Skip to main content

7 Easy Ways to Save Your Eyes From Smartphone Strain

Zeeshan Mir Baz has collected the information from thewebsite:https://www.entrepreneur.com/article/232665 articles/list-of-input-devices-on-a-computer in this article by 
 Former West Coast Editor said that: 

Your smartphone is a sight for sore eyes. Literally.
If you’re one of those people who glances at their smartphone 150 times a day, chances are your eyes are paying the price for your screen addiction.

Staring at your smartphone -- or tablet, e-reader or laptop, while we’re at it  -- for too long can lead to tired, itchy, dry eyes, and even blurred vision and headaches. Think zombie eyes and you’re there.

Luckily you can minimize inevitable digital eye strain by blending a few simple, healthy habits into your smartphone-gazing routine.
Here are seven super quick and easy ways to give your eyes a break during your all those smartphone marathon sessions.

1. Blink, blink and blink again. Blinking often (and for more than a second) keeps your eyes moist and reduces dryness and irritation. We tend blink about a third less than we normally would when we stare lovingly at our precious smartphone screens, which starves our poor peepers of protective tears. Keep your eyes wet by blinking about 10 times every 20 minutes or so and you should be good to go. Bonus: Blinking often helps refocus your eyes, too.

2. Minimize glare. Unless you have a smartphone equipped with anti-glare Corning Gorilla Glass or use a matte screen protector film, you’re probably coping with a fair amount of annoying reflective glare. The fix is easy and inexpensive: Buy an anti-reflective coating and (carefully) slap it on your smartphone screen. They range between about $1 and $20 on Amazon.com and in most mobile service provider stores. Bonus: Anti-glare screen protectors also fend off fingerprints. 

3. Take breaks. Sounds scary, right? But your eyes will thank you. By now you’ve probably heard of the 20-20-20 rule. The concept is to take a break from looking at your screen every 20 minutes for 20 seconds while looking at something 20 feet away. Doing so relaxes your eye muscles (and gives you ample time to contemplate which fun, new iPhone or Android app you’ll play with next). 

4. Adjust your brightness. Having your screen too bright or too dark stresses your eyes out and can cause problems maintaining focus. To eliminate either issue in about a matter of seconds, simply go into your smartphone settings and adjust your screen brightness so it’s about the same as the light level in the environment around you. Wait -- that is unless you're in the pitch black dark squinting at your smartphone in bed, which, by the way, can lead to insomnia and less sex). 

5. Tweak your text size and contrast. Adjusting your smartphone text contrast and size also provides a little much-needed relief. It makes it easier to read web content, email messages, calendar appointments and everything else on your phone.

6. Keep a clean screen. Routinely wipe down your smartphone screen with a dry (not wet!) cleaning cloth to remove distracting dust, grime, smudges and fingerprints.

7. Hold your smartphone farther away. It’s ok. You don’t have to put it all the way down. We promise. Most people tend to hold their cell phones only about 8 inches from their faces. Not good. Try holding yours at least 16 to 18 inches away from your eyes to give your eyes a break. It might feel funny at first but shouldn’t take long to get used to.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

POSITIVE AND NEGATIVE EFFECTS OF PHONE

Zeeshan Mir Baz has collected the information from the website:https://infogram.com/positive-and-negative-effects-of-phone-1gxop47zrnqdpwy in this article said that:   Mobile phone is becoming more and more important in people’s daily life. but phones bring positive and negative effects, people in these days never left their phone is like part of their body. Phone do a good job on making our life more easier, but there are more negative than positive.  Parent buying smart phone for their kids is handing them fire to play with.  •stop kids going outside and interacting with friends •Miss homework •Have adult experience(adult movies) •keeps them awake at night because of texting •causing anxiety because not enough followers in social media ":  Cell phone may cause some health problems I know a lot parent buy their kid a phone due to safety issues, becau...

The 4 Best Phones for Privacy & Security

Zeeshan Mir Baz has collected the information from this website:https://smartphones.gadgethacks.com/how-to/4-best-phones-for-privacy-security-0176106/ in this article BY  JON KNIGHT   06/12/2018 5:07 AM  said that: Smartphones are inherently bad for privacy. You've basically got a tracking device in your pocket, pinging off cell towers and locking onto GPS satellites. All the while, the handset's data connection ensures that tracking cookies, advertising IDs, and usage stats follow you around the internet. So no, there's no such thing as a perfectly secure and truly private smartphone, let's get that out of the way now. But in the information age, you practically need a smartphone just to get by in society, so the question then becomes: Which phone manages to be the lesser of all the evils? With critical vulnerabilities such as the  KRACK  exploit and  Blueborne , not to mention the  FBI attempting to find a backdoor  into practicall...

These phones do at least one thing that the iPhone X and Galaxy S9 don't

Zeeshan Mir Baz has collected the informatin from this website:https://www.cnet.com/news/smartphones-with-unusual-features-roundup/ in this article by Jessica Dolcourt June 25, 2018 12:29 PM PDT said that: Today, every phone is more or less a rectangular slab along the lines of the iPhone X ( $800 at Cricket Wireless ) or Galaxy S9 ( $700 at Amazon.com ) . That's not inherently a bad thing, but when you stack these devices side by side, it's easy to feel like you're drowning in a sea of sameness. From time to time I like to sit back and take stock of the phone designs that are different, some even conspicuously so. (We'll never forget you, Runcible ). When devices follow design trends in a pack -- slim bezels, face unlocking and the soon-to-b...