Sentences with phrase «big enough screens»

Desktop computers had big enough screens to accomodate multiple windows, and switching between browser tabs was quick, allowing users to easily hop between different sites.
Virtually all are poor substitutes for the smartphone, which have big enough screens to handle most basic online chores while small enough for people to conveniently carry in their pockets.
Plus, it features a 5.5 - inch display, making it easy to transport in your pocket while still offering a big enough screen for reading.
I love the size of the Tab, easy to fit in the pocket and just a big enough screen to appreciate.
Cabot posits that the 7 - inch size is a big liability: «7 inches just isn't a big enough screen for me to be productive with.
That might help address one of the big issues ongoing in smartwatch design: trying to balance a device that's not too bulky for everyday wear, while at the same time providing a big enough screen to be functionally useful.
It's small enough to take with you everywhere, but with a big enough screen to allow for more precision with your taps, and it's that deadly combination that makes me reach for my iPad to play my favorite mobile games over and over.

Not exact matches

The Pixel XL definitely looks like a phone, but has a 5.5 - inch screen that's big enough to see a document in an app like Microsoft Word Mobile.
The car is big enough for only two passengers and features a minimalist dashboard with merely an on and off button, and a screen for a digital map.
But it was good — good enough to watch on a big - screen TV.
Why: There just aren't enough great VR experiences, but perhaps Facebook can get people spending more time in their headsets by creating a virtual big screen for 2D content.
One way to begin to address them is by throwing the issues against a screen big enough that we can see them clearly.
Every sport book today is computerized, Back in my day money always moved the line if a player was respected, and if the squares tossed enough money on a game most books would move the line a little, However the big books would just sit and even take layoffs from the small stores, They knew even if the squares got hot in the end the juice would eat em up.Gone are the days when Billy Walters and his crew would move the line 3 and 4 points, I'm talking sides not totals, Forget about what they did to the horseshoe with totals in the NBA, Back then you could catch small non computerized stores with bad lines to begin with, imagine a three point move and the small store or corner bookie is off on the line a few points to begin with, I could catch some game with 6 and seven point advantages, with computers today if you can catch a half or one point advantage your lucky.Even if you know the group moving the line most of these store move the lines on air, when I say air they just watch the screen from D.B. And move the line before they even get hit, Hell even the big stores have the sharps on small limits per call.
If you're prepared to stare at a live lines screen for the 60 minutes before a set of games goes off (for example the early NFL games every Sunday), you'll find many line moves that are big enough to scalp.
I love movies on the big screen and have heard about the movies being shown at The Prudential but have never had a clear enough schedule to head down there.
And speaking of LCD screen, the display is big enough for everyone to see the findings as well.
In the 3.5 years since E.pol's initial launch, the proliferation of big flat - screen monitors has changed the prevailing standards and allowed sites to spread out sideways, just like certain online authors if they don't hit the gym often enough.
The Japanese government is pouring money into a research effort to develop flat liquid crystal displays bigger than the largest existing TV screens, but thin enough to hang on the wall.
And instead of a storage device, the images (text or pictures) could be permanently displayed on these layers even with the power off, so that a document hundreds of pages long could be stored on the display screens themselves, and portable enough to carry around, no bigger than a small laptop computer.
While those who enjoyed the Brooks book will likely be chagrined at seeing little of what they enjoyed show up on the big screen, taking World War Z on its own terms as a Hollywood blockbuster, there's still enough entertainment value to be had for those who are OK with the fact that the film doesn't represent the book.
You know one of the biggest problems with horror movies is nowadays, and perhaps this has even gone farther than, say, the last 5 years, and that is the fact that some of these movies do not have enough interesting material in the script to fill out one hour of screen time, much less 90 minutes of it.
Perfectly complemented by Olivier Bernet's score, the dreamy look of Persepolis is almost enough reason to recommend seeing it (on the big screen, if you can).
While the story is entertaining enough, it's numerous lulls and predictability felt too often like a lifetime movie rather than a big screen feature film.
After showing some promise (Bill & Ted's Bogus Journey, Tom and Huck, The Borrowers), director Peter Hewitt has struck out a lot with his most recent big screen fare like Garfield: The Movie and Zoom, but he seems comfortable helming a sequel distanced enough to create no positive expectations.
Although it can be played on a small screen, there really is nothing quite like experiencing a Shantae game on the big screen with the volume as loud as you want it to be and because I have said enough, it is time to wrap this review up.
Still, even Blade's success wasn't enough to get more top - tier black superheroes films on the big screen.
The invented romance subplot is not explored enough to justify its presence, and this is indicative of the basic problem with the screenplay by author Mark Frost (whose career has taken him all over the place, from Minneapolis's Guthrie theatre to David Lynch's cult favorite «Twin Peaks» and now the big screen Fantastic Four and its forthcoming sequel).
Is a bigger screen reason enough to go to a theater and sit passively in the dark when you can stay home and actually play the game?
She's the only one who is in virtually every scene, and she isn't charismatic enough to hold the big screen.
«Trainwreck» quickly reveals the small screen isn't big enough to showcase the enormous talent that is Amy Schumer.
The actor's last three big - screen appearances were in small roles, in «Tim and Eric's Billion Dollar Movie,» «Morning Glory» and «The Switch,» and that's just not enough to help sate our Goldblum cravings.
The highly anticipated film, which will see the Avengers team up with the Guardians on the big screen for the first time, is still quite a ways off and Marvel Studios has managed to reveal enough to excite fans while still managing to keep the details sparse.
«Blue Valentine,» «Nowhere Boy» and big dog «The King's Speech» are enough to play with, and there is also «The Company Men,» which has been screening lately.
The initial line - up was exciting enough but over the past few days, the festival has added two work in progress screenings of Keanu and Sausage Party which should be fairly big hits at the festival.
The short children's story of Jack & The Beanstalk may not have been long enough to bring to the big - screen but a writing team of Darren Lemke, Dan Studney, David Dobkin and Christopher McQuarrie have fleshed the fairytale for a new generation.
We don't see that on the big screen often enough.
to the Movies: Much loved DC animated series Teen Titans is getting a big screen adaptation and it can not come soon enough.
While that film had a broadly comedic tone, it showed enough of a handling of actors and themes enough to bode well for his inevitable big screen debut.
A matinée screening will service this film well enough, and at home a HD rental on a nice big TV will suffice.
When: September 21st Why: I don't remember much about the 1995 Sylvester Stallone action vehicle «Judge Dredd» other than the fact that it was terrible, but that's surely enough to raise some eyebrows regarding the latest attempt to bring the popular antihero of the British comic «2000 AD» to the big screen.
When: October 28th Why: A big screen adaptation of Hunter S. Thompson's «lost novel» has been in the works for over a decade now, but it wasn't until two years ago when the project finally went into production, only to be shelved long enough for Thompson's death to prevent him from seeing the final product.
The mere notion of having Michael Myers back on the big screen was enough to whet the appetite of horror fans, and the later additions of Curtis and Carpenter to the project sparked a frenzy.
But Robinson's story was big enough for the big screen and 42 seeks to do it justice as a cinematic period drama.
Gunn turned the cult comic figures into massive fan favorites to the point that simply knowing that Star Lord, Rocket, Groot, Gamora and Drax are on their way to the big screen is enough to guarantee a big turnout at the box office.
A lot like Life Partners, and various other innocuous fare in the line - up, About Alex is also exemplary of the dialogue - driven dross that thinks TV aesthetic is good enough for the big screen.
The story is scaled down and tweaked to meet the constraints of a big screen running time, and for the most part it works well enough.
What's being called the film's second theatrical trailer actually just aired on NBC and, sure enough, it looks even better on a bigger screen than on my laptop.
While I wasn't the most dedicated viewer of The Sopranos (I have yet to see a single episode), it just seemed appropriate that I go catch his last big - screen performance in Nicole Holofcener's Enough Said, which pairs him with Seinfeld star Julia Louis - Dreyfus in a romantic comedy that is both timely and by the same token, almost unbearably bittersweet.
, and sure enough here's director Tony Goldwyn's big - screen version, with Hilary Swank striding out front carrying the banner for truth, justice and the supernatural properties of sibling devotion.
When your biggest problem is that the cast is so uniformly terrific that the greatest complaint you have is some don't get enough screen time, you know you have something quite special, and, having sat with the film for several months now, it feels like nothing less than «The Godfather» of espionage movies.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z