Originally Posted by
Lelarep
The i.Scription, from what I understand, is an "ocular wavefront aberrometer, autorefractometer, ATLAS corneal topographer and keratometer", and spits out some kind of compensated Rx, so it's dissimilar to Essilux's Visioffice. The Visioffice is more like Zeiss's i.Terminal 2 system that grabs "Frame data (A, B, DBL), Interpupillary distance, Monocular pupillary distance, Fitting height, Segment height, Back vertex distance, Pantoscopic angle, Wrap angle, Head rotation".
The "compensated Rx" it produces is what I'm interested in understanding, and it's benefit, if any, to patients. The lack of adoption of this technology by other major lens manufacturers is what makes me so skeptical.
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