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Recent Posts

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1
I finally found Elecom/Deft they are in Japan and make a good mouse actually they make several trackball mice .  I have been using their cordless pro and what they call Huge.  Both are very nice  and not bad price either.
2
Logitech Mx Master 3S has a wonderful dull quiet sound when you click the buttons.  I love it.
3
I finally found a kindred spirit, except this guy is much smarter than I am:

"I made a DIY gaming mouse because Logitech's mice keep BREAKING"


It's open source, too:
https://github.com/w...eya/DIY-Gaming-Mouse
4
Thank you for this brilliant release  :Thmbsup:

i could count taps but you wouldnt be able to trigger on both 2 and 3, so it would only be useful if you wanted to catch tripple taps and never double taps, which seems a bit much.

There's a new TapTap-inspired program "in the oven" that approaches multiple taps by setting up a set time and then counting the number of consecutive presses the user made within this time (say, 2 seconds). Then, an associated action triggers if the number of presses matches it exactly.
5
PublicDomainVic / [dev] AnyHandler
« Last post by paradisusvic on May 03, 2024, 11:08 PM »
Placeholder thread for AnyHandler (the very next release).

https://github.com/paradisusis/anyhandler

URL needed for About box, Readme, etc.

This post is scheduled to be updated with the binary / executable.
6
Hello @IainB, I'm doing this program ASAP to bring relief to this condition.

The code repository is open as "WhiteEase" (as in easing the strain derived from too much white on screen):

https://github.com/paradisusis/white-ease

This is going to be fast-tracked. If you wish, I can "ping" you directly by PM on release.

Cheers!
Vic
7
I'd be very interested in any app that meets the general requirements stated here - I have had a similar visual perception impairment for a long time.

In my case, reducing unpolarised light/glare helps - either by using light-tinted polarised sunglasses, or (better) using Eskimo-style spectacles (ordinary specs, but with the lenses taped over with black tape to leave just narrow horizontal slits to see through. I haven't tried pinhole glasses yet, but that might help.

With computers, the problem seems to be too much bright, unpolarised light coming from the pixels of the computer/laptop screen. We are designed to see things by their reflected light, but with pixels we are literally reading from the light source. The result is unpolarised light noise falling on the retina, blurring the image there. If one has slight cloudiness of the fluid in the eyes (as I do), that leads to intra-optical refraction, causing more noise on the retina.

I think my eye problems probably all stem from injury - getting severe snow-blindless at high altitude when I was 16. It also damaged the epithelial membranes on the eyeballs. My eyes became sensitive to bright sunlight and I have worn low-tinted polaroid sunglasses for years to combat sun glare.

"Polaroids - the kindest thing you can do to your eyes."
 - my eldest brother, who is a pilot.
________________________________
8
I'd be very interested in any app that meets the general requirements stated here - I have had a similar visual perception impairment for a long time.

In my case, reducing unpolarised light/glare helps - either by using light-tinted polarised sunglasses, or (better) using Eskimo-style spectacles (ordinary specs, but with the lenses taped over with black tape to leave just narrow horizontal slits to see through. I haven't tried pinhole glasses yet, but that might help.

With computers, the problem seems to be too much bright, unpolarised light coming from the pixels of the computer/laptop screen. We are designed to see things by their reflected light, but with pixels we are literally reading from the light source. The result is unpolarised light noise falling on the retina, blurring the image there. If one has slight cloudiness of the fluid in the eyes (as I do), that leads to intra-optical refraction, causing more noise on the retina.

I think my eye problems probably all stem from injury - getting severe snow-blindless at high altitude when I was 16. It also damaged the epithelial membranes on the eyeballs. My eyes became sensitive to bright sunlight and I have worn low-tinted polaroid sunglasses for years to combat sun glare.

"Polaroids - the kindest thing you can do to your eyes."
 - my eldest brother, who is a pilot.
________________________________
9
Thank you again for helping me making this a valuable software. :)
10
I just tried version 0.14.0 and everything works as expected, given the warning message about deleting PostScript files. :)
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