Old-N-Feeble
Member
It doesn't hurt you, Michael. We adapt quickly so little things like this don't matter.
I've never watched a movie in 3D, but it would probably not work for me.
You just described my childhood. I had to look again to make sure I didn't know you. I had lazy eye (left) as a child. "Put on your patch, Brian!" "Where's your patch, Brian?" The "patch" was a big flesh-colored Band-Aid affair that used to stick to my eyebrow. Very bad for the social life of a second grader. There were eye drops too, and even glasses with a clear left lens and blurry right lens.3-d vision is something you learn when you are about 3 months old. If you truly don't see any difference, it is possible you had lazy eye as a child and didn't wear the eye patch over your good eye to force your bad eye to develop, in which case perhaps you never learned 3-d?
Now I have diplopia -- or double vision. If I relax my eyes, my left eye wanders and everything doubles up. Right eye is still very dominant, so the left eye image is a distraction more than anything. I squint when I drive. And I never could make sense of those damn stereogram images. I still think it's the world's great joke one me.
actually, if you go to the Smithsonian library and look at stereograms, one of the options they have for viewing them is to flicker them rapidly between the left and right image, alternating, and when they do that you do get a sense of 3-D-- your brain sees the difference between the two images and analyzes them as the same image and tells you that it is a stereo image.^^^ Okay... that's just weird.![]()
the 3-D effect is very good if used wisely
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