There are two sets of Forward /
Back page turn buttons.
Not exact matches
Nine tips to create a landing
page for your business that
turns visitors into leads, instead of sending them toward the
back button.
We were massive fans of the clickable
page -
turning buttons on earlier Kindles and it was a shame they were ditched on the Paperwhite, but thankfully they're
back in some form on the Voyage.
The front has a number of physical
buttons, including a
back, home and two manual
page turn keys.
It has a rear facing 5 megapixel camera and
page turn buttons that are on the
back of the unit.
It has
page turn buttons on the left and right side of the screen that can be adjusted so that the upper
buttons turn the
page forward and the lower ones
turn the
page back, or vice versa.
A couple freezes that I would fix with the paper clip reset, sometimes when reading and
turning a
page, two
pages would
turn forcing me to
turn one
back etc... Now with firmware 2.5 I have a new glitch, whenever I keep my Kobo light on at the lowest power level, if I
turn off the light with the
button on top of the Glo, it won't
turn back on.
In the first week or so of use I certainly did find this very cool but once the newness had worn off, I found myself
back using the physical
page -
turning buttons - you can't swipe with your finger while drinking a cup of coffee and on the train!
And the actions of the user are so strictly defined —
turn page, highlight, go
back to library — that you can build in hardware
buttons to do a lot of heavy lifting.
Page turn speed is up, too: If you hold and press the page forward and back buttons to scan by page, the pages will blow by with an impressive speed not seen before on an E-Ink e-rea
Page turn speed is up, too: If you hold and press the
page forward and back buttons to scan by page, the pages will blow by with an impressive speed not seen before on an E-Ink e-rea
page forward and
back buttons to scan by
page, the pages will blow by with an impressive speed not seen before on an E-Ink e-rea
page, the
pages will blow by with an impressive speed not seen before on an E-Ink e-reader.
I don't think the Kindle Voyage is for me, at any price point, because the haptic feedback on the
page -
turn buttons would surely jolt me out of my book world and right
back into real life.
The top and bottom
buttons are mainly used for
turning pages forward or
back when reading ebooks.
The only
buttons present on the Illumina are physical
page turn keys on the left / right hand side of the screen,
back button and the physical
button that
turns on the front - lit display.
Page turn buttons would be nice as well as scrapping the inferior carta screen and going
back to an infrared screen such as in the GLO HD and original H2O.
Zoom,
back, home, settings, and two
page turn buttons are what you have to work with.
The best way to
turn pages in ebooks is to use the
back and forward
button, but this method is only compatible with the built in e-Reader application that your Pandigital comes bundled with.
Gone are the
page -
turn buttons that used to edge the sides of the Amazon Kindle; instead, you now use the touch screen to flip
back and forth.
On the left edge are the
page -
turn controls (forward and
back) and a
button with a search icon on it.
This unit has the
page turn forward on the right hand side and the
back button on the left hand side.
This new upgrade enhances the speed of the device in relation to
page turns and hitting the menu
button to go
back to the home screen.
My wishlist for Paperwhite 4 ~ MUSTS: Flush screen - PLEASE Please keep the more tactile - friendly rubberized
back Page turn / Pagepress
buttons Smaller / No bezel 8 / 32G Storage BE NICE: Waterproof ~ but it's not a deal - breaker Warmer lighting system, with more LED's — I DO like that the Oasis has 12 LED's, as opposed to Paperwhites» 4
On the conference table before us were the dozens of iterations of possible
page -
turning buttons for the new Kindle Voyage,
buttons that would have been on the
back of the Kindle, a switch
button, and also arrows alongside the screen — a > for forward and a < for
back — the most visually pleasing design and by far the most intuitive, but then in testing it
turned out that people liked to
turn the Kindle and read horizontally, which meant that the arrows were pointing, confusingly, up and down.
The Guardian's reviewer praised the Oasis's ease in holding, it weighing next to nothing without the cover attached, its long battery life, excellent display, even front lighting, and usable
page -
turn buttons, and the luxurious feel of the leather cover; however, the reviewer did not like that it was so expensive, that the battery cover only partially protects the
back, and that the reader is not waterproof.
The tiny joystick has been replaced by cellphone - like four - way control
buttons, and the
page -
turn Forward and
Back buttons, which flank both edges, are silent now, for the benefit of sleeping spouses.
It uses a D - Pad to navigate and features
page turn buttons to switch forward and
back while reading.
Bring
back physical
page turn buttons.
The only two minor design flaws I could find so far are the lack of
page turning buttons (at least you can adjust your options for
page turning a bit) and the lack of adjustable
back light colors.
In Settings, you can decide if the top or bottom
buttons will
turn the
page forward or
back.
If one swipes the screen the desired
page turn direction (left forward, right
back) and holds, the
pages will
turn automatically as if one were holding the
page turn button.
I thought maybe I got a bad epub file, so I went
back to that previous
page in the book and did the
button page turns and it read just fine past the point when I had been swiping.
...
Page turns are faster and contrast is improved... the keyboard and five - way controls have been streamlined... rocker is now more compact and flush... side
buttons have been modified... to emphasize the forward paddles...
back buttons have been downsized.
Its charcoal - gray bezel has three hardware
buttons on the right side, including two concealed by the case itself; these are for
turning pages forward and
back.
I got the new firmware (1.0.03.11140) on my reader, but sometimes when I pass a
page it shows me a
page I have already read, once it happens, it occurs either with the
buttons or using the touch screen, the only way to fix it, is to put it in standby and
turn it on
back again
Plus, those
buttons, which you can use to advance and
turn back pages fall nicely under your thumb (you can also reprogram them, if you like).
Believe it or not, when I switch
back to paper, I find
turning pages (instead of just pressing a
button) slows me down!
The only somewhat unintuitive aspect of the interface is the
Back button in the reading screen: I thought that clicking it would turn the book a page back, but the button turns out to be inactive unless you've used one of the Go To navigation options, in which case clicking Back returns you to wherever you were before you jumped aro
Back button in the reading screen: I thought that clicking it would
turn the book a
page back, but the button turns out to be inactive unless you've used one of the Go To navigation options, in which case clicking Back returns you to wherever you were before you jumped aro
back, but the
button turns out to be inactive unless you've used one of the Go To navigation options, in which case clicking
Back returns you to wherever you were before you jumped aro
Back returns you to wherever you were before you jumped around.
When you have an e-book open, tapping the screen brings up a set of controls, including text - size settings, a
button for adding bookmarks, a
button that takes you to the table of contents from anywhere, a refresh
button (which resyncs the e-book with your Kindle,
turning to the last
page you read), and a slider control that allows you to jump around the e-book (along with a «snap -
back»
button that will return you to the last
page you read).
It's a large round
button which you press on the right or left edge to
turn the
pages forward or
back.
Using one of the plastic opening tools, start above one of the
page -
turning buttons and pry open the
back of the device.
One step up from the Paperwhite is the $ 199.99 Kindle Voyage, which is also six inches long but replaces the plastic
back with a lighter magnesium material, has a sleeker design, and uses PagePress haptic
buttons, which are basically
page turning sensors that vibrate when touched — similar to the home «
button» on the iPhone 7 and 8.
You've got two
page -
turn buttons (< and >) on each side of the reading screen, up / down /
back buttons on the color screen, and a Home
button above the color screen.
Down the left - hand edge of the Kindle bezel you get
page turning buttons Prev Page and Next Page, whilst on the right - hand edge you get Home, Next Page, Menu, Back and a small clickable joystick, which can be a little fiddly to
page turning buttons Prev
Page and Next Page, whilst on the right - hand edge you get Home, Next Page, Menu, Back and a small clickable joystick, which can be a little fiddly to
Page and Next
Page, whilst on the right - hand edge you get Home, Next Page, Menu, Back and a small clickable joystick, which can be a little fiddly to
Page, whilst on the right - hand edge you get Home, Next
Page, Menu, Back and a small clickable joystick, which can be a little fiddly to
Page, Menu,
Back and a small clickable joystick, which can be a little fiddly to use.
Turn pages by tapping the edge of the screen or by using the forward and
back buttons.
Turning pages can be done with a swipe of the finger or by using the
back and forward
buttons along the bottom.
Two are
page turn buttons, one is a
back button, and the other is a menu
button that for some strange reason has a home icon on it.
It is almost the exact same size and weight as the Kindle 3, and appears very similar with the full QWERTY keyboard below the screen, which includes arrows for navigating and
turning pages, along with the silver 4 - way nav bar, home, options,
back, and enter
buttons.
There's also a
button for
back and a dedicated
page refresh
button that
turns the frontlight on and off when long - pressed.
Speaking of
buttons, the Libre Color has some very nice and subtly integrated
page turn buttons about 1/3 the way up on each side of the screen (in portrait mode)-- forward on the right,
back on the left.
The front of the device features five
buttons along the bottom: 2
Page Turn buttons (backwards and forwards), Home,
Back and Menu.
They are both six inch devices and have the same
buttons along the bottom of the device - 2
Page Turn buttons (backwards and forwards), Home,
Back and Menu.