Jungel easier on the Eye

Community Forums/Monkey Talk/Jungel easier on the Eye

Hardcoal(Posted 2014) [#1]
From some reason I find programming with Jungel IDE
much nicer to the eye.
In general Jungel IDE is much nicer then Blide.


Derron(Posted 2014) [#2]
I think beer tastes better than grapefruit juice.

Just to remember: you compare two IDEs for two languages with a different amount of language specific aspects to visualize. If you like colorizing of X better than in Y: adjust the color scheme.


bye
Ron


Hardcoal(Posted 2014) [#3]
Its not only the color scheme..
If I knew what it is I would not raise this issue..
Since I suffer from high sensitivity to monitors.. This issue is important to me.
No need to make a big deal.. It was just a remark.

Btw In blide you can't replace the white background of the file explorer etc.. and in jungle ide
It is taking the desktop color scheme. So this is another plus to jungle.
I try to avoid any white color as possible which glares into my eyes.

Also text looks sharper.. Some how
And more stuff I prefer not to say as it might be a product of my own imagination ;)


Rick Nasher(Posted 2014) [#4]
I know exactly what you mean Hardcoal. Hate the white bars in Ideal even though I love the editor itself. Is Jungel IDE part of monkey or do you have a link?

I noticed my HP laptop's glossy screen appears to be giving me more pain than a mate screen. So I'm now considering an anti glare screencover that apperantly also reduces the UV radiation. If works I'll put it on my galaxy S3 too.

I found it may or may not have something to do with my vitamin B12 deficiency I suffer from(caused by an autoimmune reaction to cells that produce the intrinsic factor that is required in order for B12 to be absorbed) as sustained shortage can lead to over sensitiveness off the nerves as it peals away the outer coating of the nerve tubes. Not something generally known to the medical world.

For now I resort to my dark sunglasses(I wonder if mirroring glasses work better)

Also what can help during coding is putting a theme to a light one and then using Win7's magnifier to turning on the color inversion option.


Hardcoal(Posted 2014) [#5]
Wow rick I always suspected I have a lake of a vitamin and now your theory is very interesting.
I use a glossy monitor and not mate.
I wonder if you also have symptoms like annoying ring in the ears. It come and goes...
But mostly its on.
I relate it to damaged neurons..
I have much less problems with tablets BTW. Also because of the size..

I'm gonna try this b12 who knows..

Jungle Ide is made for monkey and others.. But I don't think its for blits3d

My latest monitor purchase is Dell S2440L
Its Glossy With Deep Black
Good Contrast.
Not a bad monitor..


Rick Nasher(Posted 2014) [#6]
Ringing in ears don't sound too good, I had those moments along with dizziness.

I'm was getting B12 injections, once every 4 weeks, but now increased to once every 3 weeks cos after 2 weeks the effectiveness seems to wear off. Before this I used to take a B12 tablet(4000% of recommended amount a day) every morning just to hold out. But my current physician thought my previous physician was wrong and I was exaggerating. Then I stopped all and got increasingly more issues like pain during walking, bit of hair loss, infections like colds taking longer to cure and extreme tiredness/lack of energy.

A specialist finally found I was unable to absorb B12 due to above mentioned autoimmune reaction. They completely missed this cos usually one would also get anemia with this, but apparently my body is a bit strange in that it compensates for this so no abnormal blood levels.
I still am having pains when looking at screens though and found they really lack the insight of how far this stretches.

Pernicious Anemia and Vitamin B-12 Deficiency:
http://www.medicinenet.com/pernicious_anemia/article.htm

Btw: I'm working for Dell Tech Support in the Benelux.. and I have to wear sunglasses while sitting in front of the screen. ( to come full circle. ;-)


xlsior(Posted 2014) [#7]
ringing in the ears could be tinnitus (not much you can do about that), or high blood pressure. visual problems / eyestrain can also be caused by high blood pressure. Might want to have that checked out.


Hardcoal(Posted 2014) [#8]
Xlsior. It comes and goes. The more I don't touch computer/TV etc.. It gets better..
The more in in the sun the better I become.
With all my passion and wheel I suspect I'm going to end my programming era for the time being.
It should be fun not a torture.


Rick Nasher(Posted 2014) [#9]
Same here: the longer I stay away from screens the better it gets.
Weird huh, looks like circuitry is overloaded or something. Also odd is that my left eye hurts more than the right one.
Might help if staying away from screens for few montha and see how goes if you pick it up after.
I had feeling it was almost gone, then I overdid it again staying up until late (like 3:00 AM) coding as I felt OK again and was trying to catch up with the backlog(was kinda frustrated).


Hardcoal(Posted 2014) [#10]
so far this new monitor surprises me (Dell S2440L)
but only time will tell.

yet, I seems that IPS proves it self as a better technology for the eye.


benq has flicker free technology senseye3 i got there screen
and its really! flicker free.
I will they will combine IPS with flicker free technology.
wait? maybe benq has one?

im gonna check :)