TechSensitive
Sorry for this tangent in the wrong thread.
I originally thought that may be the reason as well, but I think that hypothesis can be eliminated do to the fact that the pattern follows the users mouse in recorded video on u-tube. When viewing a U-tube video of a desktop, white areas have a moving dithering that follows the mouse in the video. My panel would have no idea where the users mouse was on the screen, so the non-white interference must have been present in the video itself. The standard methods of removing dithering (Ditherig.exe, DP_DissableDither, Etc) do not remove the moving patterns I see, which are identical to that captured in video. My assumption is that the OS (all of them) and individual programs introduce their own dithering in software. Since I am able to use the same monitors that cause me eyestrain when connected to a PC with a dvd player without issue, I can assume it is dithering that is the culprit of my nausea, headaches, visual snow, etc.
This was an interesting video, however, I have not heard of any one having burn in problems with even 8 year old e-readers. in my experience and on-line research, I have not found burn in to be an issue with e-ink. Ghosting is certainly part of the technology, but it is not permanent. My mother’s kindle has seen thousands of hours of use without any sign of burn-in. I am certainly happy with my E-ink devices.