Blue light emitted from digital devices could contribute to the high prevalence of reported sleep dysfunction by suppressing melatonin. Study participants who wore blue wavelength-blocking glasses while still using their digital devices had a 58% increase in their nighttime melatonin levels.

You're so full of shit...

It's funny because your first link is an outdated statistic

It's not outdated, it's from june 2017 (more recent than the steam HW survey)

second link is sourced from a script that runs on maybe 1% of all blogs (which also looks highly unreliable) yet you think they are better representations than a website with a 150 million userbase from a large range of backgrounds.

...no, not close.

StatCounter is a web analytics service. Our tracking code is installed on more than 2.5 million sites globally. These sites cover various activities and geographic locations. Every month, we record billions of page views to these sites. For each page view, we analyse the browser/operating system/screen resolution used and we establish if the page view is from a mobile device. For our search engine stats, we analyze every page view referred by a search engine. For our social media stats, we analyze every page view referred by a social media site. We summarize all this data to get our Global Stats information.

In other words we calculate our Global Stats on the basis of more than 15 billion page views per month, by people from all over the world onto our 2.5 million+ member sites.

By collating our data in this way, we track the activity of third party visitors to our member websites. We do not calculate our stats based on the activity of our members alone. This helps to minimise bias in the data and achieve a random sample.

In September 2015, our global sample consisted of 16.3 billion page views (US: 2.7 billion); 2.3 billion of these were search engine referrals (US: 404 million); 576 million of these were social media referrals (US: 155 million)

http://gs.statcounter.com/faq#methodology

There's a reason why wikipedia ( https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Usage_share_of_operating_systems#Desktop_and_laptop_computers ) is referencing this statistic as opposed to the steam hw survey. But you're far too deep into this and won't admit you're wrong, now will you?

Learn a thing or two about representative samples bother bothering writing another comment full of shit pulled out of your ass.

/r/science Thread Parent Link - uh.edu