Sentences with phrase «bright little screen»

Not exact matches

Now, though, that screen is a little bit brighter, the battery lasts a little bit longer, and the whole thing runs faster (with Intel's latest Core chips).
It was constant, with bright screens turned on about every three minutes, message read, screen dimmed for a little bit... then.......
With it's easy breezy fit, bright colors and easy to throw on fit (it has an elastic waistband) I can mix and match it with tucked in blouses, blazers, tied up tops, screen print tees, jean jackets and even a leather jacket for a little edge.
MONDELLO: The plot's not going to tax anyone over the age of 12, but Spielberg crams the screen with visuals eye - popping enough to make viewers not care - grimy and dystopian for the real world, bright and cyber-sparkly for an OASIS that's just unreal enough to ring a little hollow.
The glossy nav screen can be a little difficult to see in bright sunlight, but the Vitara's multimedia package is slick to use, and flicking through different functions in the Vitara is easy.
This is particularly noticeable if you are showing off: having the bright, moving navigation maps visible within both the instrument binnacle and the large central touch - screen can feel a little like watching the drive - in movie on the move.
A bright white screen (which was the only option on the original app) can be a little tiring on the eyes, so I'm trying out the new «sepia» background.
Even so, the iPad 2's smaller 9.7 - inch screen looked a little brighter than the Tab's, which possessed a slight blue cast.
The PRS - 505 has a new screen that gives faster refresh times, is also a little brighter and now supports 8 shades of gray.
In fact comparing both Paperwhites is a little off too because I notice that the 1st gen has a much brighter light at the lowest setting; with the lights off you can still read the screen, whereas the 2nd gen you can hardly see the light at all.
I do see the little scratch, capacitive, marks that you mention but only when there's bright light and only when the light is hitting the screen at a certain angle, also not much of a turn off.
The screen is more legible than color screens in bright daylight and uses very little power.
At 460 lux, the Kindle Fire's screen is a little bit brighter than the Nook Tablet's 392 - lux display, but that's not where the story ends.
While the light does a good job of illuminating the whole screen, it is a little brighter near the top middle where the light source is than the bottom of the screen.
If used in strongly sunlight areas, either outdoors or in a bright room in a skyscraper with lots of sun coming in through large windows, then the screen could be a little brighter, otherwise I found it bright enough.
Colors were bright, but sadly the display is reflective, and viewing angles are limited to those sitting more or less directly in front; tilt the Archos 101 just a little vertically or horizontally, and the on - screen image begins to wash out.
When compared to the Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1's screen — our previous favorite — the Eee Pad Transformer Prime's display was a lot brighter, though colors seemed a little less vibrant.
The light is a little brighter toward the top of the screen and the light doesn't adjust nearly as dim as the Kindle's.
However, there are enough small advantages to Voyage — it's a little lighter, it has slightly better contrast, it has a brighter light and whiter screen — to distinguish it from the Paperwhite.
It feels a little brighter, and the colors on screen just seem to pop a little more.
It is certainly bright enough and there is plenty of space available to be browsing the Internet or bashing out emails, although bear in mind that most Android apps you run on it will just be magnified, with very little designed to run on such a large screen.
The Note's 5.3 - inch Super AMOLED screen is incredibly bright, vibrant and detailed, thanks to its 285ppi resolution... colors on the Note pop just as they do on the GS II, that eye - pleasing contrast and saturation we've come to love from Samsung's AMOLED displays, and little vibrancy is lost when viewed from the side.
The illumination runs a little brighter near the top of the screen, but not distractingly so.
This may seem off the pace a little compared to some tablet devices but considering how bright the screen is, it's a totally reasonable score.
There is little here we can criticise, other than the fact that the screen is sometimes too bright.
That light is brighter in the Voyage and displays across the screen a little more uniformly.
If you do want the screen to be a little brighter, standard mode is also good.
And, it's plenty bright, too, a properly nice screen that, like everything else here, is just a little nicer than you'd expect given the cost.
The screen is a little brighter and more durable, thanks to micro-LED and glass - film touch technology (as opposed to OLED and touch - on - lens panel onboard the Apple Watch Series 2).
When I played Middle - earth: Shadow of War, the grass around an orc fortress was a crisp green, but Talion's brown - and - gray cape was muddled, and I wished I could make the screen just a little brighter.
I wish the T470's screen were a little brighter and had wider viewing angles.
Those pictures look far better on the X's OLED display too, thanks to the improved contrast ratios and better colors, although sharing the same pictures to an Apple TV shows they're a little brighter than on the phone screen.
Finally, gamma was 2.1, close to the optimal score of 2.2 and demonstrating that the screen might be a little brighter than intended.
Our tests measured the screen at 478.1 nits, a little bit brighter than the average smartphone (428 nits) and in line with the Moto G (463 nits) and the Nexus 5X (453.6).
Allo's main screen is minimal, featuring an all - white background that can be a little bright at night.
Aside from GPS, I saw very little differences between Series 1 and 2 benchmarks in my testing, including battery life; the Series 1 doesn't have the same bigger battery as the latest Apple Watch, but given that it also lacks GPS and the brighter screen, I suspect that the S1P processor does a lot of the heavy lifting here.
Colors and blacks are a little brighter on the Pixel 2, but the screen's white balance is a tad warmer than the Pixel 2 XL.
Overall, little has changed in terms of design and displays for Samsung's latest flagship, but we'll give the edge to the Galaxy S9 and S9 + for their slightly brighter screens and relocated fingerprint sensors.
Despite squeezing a brighter screen and new processor into the mix, the 3,000 mAh battery is too much an echo of the earlier G3, delivering performance that's a little below par.
The two UIs are functionally the same, but it's in the little touches that you see the differences: the default clock / weather widget that sits unassumingly at the top of the S6 home page rather than taking half the S5 screen up with a bright image.
Tuning the display to your preference is something you'll want to do as out of the box things are a little warm and dark - and can benefit from a bit of a lift, as long as you don't try to force the screen too bright and destroy the deep blacks.
It's also worth pointing out that in very bright sunlight, this screen can get a little bit swamped.
Vibrant Display, chiclet - style keyboard, and connectivity: The 14 - inch screen has 1368 × 768 pixel resolution that produces vibrant colors but reflective coating makes it a little difficult to use in bright sunlight.
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