![]() Deep tissue massage is a good place to start looking if you can't find a trigger point person. The trigger point therapy workbook can also be good for some self therapy. It's helpful, but forceful trigger point massage is one of the most effective things I've found. This was essential, and the most helpful. * Investigated which keyboard shortcuts strained my left hand and remapped them. ![]() It's also asjustable, as proper monitor height differs when sitting and when standing * Raised the monitor to proper height with books. Most off the shelf desks were too high for me and it hurt my arms I do stand at it, but it helped the most because I could lower my desk. But they help many! So, you'll have to think about what seems to be causing your issues and test things. I also tried a kinesis, it didn't seem to help. For example, I tried trackballs, as the poster below did, and they made it worse. (It's also better at others, to be clear)įirst off, I'll say that all cases are unique. Those factors are part of why I kept using the ipad even though it was worse at some tasks. The ipad's screen, 120 hz refresh rate, and fast, fanless performance have spoiled me. ![]() Will also be getting a better computer monitor and computer. I have a few drawing/video recording workflows where it is the main device, and it is a good admin device when I'm not at the computer. All the little frictions in safari on ios are starting to annoy me: it's hard to manage webapps for my business there.īut I'm going to keep using the ipad pro. Now that I've fixed the rsi and got a better mouse, I'm going to go back to a mac for most stuff. I didn't do all my work on it, but it let me heavily reduce my computer usage. Got me through a rough period of rsi, and the 120 hz screen was a joy. I have a stand I can put my ipad in to raise it up in desk mode, but it's often just in my lap. The apple pencil is a great input device, and I use anker bluetooth ipad keyboard that I find very comfortable and ergonomic. If anyone has rsi issues, I've found the ipad very helpful. But they aren't pulling off half the shit MS did, and have nowhere the influence to do it if they wanted to (w.r.t. Not because MS sold applications (they did, and do, of course), but because they sold the OS that most native apps ran on.Īpple may eat up a lot of profits (30% cut) and restrict a lot of options (can't use third party browser engines, limits on use of embedded languages and side loading applications). Why? Because Netscape offered the potential (though still in its infancy) for web apps that would reduce/eliminate the market for native applications, which MS relied on. MS spent the money to develop IE, and then a billion dollars marketing it. Compaq nixed the deal with Be, because they couldn't afford the hit to their profit margin (PC margins were slim then, though they got tighter in the future). MS told Compaq that they'd have to pay the higher, direct-to-customer, cost for Windows licenses if they also sold BeOS, as opposed to the OEM license cost. ![]() Apple has not gone out of its way like MS did to block people from entering the general market (like MS did with BeOS and Netscape), let alone the market on their system.īeOS was going to be sold by Compaq. Android has the majority of the market share for mobile devices by a pretty decent margin. Apple does not have such a sufficient hold on the market that anyone has to target their users for customers.
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