Telaneo a day ago

Tell that to my glasses. At any sort of distance where this could be an advantage, the clock is just going to be a blur anyway.

Not to mention, how often are you in a situation where you want to know what time it is, but the nearest clock is far enough away that it being analogue becomes an actual advantage?

  • 1718627440 a day ago

    Interesting, I also have glasses and am short-sighted, but for me light-emitting objects blur much faster than solid objects. It depends very much on the light type, frequency and brightness, but most LEDs, which most digital clocks use, tend to have an overgleaming effect, which makes them unreadable due to being a block of light.

    > Not to mention, how often are you in a situation where you want to know what time it is, but the nearest clock is far enough away that it being analogue becomes an actual advantage?

    All the time? Being in a train station, sitting in a (class)room (during exam), in the kitchen, walking on the street, etc.

    • Telaneo 18 hours ago

      > All the time? Being in a train station,

      Phone. Or a wristwatch if you're that type.

      > a (class)room (during exam),

      My last 7+ exams were all done on a computer. That clock was a lot closer than any that happen to be on a wall.

      > in the kitchen, walking on the street, etc.

      Phone. Or wristwatch again.

      • 1718627440 18 hours ago

        > Phone. Or a wristwatch if you're that type.

        Sure, but why would I look down, when there is a clock in every direction I look at. I wristwatch would also be analog again.

        > My last 7+ exams were all done on a computer. That clock was a lot closer than any that happen to be on a wall.

        I have no clue how your university does prevent cheating, but ok. Here any kind of network-connected(/connectable) device is forbidden. And then there is math, where the only thing you are allowed to have is a pen and the formulary (and maybe a ruler).