On Fri, Apr 03, 2020 at 05:41:20PM +0200, Ralph Seichter wrote: > * Petric Frank: > > > Problem: Usually the camera is outside of the screen. The user normally looks > > at the screen. As result the communication partner(s) see him not looking at > > the camera. > > It may be bothering you, but that's not a problem in any real life > sense. People can either live with it, knowing the reasons behind it, or > look into the camera when speaking, if they want to provide an illusion > of eye contact. Actors have been doing it for ages. On a lot of news T.V.\ channels, they place the camera quite far away from the newsreader, making it almost impossible to notice they are looking at the teleprompter, instead of directly into the lens. Maybe that would be a solution to this pressing issue ? Alternatively, dark glasses could be used, or even better, glasses with painted eyes on them from the local joke shop. If you were feeling sadistic and wanted to further the misalignment, how about glasses with spring-loaded eyes ? -- Ashley Dixon suugaku.co.uk 2A9A 4117 DA96 D18A 8A7B B0D2 A30E BF25 F290 A8AA