I have one of these ... holy crap. It works. I've had SAD for twenty years. Not any more.
For those thinking "surely this is bollocks":
These is some very credible, peer-reviewed, medically journalled research linking the particular frequencies of light used to serotonin production in the brain.
For those thinking "why not just open the window":
I live in a country that has a wet, grey, overcast winter. There is nowhere near sufficient sunlight. I could move ... or now, I can stay!
For those thinking "can't I just visit a blue website"; no. It won't be remotely bright enough. Also I have a feeling that 440nm LCD blue doesn't have research to back it up, unlike the 470nm blue light used in this device. Plus, you won't be able to multitask.
I love my goLITE BLUE. It's changed my life, vastly for the better.
Maybe this is a stupid (or impossible) idea, but I am wondering why someone hasnt set up a website using this color, brightness, light or broadcasting sunshine. Sell ad space (probably to Prozac) and make a fortune.
(If it was possible wouldnt Gawker have done it already?)
@ripfire: I opened that link (breifly) and saw lots of boobage, which, sorry, does nothing for me. I heard Kotaku was a real sewer as well. I will check it out from home.... ;)
@Curves: B/c only T-Mobile has been able to trademark a color? On the plus side, since two days ago, the amount of sunlight in the day has gone up, so that makes me feel better.
The $250 price tag may seem like quite a bit to pay for something you only use 30 minutes a day, but think of it like this. We buy electronics all the time in order to give ourselves and emotional boost; the goLite is one that's actually designed for that purpose
while i don't argue that one's emotional health is tough to put a price tag on, I do question why you need to pay $250 for, ostensively, light in the 470nm spectrum, when people with aquariums have been doing it for 1/10th the cost for a long time.
I understand the basic concept behind this device and the practice in general, but I'm curious as to why it has to be blue. Does that wavelength have any special properties? Why can't I have a red light instead?
@phoenix6666: It's not a blue wavelength perse as much as it's a full spectrum lamp, containing all wavelengths, or the wavelengths the Sun affects through our atmosphere. We end up responding quite naturally to the "sunlight" and trick our endocrine system into believing that it's summer, then it can release the good stuff into our bodies ;)
07/29/09
For those thinking "surely this is bollocks":
These is some very credible, peer-reviewed, medically journalled research linking the particular frequencies of light used to serotonin production in the brain.
For those thinking "why not just open the window":
I live in a country that has a wet, grey, overcast winter. There is nowhere near sufficient sunlight. I could move ... or now, I can stay!
For those thinking "can't I just visit a blue website"; no. It won't be remotely bright enough. Also I have a feeling that 440nm LCD blue doesn't have research to back it up, unlike the 470nm blue light used in this device. Plus, you won't be able to multitask.
I love my goLITE BLUE. It's changed my life, vastly for the better.
05/29/09
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05/21/09
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12/23/08
(If it was possible wouldnt Gawker have done it already?)
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while i don't argue that one's emotional health is tough to put a price tag on, I do question why you need to pay $250 for, ostensively, light in the 470nm spectrum, when people with aquariums have been doing it for 1/10th the cost for a long time.
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12/23/08
Side effects may include: singed stump, spontaneous combustion, blindness, boiling anal leakage, diarrhea, headache...
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12/23/08
I still miss that show.
12/23/08