The new iPad’s Retina Display reduces strain on your eyes felt from looking at monitors!

The iPad’s Retina Display was amazing when it hit the hands of the customers on March 16th. But some were worried about their eye strain due to increase in the saturation and brightness of the display. Here’s some good new for those who thought so. A recent finding by All About Vision claims that the Retina Display iPad has significantly lower strain on your eyes which are felt from looking at monitors for a long period of time.

The new iPad comes with a 3.1 million pixels display and has 265ppi instead of 132ppi on the devices, that aims at reducing the Computer Vision Syndrome. Apple’s Senior VP of Worldwide Marketing, Phil Schiller said that there’s a serious math behind all these and he now proves to be right. The quality of Retina Display is so realistic that there are only minor differences between the real life scene and the scene on the new iPad. The Retina Display’s idea is to make the screen quality better, that a normal individual can’t tell apart pixels when the device is held at normal viewing angles.

We have all been knowing that the normal monitors have a bad effect on your eyes when bought closer. But this is not the case with the new Retina Display. The closer you bring the display to your eyes, the lesser is the strain imposed. This report was given by Mr. Gary Heiting of All Things Vision. He also reports that the new Retina Display still reduce the strain caused by gaming on the device when compared with any other device on the market.

Source: All Things Vision

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