Night-vision lenses so thin and light that we can all see in the darkreturn2ozma@lemmy.world to Technology@lemmy.world – 192 points – 1 months agonewatlas.com33Post a CommentPreviewYou are viewing a single commentView all commentsShow the parent commentIt doesn't. I recall an experiment a few decades ago where they turned the world upside down. Didn't take participants long to "normalise" the image. When they removed the experiment, took even shorter to flip back. I seem to recall it being done in a train carriage, as art, but I'm not sure.Huh guess a bit more training and u can totally remove the fibre optic flipping which if i recall correctly is the most expensive part.2 more...2 more...
It doesn't. I recall an experiment a few decades ago where they turned the world upside down. Didn't take participants long to "normalise" the image. When they removed the experiment, took even shorter to flip back. I seem to recall it being done in a train carriage, as art, but I'm not sure.Huh guess a bit more training and u can totally remove the fibre optic flipping which if i recall correctly is the most expensive part.2 more...2 more...
Huh guess a bit more training and u can totally remove the fibre optic flipping which if i recall correctly is the most expensive part.2 more...
It doesn't. I recall an experiment a few decades ago where they turned the world upside down. Didn't take participants long to "normalise" the image.
When they removed the experiment, took even shorter to flip back.
I seem to recall it being done in a train carriage, as art, but I'm not sure.
Huh guess a bit more training and u can totally remove the fibre optic flipping which if i recall correctly is the most expensive part.