AFAIK it hasn’t been done because the mascot is placed there as some sort of branding by the creator of Anubis. In its website it’s explained that you can change or remove the mascot for a fee if you plan to use it for corporate purposes.
Si me conoces: tu sabes que opino tonteras, acá leerás más de eso. Si no me ubicas: espero que nos llevemos bien :)
Si eres Vicente o del trabajo: Estoy trabajando. :)
Todo es CC BY-NC-SA 4.0. Excepto fotos con mi cara, tengo todos los derechos sobre fotos que la contengan, no la uses sin permiso.
AFAIK it hasn’t been done because the mascot is placed there as some sort of branding by the creator of Anubis. In its website it’s explained that you can change or remove the mascot for a fee if you plan to use it for corporate purposes.
They can’t predict with 100% accuracy, because vision isn’t a completely objective matter as it also takes into account your brain’s interpretation of the image, but they can get pretty close. The exams you took probably measured your eye’s axial length, your cornea’s keratometry, diameter and other measurements.
Your ophthalmologist then selects the formula that best suits your eye (there’s different mathematical models for different cases of myopia, hypermetropia and how extreme they are) and then the lens’ power is calculated according to the measurements that were taken. Usually the device that takes your exam already does like 80% of the job (in the mathematical side of things), but your doctor uses their criteria to define the final IOL and from where it’ll be inserted during surgery*.
It’s pretty cool to take that exam. In my country I used to take it for patients that were going into eye surgery.
* It usually means a little bit more math