCDs, only OLEDs can (OLED produces colour by stimulating individually coloured "sub-pixels" so they emit light of that colour, no backlight needed).
I received these computer glasses and the lenses have scratches on them right out of the box.
Additionally, the ear pieces do not open very smoothly because the hinges seem to be a bit tweaked.
The scratches on the lenses are hard to photograph. I can only see them by holding them up to light, but it is noticeable if are wearing them the scratches create a blurred presence in my field of vision.
*Edit* arrozi has fantastic support.
You just did it again " I was just pointing out what is obvious to anyone who works in businesses where mass produced items are sold but may not be obvious to purchasers of said products. "
Justifying and defensive. Can you just stop?
ShadoW865I just received my replacements from Arozzi. The support went above and beyond expectations in their services and I am extremely satisfied with them!
That type of glasses is so much gimmick, just install the latest beta version of (FLUX) and it's gonna do an even better job imo! Also having a glass could potentially add extra reflection, lower a bit the brightness of ur monitor, be annoying with headphones, etc.
PanzerIVI'm woth ArroziScott on this one. I used to use f.lux as well as macOS's built-in nighttime settings. Whether I'm using both programs at the same time or individually, I still feel eye fatigue. Not so much with these types of glasses.