Revolutionizing Visual Delight: How Honor’s AI Defocus Tech Enriches Your Viewing Experience
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So, we’ve got this complicated relationship between human eyes and electronic screens. We’re glued to them for most of our waking hours, and yet, they can be pretty bad for our eye health. It’s not a new concern, either – I remember being told as a kid not to sit too close to the TV because it would mess with my eyes. There was already a connection between screen time and eye health back then.
Fast forward to today, and smartphone manufacturers are taking eye health a lot more seriously. Honor, for example, has introduced a range of screen tech designed to avoid damage and even strengthen your eyes over time. And let me tell you, it’s impressive stuff.
The Honor Magic V3 and Magic Pad 2, for instance, come with a suite of eye care tools. There’s Circadian Night Display, which adjusts the screen’s temperature based on your sunrise and sunset times, and 4320Hz ultra-high frequency PWM dimming to reduce screen flicker and ease eye strain. Then there’s Eye Comfort, which filters out blue light, and Natural Tone, which adjusts brightness to give you a consistent viewing experience.
But the real game-changer for me is Honor’s new AI Defocus technology. Essentially, it uses AI to replicate the function of specialized myopia glasses by including defocus signals on the left and right edges of the screen. This reduces eyestrain and helps fight off transient myopia, or nearsightedness, which is believed to be influenced by prolonged screen time.
I was blown away by the effects I felt on my eyes almost immediately after turning the tech on. I felt relief from strain that I didn’t even notice I had, especially around the periphery, without any noticeable change to the quality of the display. And Honor’s testing backs this up, claiming that the tech can reduce transient myopia by an average of 13 degrees after 25 minutes of use.
It’s a big deal, too, because according to a study from the National Institutes of Health, more than half the world’s population will be affected by nearsightedness by 2050. So, it’s about time we started taking eye health seriously and implementing tech like this into our screens.