Damn y'all if you want to be safe, go get yourself a lamp and carry that around
>WITH THE SHADE OF COURSE!
But C'mon be real. 1mw of green, aiight yeah it can be dangerous. Don't point it at peoples faces or I'll be pissed off, they'll be pissed off and LPF will be pissed off. 10mw? yeah it can be dangerous. But it's relatively safe, if you can understand that. If you take a direct hit from 10mw from a distance like 200 ft, it'll be bright and might hurt you're irical muscles for a bit but it won't obliterate your eyes. At my university, we had a couple of owl, horse and human cadavers sitting around so I did a little testing with the approval of a professor and cracked some eyes opened and tensed the sclera, retina, eye lens it's self and iris. The sclera will block light like no tomorrow, but chances are the beam will still get to your iris, which stops light like a handfull of parallel, taut threads. it'll stop an amount but a good amount will get through. And the retina will stop all light but we're more worried about the retina in posterior portion of your eye being affected. There was no visable evidence of a laser being shined on the retina after a quick pass, probable on it for less than 1/16th of a second. BUT DAMAGE WOULD BE DONE ASSUMING IT WAS ON AN ALIVE SUBSTANCE AND IT WAS STILL VASCULAR.
At night, pointing it at the stars, heck I take my safety glasses to look at my 100mw green while I'm starpointing. BUT ONLY STARPOINTING. My 1.4w 445, I keep my glasses on and take pictures with a camera, that can get dangerous fast.
All in all. 10mw is safe. You don't need glasses if you're going to be smart with it. pointing it in a pitch black room would be fine, as long as you avoid very reflective items like mirrors. It can hit a wine glass or something and difract the beam and ya know what, it's kinda cool but some light may hit your eye. So you can go ahead and do that at your own risk.
But I'm not going to be an eye doctor, so...