In my own case -- with a focus only on words one after another against a background that puts light right into my eyes, there's quite a difference.
I (and others report the same) can read a book on e-ink for hours but on my LCD screen, which I DIM -- and it has a reputation for being an excellent screen) -- I can read an e-book for no more than 20 minutes. I then need to squint my eyes to continue, no matter how far down I dim that light. I also use a lamp to help my eyes adjust to the light difference between the light source (LCD) and surroundings, and that helps me read books for about half an hour. I do it only because I like to see some of the color illustrations on my Kindle 4 PC.
Yet, I can surf the web on a computer of any type for 10+ hours a day without a problem because in surfing the web your eyes are looking all over the place and get to relax from one short-term position of focus, with images and other stories to catch your eye (as with a paper newspaper). That's why it's called surfing ... or browsing. It's not a heavy focus on just one plain-text word after another, contained, with not much movement of the eyes for relaxation and then, with that more intense form of light (vs reflected light from e-ink screens) coming into your eyes, it has more effect on some of us.
Carnoy gets a quote from Barnes and Noble's CEO, William Lynch, that B&N did "extensive research on displays" and "discovered" that "eyestrain with LCDs was not the huge issue many people were making it out to be." He added that B&N is using a "high-resolution next-generation panel from LG" that is backlit with LED.
Carnoy then asks his optometrist for his take on this and reports that the doc doesn't feel there's that much to the eyestrain idea. It doesn't matter, he feels, if a light is shining into your eyes when you are doing serial reading (words in a string) for long-form sessions as opposed to short magazine reading or surfing the web. He doesn't believe today's LCD screens cause any eyestrain for anyone but that it's just a matter of "aesthetics" whether they prefer an LCD screen or an e-Ink one for reading.
In the comments section for the article, some point to differing light-sensitivity that people have. One would think that was common (and good) sense.
But the most interesting Comment of all to that article was one which I'll put here, as his explanations for perceived or reported LCD eyestrain comes from someone who has studied this at length and of course has reasons for his most definite bias, as he is a co-founder of e-Ink:
' Hi David,
While LCDs are adequate for reading, E Ink was invented and engineered for the best possible reading experience. Your readers might like to hear about a few technical factors that are not well known and contribute to the difference:
1. Ambient brightness
Over the years many people have told me that reading an emissive display is bothersome to them while E Ink is not.
I think one reason is that as you read, your eyes skip along the lines of text, dwelling for a fraction of a second on small groups of words. Your eyes are constantly moving ? hundreds of times per minute. So it is very important that your eyes be able to refocus on the surface of a screen within a split-second.
Emissive displays are ill-suited for this. While you are reading a book, you see a lot more than the screen. Your field of vision is wider than the page alone and your eyes often glance off the page. With a backlit screen, every time your eye switches from a bright screen to the dimmer ambient room, your eye muscles must make an adjustment. And the more adjustments, the more chance for eyestrain.
With paper or E Ink, the page is the same brightness as everything else in the room. Your eye needs less adjustment effort to go back and forth. You can see and understand information more immediately. Paper is the ultimate "glanceable" display and that helps improve comprehension and maximize reading speed.
2. No parallax / closer to the eye
Have you ever gazed at a calculator display and noticed a bit of a shadow? That is parallax. The same thing happens on your emissive LCD. The white color is actually coming from a backlight behind the LCD; the black color is coming from a shadow cast by the liquid crystal material in the middle of the LCD glass sandwich. So black and white are different distances from your eye. This degree of shadowing changes with the viewing angle. There are also two sheets of glass and multiple polarizer films between your eye and the white background, which creates a slight feeling of separation between screen and real world.
In an E Ink display, the electronic ink contains black and white particles that are both moved physically by electrophoresis to the front of the display. So both black and white are exactly the same distance from your eye. Furthermore, both are at the front pressed up to the top layer of glass. This greatly contributes to the feeling that the information is printed on the top of a page.
3. Less glare
All E Ink display surfaces are treated to be matte like a printed page. Most LCDs are not. This is not an obvious feature when you buy the product, but it makes a huge difference to legibility in some settings.
4. Same contrast across the entire page
Although modern LCDs have greatly improved their viewing angle uniformity, there is still a detectable difference in contrast ratio across the page. These differences in contrast make it just a tiny bit harder to resolve images as your eye skips along the page. As the screen gets larger or closer to your eyes, as with a handheld book, this angular difference is increased.
5. No aperture ratio loss
The pixels on LCD screens do not have a full aperture ratio, because each pixel must be separated by a black border. The border hides the underlying transistor and separates the areas of the color filter. There are actually 3 sets of borders per pixel, since color LCDs have RGB subpixels. This all adds up to tiny black gaps between each pixel. As LCDs reach higher resolutions there are even more dead gaps as a percentage of viewing area.
E Ink screens have a 100% aperture ratio. There is no black mask and no black border between pixels. When two neighboring pixels are white on an E Ink screen, the pixels merge to form a solid block of white. Therefore the blacks and whites on an E Ink screen are uniform, again improving image quality.
Russ Wilcox, co-founder E Ink <-- absolutely biased in favor of E Ink! =) '
This is all a concern as some of us are considering, as a SECONDARY e-reader, the coming NookColor, for color magazine reading or for photography and travel books. Also of interest is the ePub (but not its proprietary form of Adobe DRM) and library capabilities *IF* the new Nook functions better than the eInk Nook does (and certainly better than it did in its first buggy half year) as I find its menu system and processes have too many steps, it's too slow to respond (when you're used to the Kindle (UK: K3)), and the Nook's search and annotations systems are quite poor.
But also of interest is that it will view though not edit Microsoft Office documents.
Searches can function as 'flipping' through a book in search of something and that's important to me, as is the dictionary function being right on the front screen as it is for both the Kindles and the new Sony e-readers. Annotations should be FINDABLE rather than depending on your ever reaching those pages again (a drawback of the current Nook).
However, the new Nook software update coming may help. Oddly, Engadget's look at the NookColor the other day left them feeling the NookColor has to be sped up, even though it's not an eInk device. B&N has another two weeks to get it ready for reporters to touch (they wouldn't let Engadget operate it).
As of now, I'm also looking at the fact that the NookColor is almost one pound (15.8 ounces) and gives "up to" 8 hours on a battery charge, and it takes 3 hours to do a full charge.
Those are drawbacks to it being a primary portable e-reader, but the color will entice, even if it is an LCD screen and we now know what an LCD screen is like, for book-reading outside where the sun shines. There should be a good market for it though, from people who won't need to use it outdoors and who want color above all else and have not bought an e-reader because of the lack of color. I imagine that's a large potential market.
I'll be writing more about the NookColor, but I would personally not, at this point get a color LCD screen device as my primary ebook reader but am considering the new Nook as a supplemental e-reader and also because I'm a long-time B&N member and want them to survive, as they're not in the best financial shape currently but should certainly make it through fine if they do things right with the Nook.
It's important to me that their bookstore in my neighborhood, which I like to visit, stays, when the 3 others in this area gave up the ghost this past year.
The IPad has a great screen but is decidedly not pleasant for me to try to read a book on although some others can do it (the Nook will add an anti-glare coating and it'll be interesting to see how effective that is), but the market shows clearly that the Kindle's eInk screen is a huge attraction for avid book readers and many of us are reading and buying books much more than we used to because it is so strangely pleasing to read on an e-Ink screen and with the Kindle's features and functioning.
That's a good reason for B&N to keep the E-Ink model, as the new model does not 'replace' that but is an addition to the line. The new model will not offer 3G access and will depend on WiFi networks in the home or available nearby.
PC World's TOP 5 Tech Products of the year (out of 100 chosen)
PC World's Cody Hahn reports on their pick of the top 100 best technology products for 2010.
The surprise for many in this was that "Google Android 2.2" is number one rather than the Apple iPad. They also list their Top 5 tech products and services:
. Google Android 2.2
. Apple iPad
. Amazon Kindle (third generation)
. Netflix
. Samsung Galaxy Tab (7" tablet with flash and 2 cameras)
No surprise that the Kindle 3 is in the bunch.
Kindle 3's (UK: Kindle 3's), DX Graphite
Check often: Temporarily-free late-listed non-classics or recently published ones
Guide to finding Free Kindle books and Sources. Top 100 free bestsellers.
UK-Only: recently published non-classics, bestsellers, or highest-rated ones
Also, UK customers should see the UK store's Top 100 free bestsellers. Below are ways to Share this post if you'd like others to see it.
-- The Send to Kindle button works well only on Firefox currently.
(Older posts have older Kindle model info. For latest models, see CURRENT KINDLES page. )
If interested, you can also follow my add'l blog-related news at Facebook and Twitter
Questions & feedback are welcome in the Comment areas (tho' spam is deleted). Thanks!
A few quick thoughts on the NookColor and color ereader screens.
ReplyDelete1) I have always thought that color was very important- even though 98% of my reading is straight text (and I do NOT need purple or blue text to be happy). That is because color readers will attract more casual readers and children- BOTH very large markets.
2) I do believe that it will do well for highly graphic material- like comics and National Geographic type mags/books. BUT, I do not think that they will render well on the small 7" screen. I think that they are best on a full sized tablet (like the iPad). So the nookcolor is the wrong size for adult material (but the right size for kids).
3) I agree and expect to get a color reader (which MAY be an LCD) as a supplemental reader (and web surfer), but not for my book reading (games and video don't appeal to me). So I will wait until the prices drop way down for a large reader. probably a few years.
4) I am not convinced that Mirasol, et als, will ever have a great color screen- we may have to go with LDC/LED for excellent and vibrant color.
Rick Askenase
Hi, Rick
ReplyDeleteI agree, re the casual readers and children, but I also worry about the fragility of those screens when it comes to the latter..
So, you're looking at it from the marketing and business growth viewpoint! Thanks for the feedback already.
I actually don't miss color when reading but what I don't like is when a publisher does not make paragraph breaks. Then it's mind-numbing, without the relief of white space.
I do like color enough that I go to the app for PC to check on it but I also know I can't stay with it on a really good LCD screen that's way above the iPad when it comes to reflections (it's matte with good contrast).
Right. I have quite a few Photoshop books, photography histories and travel books on my Kindle. For those, the color will be good.
PDFs are barely ok on a 9.7" DX or iPad, in size, so the 7" size won't be at all ideal, as you point out -- but it IS lighter and that's a big thing with people who don't want to lug around or hold the heavier iPad when they're outside.
I've not had any interest in the iPad and I'm a gadget person, but I'm intrigued by the Galaxy Tab and by the Nook if the latter functions okay, which is a big If judging from its predecessor. $250 plus case as a secondary reader will take a bit of doing for me to justify but at least it's a possibility. I think the idea of reading travel books or photoshop/photography (none of these are long-form reading) on an LCD color device which is quite portable has its attractions for me.
Mirasol's newer screen (saw it two days ago in an article) has better contrast than the earlier ones. Subdued color will be okay for me in books especially if cheaper and less hard on the eyes and it's fast enough for video and is light on the battery. So I would look fwd to one. Excellent, vibrant color is great for paintings/photos but not a necessity for me for any type of reading. The eyes come first! And the pocketbook.
When the flexible screens are ready (not too far off they say), then the color + that are a nice combo but especially with young people and the tendency for any of us to drop one.
"...This all adds up to tiny black gaps between each pixel. As LCDs reach higher resolutions there are even more dead gaps as a percentage of viewing area."
ReplyDeleteAlthough the gaps are not necessarily black, what Russ Wilcox describes here in re LCD screens reminds me of a close-up on a painting done in the pointillist style, such as:
http://www.webexhibits.org/colorart/jatte.html
While from a distance pointillism/LCD blends together for the most part, there is always some sense of things being a series of discrete elements. But with eInk, everything blends together as a smooth, organic whole.
Hi, Jason -
ReplyDeleteGood point/illustration.
I guess the exception would be the "Retina Plus" feature of the iPhone.
But PDFs on a screen that small ... :-)
Andrys,
ReplyDeleteI have both a first and a latest generation Kindle DX, and an iPad, all of which I use to read largely pure text books and other materials.
Concentrating on just the LCD sensitivity issue, it effectively disappears completely if the iPad application is configured to display yellow or green text (white is usually too harsh) on a black background. (this means that there is now really no backlight) I usually prefer this to the DX, but the Kindle iPad App cannot be so configured. However, the Nook App can (I don't know about actual Nooks), and several ePub Apps can (Bluestream, for example), and one PDF App can (Folio PDF Reader).
I actually shifted all my book buying from Amazon to B&N to get the yellow text, but shifted back because of account sharing.
Regards, Don Lloyd
Don,
ReplyDeleteThanks for all that good info. When I've coded webpages that had to be black background due to images that look better against it, I've used a mild non-bright yellow, almost yellow white for text, so that makes sense. I don't like reading green on black though. The Kindle App can be configured to sepia and dimmed, which helps some.
The DX is, for me, beautiful though, for reading. I guess it's all in how one's eyes are and the different sensitivities.
That account sharing is hard to beat... the way it's implemented at Amazon at least. Thanks again.
I've always thought going back to a white background with black text for computer screens (from black background with white/amber/green text) was a step backwards.
ReplyDeleteEyestrain definitely increased dramatically, no matter what B&N's "expert" on the matter may claim (who is of course completely unbiassed, cough cough).
As a professional software engineer, I have most of my development tooling set up for using a dark blue background with white or yellow text.
This works well on computer screens, reducing glare and eyestrain while remaining readable (white text on a black background for some reason isn't as readable on an LCD, maybe the contrast is too high).
I too keep my screens generally dimmed a bit, if not I tire quickly, enough indication that backlighting is not a nice thing when reading text on a screen for long periods of time.