Eye strain, foggy mind and what I found behind it
Thanx a lot for your inputs, i'm definitely going to a doc then. Martin as you write about the issue, i begin to feel i really have this heterophoria or some of them variants as well.
I have an old article about parallax images, maybe it is also something similar, what happens to us:
https://www.3d-forums.com/threads/stereoscopic-parallax.4/
It is still shame however, that not much we can do, actually the consumer protection didn't answer a single thing yet either, which is quite interesting. nVidia sad, that they will forward my issue to the related teams...
That's all one can do it seems...
Intel opened an initiative to figure out this problem. In the end, their engineers (an external QA team contracted for this) found that there was "no difference in output" between known-good revisions and known-bad revisions. So they gave up. I expect much the same from nVidia.
tsb i think there's some combination of factors going on that induce a fake 3d/parallax effect in certain people- like these http://magiceye.com
interesting they are promoting them as eye exercises..
reaganry God that thing is horrible to look at, just checked their FB site and some of the picures there are even vibrating for me! I think its very close, if not the one technique we have here about.
I was actually began to think, that they probably don't need any "animation", it should be doable on single still images, because i already made some screenshots before (from WoW) and i was pretty positive that the effect was still somehow there. I was just thinking how one could destroy or just lower this effect, e.g. antialiasing, sharpness-lowering, etc. I think i'll look into this some more.
There's one more thing, if the consumer protection doesn't react, i'll try the EU central consumer protection. I cannot just leave the whole thing behind anymore.
- Edited
martin The heterophoria you describe is then a separate issue beside your "one eye is weaker", or the "one eye is weaker" itself? I'm not sure i understand it correctly. Just asking, because my left eye is indeed weaker; having prescription glasses for that for computer use as well, but it disturbed me somehow and not using it right now. Is it generally possible, that this "one eye weakness" itself is not the only problem then? I don't know if i'd test around simply with the glasses for a while until i meet the optometrist.
Any of you guys tried already to Google up this kind of rendering technique? Just asking, because whatever i try, i'm not finding a single thing related to that
tsb there are some interesting print concepts in here that might apply. https://photo.stackexchange.com/questions/5779/what-is-the-difference-between-halftoning-and-dithering