Sentences with phrase «bright looking display»

It feels great in hand, with a crisp and bright looking display.

Not exact matches

The look of it hasn't changed much, but there's an updated processor, a brighter display, stronger water resistance (but no waterproofing), a built - in GPS, and new casing options.
With a notchy new look, a super bright display, and a bucket load of AI smarts the LG G7 ThinQ is LG's latest flagship.
One of the brightest prospects coming out of Brazilian football at the moment, Arthur looks like he could be ideally suited to the Catalan giants» playing style after some impressive midfield displays with Gremio.
You also get a new LED backlit display which looks bright and sharp, even in direct sunlight.
So if you hook your millimetre - wave detector up to a video display, a human being comes into view looking like a bright, human - shaped fluorescent light bulb.
I still need to decide what to do with my wedding shoes... I wanted to display them somehow but they haven't looked quite as bright white since I wore them for 12 + hours on our wedding day so now I'm choosing between dyeing them or just dealing with the fact that they're looking a little well - loved.
We want to look cool and crisp in their clean bright effortlessness, but we certainly don't want our backside and Hello Kitty underwear on full display.
Win - win as students are pleased to see their work displayed and the classroom looks brighter.
If you are looking for a dynamic and bright spring bulletin board display idea, these charts are a blooming great resource!
Our only critique is that the small, low - res trip computer looks dated in comparison to the bright, colorful displays in new crossovers such as the Nissan Murano.
When the Q50 debuted at last January's Detroit auto show, it looked overstyled as it rotated under the bright display lights.
It is really too bad Kia chose horrible / cheap looking colors like this bright yellow for the Auto Show display.
The mapping display looks very similar to the Mercedes COMAND system, too, but brighter colours do make it easier to read.
SEATTLE --(BUSINESS WIRE)-- Nov. 19, 2007 — Amazon.com (NASDAQ: AMZN) today introduced Amazon Kindle, a revolutionary portable reader that wirelessly downloads books, blogs, magazines and newspapers to a crisp, high - resolution electronic paper display that looks and reads like real paper, even in bright sunlight.
Amazon's looking to improve the ultracheap $ 49 7 - inch Fire (now called the Fire 7) with a brighter display and a lighter design, dropping from 11 ounces to 10.4.
The future of electronic paper looks bleak and stagnant because E Ink has no real competition in the field of low - power displays that are readable in bright light.
It's hugely impressive, and breathtaking when displaying 1080p video, which looks bright, vibrant and flawless.
The screen resolution is identical to the HTC One X, so the pixels per inch aren't quite as high on this slightly bigger screen, but both displays look lush and inviting, with this one winning in terms of bright, rich colours.
The Fire HD's seven - inch 1280x800 screen is warm, clear and bright, outshining the Nexus 7's display, which looks technically better on paper.
With the original GlowLight, the LED lights tucked along the upper and lower edges of the display were visible (and had a greenish hue) if you looked at the tablet at an angle, while subsequent models from Amazon and Kobo bettered B&N's efforts, with lighting that looked more even and brighter.
When Amazon introduced its first Kindle back in 2007, it raved about the e-reader's «crisp, high - resolution electronic paper display that looks and reads like real paper, even in bright sunlight.»
The COOL - ER Reader, which looks a bit like a distorted iPod Nano, comes in a variety of bright hues and sports a 6 - inch e-ink screen that displays text in eight shades of gray.
Right out front you have a bright 5 - inch, 1280x720 LCD display that, even when set to mid-levels for battery saving reasons, still manages to look great and have some nice color pops to it.
It is this technology that makes the display look exactly like a real paper, and you won't have the least problem reading from the screen even in bright sunlight.
Nevertheless, the Tour's display looks gorgeous: Colors looked bright, details were crisp, and text popped off the screen.
Whites looked brighter than on (for instance) the Kindle Fire HD, though not quite as bright as on the Nexus 7; this aspect of the display is especially noticeable when you're looking at (or reading) ebooks.
I compared the three displays (using the Samsung Nexus S instead of the Focus, as it has a similar display) with the same landscape picture taken from my collection: the HD7 and the iPhone 4 have similar color tones, the iPhone 4 is slightly better contrasted, and, as we know, the Super AMOLED displays the colors with higher saturation than most LCDs, an effect that I personally like because the photos look bright and vivid, however, it might not reflect the reality of a scene.
It's so much brighter that the iPad Air's 2048 x 1536 - pixel display made Saldana merely look jaundiced instead of reptilian.
By comparison, the same trailer on the Pandigital Nova looked dull and listless, but both were trumped by the Vizio's display, which shone with its generous viewing angles and brighter colors.
The device detects when you're looking at the phone, maintaining a bright display so you can enjoy your content uninterrupted.
The display looks good — both bright and colorful — most of the time, and the angle of view is adequate (but not terrific — just 80 degrees according to Acer's own specs), but I had issues with a couple of things.
The 1280 by 800 pixel resolution display looks bright and brilliant, two characteristics we've come to associate with Samsung displays on its phones and tablets.
Look at how stunning the Kindle Fire HD 8.9» display is with such bright colors from this example of a «Special Offer» for Trident gum:
The 3.7 - inch display uses what I'd call the minimum resolution for a high - end Android phone, 800 × 840, but the Super LCD screen looks sharp and bright, both indoors and out.
The display looks brilliant on the Surface Pro 4, and is extremely bright, with rich colors.
The Fire HD for Kids» 8 - inch, 1280 x 800 display looks good, even in bright light.
Note that it is important to appropriately adjust the display brightness in order to preserve battery power and running time, and also to reduce eye strain from looking at too bright a display.
The resolution of the e-paper display is the same at 300 ppi, but it has a couple extra LED lights now for a brighter, more even - looking display.
The 1280 - by -800-pixel-resolution display looked bright and brilliant, two characteristics we've come to associate with Samsung's phone and tablet displays.
The phone uses a 720p 4.7 - inch LCD display; that's a lower resolution than similarly priced phones but in my usage, I found the screen looked crisp and very bright from every angle.
In fact the brighter the light on the display the better it looks.
I've found it to be fine for most purposes — the screen is bright with true - to - life colors and excellent viewing angles, and it looks quite good for Web surfing, text - reading, and other normal uses — but if you're a display aficionado who wants the best of the best, you're going to have to drop more than $ 200 to get it.
Photos and web pages look fantastic on a bright, 3.2 - inch QVGA display, and multitasking is a snap on the 600 MHz processor.
With their bright, colorful LCD (liquid crystal display) screens and shiny finish, the e-readers look more like these latter devices than traditional e-book readers.
OLED (Organic Light Emitting Diodes) is a new technology that enables brighter, more efficient, thinner, faster and better looking displays.
The WVGA (800 × 480) resolution capacitive touchscreen display is big and bright and throws out enough colors to make your high - res video look good.
The 1024 x 600 - resolution FFS + display isn't as bright or crisp as the IPS displays on the Nook Tablet or Kindle Fire and colors look washed out and muted, especially in graphic - rich books.
One answer could be that none of the companies that owned it had any idea how to make the technology compelling when compared to bright, backlit LCD displays, which are a mature technology that looks great pretty much anywhere but in full sunlight.
Both models feature the same 1024x600 multitouch display seen on the Kindle Fire, which is solidly bright and detailed within many apps, though the main user interface and some bits of text look blurry at times.
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