Glare in a sentence as a noun

They have no glare, and no false brilliance from the glossy screen.

It's just too soul-crushing to spend 5/7 of my daytime hours away from the sun, under fluorescent glare.

I'm curious if they've gone to a single screen surface, based on glossy, but with somewhat less glare.

How the **** are others not all anti-glare by default ?CPU: Hello regular voltage i7 2620M.

The OpenPandora shot doesn't look sharp because it has an anti-glare coating.

* No headphones, you get your drink as you wish* One headphone, I make your drink and shoot you a meaningful glare* Two headphones, I secretly make your drink decaf

Glare in a sentence as a verb

The extra real estate would be handy but the constant glare from all angles attacking my peripheral vision would be relentless.

I remember when I upgraded from an S3 card to a Voodoo 3, the game suddenly had things like windshield glare and partially transparent water, and much higher texture resolutions.

For example, the reason screen glass often isn't replaceable is because it's optically bonded to the underlying LCD, which improves sharpness, reduces glare, and reduces parallax when using a pen.

The real problem is that, at least in the US, no one seems to care about keeping their headlights aimed properly, which in combination with the abundance of trucks with headlights mounted higher than a normal driver's head, leads to insane glare.

And arguing about "cleanest for any language" is just a proxy for a language flamewar.- "And nobody can glare at you and demand to know why you used 576 classes when you should have used 50, because in Java doing it with only 50 classes is probably impossible.

Therefore, if no-one notices a problem like this until after the planning submission, or perhaps fails to get someone higher up to take it seriously enough to change the concept design, then they will have to remedy it by using special anti glare coatings or just plain hoping it wont be too bad.

Glare definitions

noun

a light within the field of vision that is brighter than the brightness to which the eyes are adapted; "a glare of sunlight"

See also: blaze brilliance

noun

an angry stare

See also: glower

noun

a focus of public attention; "he enjoyed being in the limelight"; "when Congress investigates it brings the full glare of publicity to the agency"

See also: limelight spotlight

verb

look at with a fixed gaze; "The girl glared at the man who tried to make a pass at her"

See also: glower

verb

be sharply reflected; "The moon glared back at itself from the lake's surface"

verb

shine intensely; "The sun glared down on us"