dDaunloz
26-09-2013, 09:12 PM
https://i.imgur.com/nifPs03.png
Varios usuarios de iDevices con el nuevo iOS7 han reportado que les causan motion sickness y dizziness, dos problemas que suelen afectar a un minoria tambien de gamers cuando un juego no trabaja bien los angulos de vision o los filtros Anti Aliasing y/o Anisotropic. Tambien hay gente (son los menos) que se marea con cualquier tipo de juego en primera persona, o hasta en un auto, ya que el cerebro le cuesta procesar el movimiento cuando el cuerpo no se esta moviendo.
En el caso del nuevo sistema mobile de Apple, estos casos se dan por las nuevas animaciones de paralelismo (supongo que es un desplazamiento) y zoom. Apple incluyo en las opciones de accesibilidad un reductor para estos efectos, pero no los elimina completamente. Muchos usuarios luegos de llamar al servicio de soporte sin recibir una soluccion satisfactoria, han optado por directamente hacer el downgrade a iOS6
Apple's new design style in iOS 7 has had plenty of detractors, but some may have genuine cause for complaint: the zooming and parallax animations across the new operating system have been giving some users bad cases of motion sickness. "The zoom animations ... are literally making me nauseous and giving me a headache," Apple forum user Ensorceled writes. "It's exactly how I used to get car sick if I tried to read in the car." Other forum users are reporting feelings of illness, eye pain, and dizziness as well.
Though Apple does include an accessibility option called "Reduce Motion," the feature seems to primarily remove the shifting parallax effect seen on the homescreen. However, it seems that most users aren't finding fault solely with the homescreen. Instead, most are pointing to the zooming effects that are now ubiquitous across iOS when opening and closing apps or entering the multitasking menu. "I had severe vertigo the minute I started using my iPad with iOS 7," writes Apple forum user glassrabit. "Lost the rest of the day to it." Another user, nybe, writes, "I had to go home 'sick' from work because of the intense nausea due to using my iPhone with iOS 7."
Most of the users commenting in Apple's forum report having called the company's support line only to be told that there was no way to fully disable the effects. Many say that they've resorted to downgrading their devices to iOS 6, which did animate the way that apps opened, but did so in a way that was quicker and didn't involve flying into or out of the screen. "I've had zero issues with any iOS version prior," writes Apple forum user BurgerKing. We've reached out to Apple for comment on the motion sickness issue, and will update if the company responds.
Fuente: theverge (http://www.theverge.com/2013/9/25/4770818/ios-7-zooming-animations-causing-reports-of-severe-motion-sickness)
Varios usuarios de iDevices con el nuevo iOS7 han reportado que les causan motion sickness y dizziness, dos problemas que suelen afectar a un minoria tambien de gamers cuando un juego no trabaja bien los angulos de vision o los filtros Anti Aliasing y/o Anisotropic. Tambien hay gente (son los menos) que se marea con cualquier tipo de juego en primera persona, o hasta en un auto, ya que el cerebro le cuesta procesar el movimiento cuando el cuerpo no se esta moviendo.
En el caso del nuevo sistema mobile de Apple, estos casos se dan por las nuevas animaciones de paralelismo (supongo que es un desplazamiento) y zoom. Apple incluyo en las opciones de accesibilidad un reductor para estos efectos, pero no los elimina completamente. Muchos usuarios luegos de llamar al servicio de soporte sin recibir una soluccion satisfactoria, han optado por directamente hacer el downgrade a iOS6
Apple's new design style in iOS 7 has had plenty of detractors, but some may have genuine cause for complaint: the zooming and parallax animations across the new operating system have been giving some users bad cases of motion sickness. "The zoom animations ... are literally making me nauseous and giving me a headache," Apple forum user Ensorceled writes. "It's exactly how I used to get car sick if I tried to read in the car." Other forum users are reporting feelings of illness, eye pain, and dizziness as well.
Though Apple does include an accessibility option called "Reduce Motion," the feature seems to primarily remove the shifting parallax effect seen on the homescreen. However, it seems that most users aren't finding fault solely with the homescreen. Instead, most are pointing to the zooming effects that are now ubiquitous across iOS when opening and closing apps or entering the multitasking menu. "I had severe vertigo the minute I started using my iPad with iOS 7," writes Apple forum user glassrabit. "Lost the rest of the day to it." Another user, nybe, writes, "I had to go home 'sick' from work because of the intense nausea due to using my iPhone with iOS 7."
Most of the users commenting in Apple's forum report having called the company's support line only to be told that there was no way to fully disable the effects. Many say that they've resorted to downgrading their devices to iOS 6, which did animate the way that apps opened, but did so in a way that was quicker and didn't involve flying into or out of the screen. "I've had zero issues with any iOS version prior," writes Apple forum user BurgerKing. We've reached out to Apple for comment on the motion sickness issue, and will update if the company responds.
Fuente: theverge (http://www.theverge.com/2013/9/25/4770818/ios-7-zooming-animations-causing-reports-of-severe-motion-sickness)