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Computer building, I am
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<blockquote data-quote="Buck" data-source="post: 8783227" data-attributes="member: 591582"><p>I've been trying to adjust my screen to make it easier on my eyes. That helps keep my CNS calm, which is essential to me. I have trouble seeing due to neurological problems, where I have tons of visual snow in my vision, 24/7. Having visual snow in your vision like mine is like old school analog antenna tv's; specifically when half the screen looks like static, because your signal is poor. That's what my vision looks like. </p><p></p><p>This is a pretty good example, and yes it really can be that bad:</p><p></p><p>[ATTACH=full]36074[/ATTACH]</p><p></p><p>I've found over-saturation works the best out of everything so far. I have trouble seeing small details or slight color changes due to the snow, just depends, seeing is complicated. But, both my GPU and monitor have the same color settings, so I can like double do any color setting. I've been running the absolute highest saturation on both my monitor and GPU, run the lowest brightness on the GPU (to keep it cooler) and run the highest on my monitor. This has helped me a bit see what I'm doing better, but it's sort of like nauseating. Part of my struggles box designing is eye related neuro problems. It's amazing how much pain sitting at a computer can spark up. I think these screens we stare at are more powerful than we think. </p><p></p><p>We stare at bright screens constantly, and I think it actually inducts electrical signals from the screen radiation into our actual neurological systems, and can cause problems, maybe sort of like too much cholesterol clogging up your blood vessels. I'm just a sensitive person, lol, so how the color of my screen is determines what my visual snow looks like after I stop staring at the screen. Like say I'm box designing, I can run a more white hue or blue/red/yellow. From staring at whatever screen colors for hours and hours, it changes the way my vision looks. It's a issue for me with triggering migraine like symptoms. If your neuro system is a trashcan like mine, lmk what you run, lol.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Buck, post: 8783227, member: 591582"] I've been trying to adjust my screen to make it easier on my eyes. That helps keep my CNS calm, which is essential to me. I have trouble seeing due to neurological problems, where I have tons of visual snow in my vision, 24/7. Having visual snow in your vision like mine is like old school analog antenna tv's; specifically when half the screen looks like static, because your signal is poor. That's what my vision looks like. This is a pretty good example, and yes it really can be that bad: [ATTACH type="full" alt="36074"]36074[/ATTACH] I've found over-saturation works the best out of everything so far. I have trouble seeing small details or slight color changes due to the snow, just depends, seeing is complicated. But, both my GPU and monitor have the same color settings, so I can like double do any color setting. I've been running the absolute highest saturation on both my monitor and GPU, run the lowest brightness on the GPU (to keep it cooler) and run the highest on my monitor. This has helped me a bit see what I'm doing better, but it's sort of like nauseating. Part of my struggles box designing is eye related neuro problems. It's amazing how much pain sitting at a computer can spark up. I think these screens we stare at are more powerful than we think. We stare at bright screens constantly, and I think it actually inducts electrical signals from the screen radiation into our actual neurological systems, and can cause problems, maybe sort of like too much cholesterol clogging up your blood vessels. I'm just a sensitive person, lol, so how the color of my screen is determines what my visual snow looks like after I stop staring at the screen. Like say I'm box designing, I can run a more white hue or blue/red/yellow. From staring at whatever screen colors for hours and hours, it changes the way my vision looks. It's a issue for me with triggering migraine like symptoms. If your neuro system is a trashcan like mine, lmk what you run, lol. [/QUOTE]
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