Also,
auto brightness works quite well.
It's adequately bright for daylight and
auto brightness works absolutely fine.
Not exact matches
I don't know if it's a software bug or a defective sensor, but
auto -
brightness only
works part of the time on my Kindle Voyage.
The
auto -
brightness function
worked well during most lighting condition changes, and it's also easy to see the screen in bright sunlight (though direct sunlight causes too much glare).
- ◊ - ◊ - ◊ - ◊ - Good: Highly premium feel, common sense design choices, loads much faster, 3D improvement
works brilliantly Bad: Distracting
auto -
brightness, many new features yet to be used - ◊ - ◊ - ◊ - ◊ -
In my time with the phone I noticed that the software's
auto -
brightness setting
works really well and detected the ambient light around me pretty accurately.
Auto -
brightness on the Honor 6X
works well too and we found it best to just leave that on and let it do its thing.
The
auto brightness setting
works accurately and the display is viewable even under the harsh sunlight of Delhi.
There's no
auto -
brightness on this watch, so for most of the time it has been used the Huawei Watch lives at
brightness level 4 — out of 5, for those unaware — and that seems to
work well.
Auto brightness does also
work pretty well.
Most notably, the
auto -
brightness feature isn't hugely effective, and often the capacitive home button (which doubles as a fingerprint sensor) simply didn't
work.
The
brightness wheel only
works in full
auto, even though it shows up and animates if you tap to focus in any of the other modes.
It
works pretty well in the sun but doesn't make up for the lack of an
auto -
brightness option, which should be a standard on every smartphone irrespective of its price tag.
That panel itself hasn't changed from last year — same 1080p Optic AMOLED, and it still
works pretty well in most conditions, though
auto -
brightness tends towards darker levels than I'd like indoors.
Some users might be fine with how the
auto -
brightness works on their device, but others might not be as comfortable with how low or high the light on the screen display gets.
Sunlight display is automated, and thus,
works without you having to always manually set it up unlike the
auto brightness setting.
Samsung also seems to have done a lot of
work on the
auto -
brightness, which now no longer annoys the living hell out of us constantly, but instead does its job with the skill and sophistication we would expect from a high - end device.
Auto brightness here
works pretty well, it's not overly sensitive and trying to adjust itself to the lighting conditions all that much.
We kept the smartwatch on
auto -
brightness throughout our time using the device, and it
worked quite well.