Comment on Why is the vision correction in VR headsets only an afterthought?
copygirl@lemmy.blahaj.zone 10 months agoThe lenses don’t have to both be at the same distance to be fair.
Comment on Why is the vision correction in VR headsets only an afterthought?
copygirl@lemmy.blahaj.zone 10 months agoThe lenses don’t have to both be at the same distance to be fair.
deafboy@lemmy.world 10 months ago
But would the 2 pictures fit together? When you shorten the lens-display distance, you basically zoom in.
XeroxCool@lemmy.world 10 months ago
From my limited experience with a Quest 2, yes, the images should be stable. It had a focus wheel. I don’t wear glasses and don’t know what is missing, but I borrowed it from someone that does wear glasses and he never complained. They are not traditional glasses lenses, they are fresnel lenses - the ridgy kind you might see on lighthouse beacons. Where as curved glasses lenses typically have a single curve to them and have limits to how close the object can be before misalignment of the image due to the curved nature of view, fresnel lenses have a flat outer surface and, in this case, are viewing a flat image panel. The only variable is where the convergence point sits in your eye. For standard near/far sightedness, this should be sufficient