I am wearing, right now, Bausch & Lomb PureVision Multifocal contacts.
They are soft contact lenses with high oxygen transfer. I am typing on
my laptop with clear vision. When I look at a mountain, I can see every
tree. You may not be able to wear soft contacts if your eyes are dry, or
if you have high amounts of astigmatism. Check with your optometrist
Mike Byerley wrote:
That's a thought. I hate my effing glasses. Doesn't matter whether
I'm working out or just working, sweat ends up in the bi-focal part of
the glasses and I spend half the time wiping them off and if I am
working, I have to keep tilting my head to look around the sweat
pooling in the bottom of the bifocal. PITA...
I just never considered contacts because I am light sensitive and need
the glass to turn dark (photo grey extra without the chem treatment).
Every photo of me as a child has right eye shut and the left eye
squinting when taken in sunlight.
----- Original Message ----- From: <[email protected]>
To: "RBASE-L Mailing List" <[email protected]>
Sent: Sunday, August 15, 2010 12:15 PM
Subject: [RBASE-L] - Re: Quitting to r> prompt, ver.9
Actually I'm dialing in using LogMeIn. But I just don't see any
definition between on and off.
BTW: when I started getting the "old folks" eyes, I switched to
having one
contact lens near-sighted and one contact lens far-sighted. What a life
changer! Recommend that everyone at least try this out. Took maybe
one week
at most to get my brain used to it. I can read the tiniest of maps,
and the
farthest steet signs. Computers are no problem. Wonderful not
having to
remember where I put those d****d reading glasses.
Karen
Around age 45 is when I started needing glasses.. ;-)
On Remote Desktop, the intrepolation of the graphics is a little
jiggy, so
I
can see (with or without my glasses) why it might not be clear for
you..