At least for me, reading on a kindle is markedly more comfortable than reading on my smartphone or laptop. I think at least part of it as you said, most of the time there's no overt indicator of an ability to exist or "multitask", unlike the home button or taskbar on phones and Computers. Though I'd still attribute most of it to having no backlight drilling into my head when I read...
Welcome to /o/STEM! This circle is dedicated to science, technology, engineering, maths, and medicine, where you can discuss all things STEM, seek career advice, share learning resources, and pose “ask an expert” questions to the Ovarit STEM community.
Please provide a descriptive title for your posts and add a flair that best describes your post topic. We encourage posters to add links to relevant articles or research papers in their posts and comments.
Since our focus is on STEM, posts should not be focused on politics, ethics, or philosophy. Any discussion on popular science or medicine (to include COVID-19) must be based on scientific principles and research.
This is also not the place to discuss diet, lifestyle, alternative medicine, or psychology. For these topics please check out o/women which is a general discussion circle and o/womenshealthlounge which is a support sub for health issues.
No conspiracy theories, no quackery, no spamming, and no politically charged posts. The Sitewide Rules and Sitewide Guidelines are both enforced here.
Any posts that fail to meet the criteria provided above may be removed.
Thank you and enjoy!
I noticed this when I found myself unintentionally rereading books on my Kindle. I thought it was just me.