Topic: Eyewear
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SpoofTimes has posted the following:
A new technology is in testing right now, Hypnotic Contact Lenses. This is a new and clear contact lenses have nano technology on it that will have the the wearer to hypnotize the person who's looking directly the wearers eyes.
The lens operates as with the thought of the wearer as he dazzled the victims with the wearers eyes. The lens will make the victim look to the wearers eyes and gives off small instances making the wearers eyes in a white color. The hypnotist will then give a verbal command to the victim and the victim suppose to obligate the wearers command.
In the U.S., people shot darts in bars until they are half in the bag. In the U.K., it's a sport--a professional sport worth hundreds of thousands to winners. That explains why the following story was front page news for the Sun.
Phil Taylor [champion darts player] has been told that he needs glasses.
Opticians say the sharpest eye in darts should wear specs on the oche, starting at next week's Grand Slam.
It comes on the back of The Power's worst run of form in almost three years - with three defeats in a fortnight.
Taylor, 50, said: "Maybe that explains why I'm suddenly losing matches - it's because I can't see the board.
"As long as I don't look like Ugly Betty I don't care."
Despite the warning from optical groups and the FDA, which appeared on scores of websites and in scores of newspapers, a Rhode Island teenager still purchased decorative CLs. Here's the beginning of the story that appeared on the Providence Journal's website, Projo: "A high school student developed severe eye problems after illegally purchasing decorative contact lenses from a convenience store and wearing them at Halloween, according to the state Health Department."
Optical News from OpticalCEUs also heard that a Halloween store in Massachusetts was selling decorative CLs.
"Safilo reported a 400,000 euro ($562 million) loss in the three months ending September, compared with a 50 million-euro loss a year earlier, the Padua, Italy-based, company said today in a statement. That beat the 11.2 million-euro loss average estimate of eight analysts on Bloomberg." That's the report that appeared on Bloomberg. "Sales rose almost 12 percent to 237.9 million euros, compared with the 230.3 million-euro estimate by 10 analysts in a Bloomberg survey. Sales gained almost 30 percent in Asia, 21.7 percent in the U.S., and 5.7 percent in Europe, Safilo said."
The reported increase in U.S. sales might hint at the beginning of a turnaround in the U.S. optical market.
The NevadaAppeal posted the following:
Near Gilgil, deep in the Rift Valley of Kenya, there is a “Granny Club” consisting of native African grandmothers who are raising their orphaned grandchildren. A program to teach the grandmothers to read was failing miserably until it was discovered that the grandmothers could not see well enough to read.
Then several of the grandmothers were fitted with affordable eyeglasses at the Rotary sponsored eye clinic at the nearby St. Mary's Mission Hospital. Now the grandmothers are learning to read...
Meanwhile Voice of America notes that "a non-governmental organization in Nigeria called Sightsavers is working to help restore sight to visually impaired people. The Federal Ministry of Health recently conducted a survey on visual Impairment. It found that about 1,130,000 people in Nigeria are blind. More than a third of them are in the northwestern states."
According to TwinCities.com, Ophthalmologist David Eilers of St. Pauls, MN, allegedly complained to 1-800 contacts "that the calls were a waste of his time. They interrupted business. He wondered why they couldn't just have a human call. In a lawsuit filed in federal court this week, the contact seller claims Eilers' protests soon went beyond mere complaints. The doctor 'has intentionally and willfully sought to impede his competitor, plaintiff 1-800 Contactsend_of_the_skype_highlighting, by violating state and federal statutes, engaging in intentional interference with plaintiff's prospective business relations, and purposefully committing business defamation,' the suit claims."
"Older adults who wear multifocal contact lenses to correct problems with near vision, a very common condition that increases with age, may have greater difficulty driving at night than their counterparts who wear glasses, says a new study [published in Investigative Ophthalmology and Visual Science]," according to post on Sify. "The study suggests that wearing multifocal contact lenses resulted in significantly slower driving speeds at night than wearing progressive addition glasses, which authors reported a reduced ability to recognize road hazards." There were other findings as well.