Sentences with phrase «day battery life which»

The reason for its success will inevitably be the five - day battery life which exists despite a very capable operating system, bright LCD display, and plenty of fitness - tracking features.
They had a chance to roll one out when they released the new MacBook Air but didn't in favor of promoting the all day battery life which is amazing.

Not exact matches

and for the way i play smash (which is all day and night lol) 80 hours of battery life is what i need.
Does this mean future Android powered devices that sport Mirasol displays will soon have one strong winning point against the iPhone crowd, which is far superior battery life that runs into days?
-- I realized that I read in direct sunlight only when I walk to work in the morning, which amounts to about eight minutes a day, not nearly enough to justify putting up with the YotaPhone's pathetic battery life or the extra bulk if you go the case route.
The Fire HD 8 is rated at up to 12 hours of battery life, which is pretty good for a tablet, but the Aura One can last a few weeks even when reading every day.
Battery life, which purports to support 6.7 hours of talk time on 3G (14 hours on 2G) proved great, as the 1500mAh unit lasted a full day with heavy use.
E-readers also claim superior battery life, which can be measured in days rather than hours.
The Galaxy Tab 8.9 hosts a 6100mAh battery which should get you around 9 hours of battery life, and having put it to the test running throughout the day on light use it was around nine hours before we had to reach for the dock connector to charge it up again.
The e-reader features one - month of battery life and a Pearl E Ink display that allows reading in direct sunlight — two features that, according to Amazon, set Kindle devices apart from popular tablets such as the iPad and Galaxy Tab, which can burn through batteries in a single day and have screens that tend to reflect sunlight.
Amazon claims it has 6 weeks of battery life if used for 30 minutes per day with wireless off and brightness set to 10, which is about 21 hours.
Amazon claims it has 6 weeks of battery life if used for 30 minutes per day with wireless disabled and brightness set to 10, which is about 21 hours.
In my moderate usage cycles — which consists of a bit of gaming, emailing, chatting, and web browsing a few times within a 10 - 15 minute period — I'm getting more than a day's worth of battery life.
Sure, I'd take HTC's Sense user interface over TouchWiz any day, but the DROID Charge offers a few things HTC's ThunderBolt doesn't, namely a gorgeous Super AMOLED Plus display and an out - of - the - box option to turn off 4G to save on battery life, which meant I was able to get through a full day with moderate usage when I didn't need to surf the Web at blazing fast speeds.
The e-reader is compatible with almost all known e-book formats and has an impressive battery life of about 14,000 page turns on a single charge, which comes to around a month of usage if used for about two hours each day.
Microsoft promises «all day» battery life on the Surface with Windows RT and, in our experience, endurance was strong as the tablet lasted a full 7 hours and 43 minutes on the LAPTOP Battery Test, which involves continuous surfing over Wbattery life on the Surface with Windows RT and, in our experience, endurance was strong as the tablet lasted a full 7 hours and 43 minutes on the LAPTOP Battery Test, which involves continuous surfing over WBattery Test, which involves continuous surfing over Wi - Fi.
BlackBerry Passport also comes with a touch - enabled keyboard that lets you perform many touch functions right on the keyboard; BlackBerry Blend which allows you to access messages and content from your BlackBerry smartphone on your computer and tablet; a text and voice BlackBerry Assistant to help you accomplish tasks quickly and easily; a high quality phone call experience and more than a full day of battery life.
The cellphone packs in 6080 mAh built - in battery which is said to offer 4 days of battery life.
The in - depth analysis is coming in the full written CrackBerry review, which will be hitting the blogs tomorrow (it's been so long since I've reviewed a new BlackBerry Smartphone that it's taking me a bit longer than normal... and I also wanted to take a couple extra days to really use the device and see how the device performance and battery life holds up in various conditions).
However, this estimated battery life is two months based on about an hour of usage per day, which may vary widely between individual users.
As tested by Engadget, both handsets achieve around 9 hours of battery life when looping a video at 65 % brightness, which translates to a full day of moderate use to the average consumer.
It's nothing like the newer devices which are coming to last for days, but it is far more impressive than other Berry battery lives out there such as the BlackBerry Bold 9000, which required a charger at hand at all times.
I read All Our Wrong Todays by Elan Mastai — which the Aura H2O estimated to be about seven hours of reading — over five days, and I still had well over 85 percent of battery life left.
Well, Panasonic says the Toughbook will have a «full - shift» battery, which I assume means it'll last a full work shift (ie, all day battery life).
Powering it through the day is a 3410mAh battery, which BlackBerry says will provide up to 22.5 hours of life per charge.
I miss OneNote and that makes me consider Windows tablets but while I could handle 3 - 4 hours battery life in the old days I've now been spoiled by modern day tablets and even netbooks or smaller latops like the Vaio T series which give 7 + hours easily and sometimes more than 10.
The phone features a sleek design and comes equipped with Android Lollipop, a 5» HD display with 720p resolution, 2400 mAh battery, which Sony claims will offer up to two days of battery life.
With wireless functionality turned on, the Kindle 3 battery lasts about ten days, according to Amazon, which is similar to the Kindle 2's battery life.
PS my first charge also only lasted 1 week, my second charge 3 days because of some wierd sleeping battery drain issue which has since gone away and my 3rd charge was 3 weeks of heavy use, my current charge has lasted 1 1/2 wks to about 75 % battery life (which may not be 100 % accurate, as I mentioned my wierd battery life indicator results, last time I got to about 50 % battery life and it would occasionally randomly power off, but then left me power it right back up, which lasted about 5 days of reading before the battery was completely exhausted).
Intel has a very specific vision for ultrabooks which also includes long, all - day battery life.
The 9104 includes a 7000mAh long - life Li - ion battery which in tests gave around four to five hours depending on the usage — running iPlayer over Wi - Fi gave around four hours, where as general usage without Wi - Fi gave around five hours use — and while it's not a full days» worth of battery life it's still enough for most users.
The battery life is amazing, I can go a full day of usage without dropping below 50 %; a major plus coming from my iPhone 5c which died after 5 - 6 hours of continuous use.
The battery life on the Glowlight is 2 months (based on 30 minutes of reading per day with the wireless turned off) which is the same as the previous model and indeed the same as the Kindle Paperwhite 2, Kobo Aura & Aura HD.
With my particular usage pattern, I'm getting about 1.5 days of battery life, which is fairly good for an Android handset.
Battery life, which is a large deal for ereaders, is rated at a month if you read for 30 minutes a day — with the frontlight on.
Example: Would an Apple tablet with a gorgeous, high - resolution color display and a (likely) limited battery life be a better e-book reader than a Kindle, which can last for days between charges?
Of note, the reading light will of course reduce the long battery life for which e-Ink e-readers are famous, but B&N says you can still read for a month for half an hour a day with the light on (compared to two months with the light off).
Battery life is good for a day of 4 - 5 minute phone calls, constant HSPA data and partial Wi - Fi connectivity and the use of e-mail, social media, music playback and GPS mapping apps which is around average for an Android smartphone.
I think this is about the same as the Kindle 3's claimed one - month battery life, which probably assumes 1 hour of reading per day.
The device has got a very good battery life of 2300mAh with a whopping two day battery life for which it has got the Stamina and Ultra Stamina mode.
My original PSP which still runs well, which runs well but whose battery life has admittedly seen better days, ran Generation of Chaos: Pandora's Reflection without any problems.
The highlights of the LG X power 2 is its 4500mAh battery, which LG rates as to deliver seven days of battery life.
I love the XL's battery life, which is never less than an intensive day's work for me, but the idea of having an extra 16 percent more juice without any size (or even weight) trade - offs is immensely appealing.
These also offer around 12 hours of battery life, which is about the industry average these days.
Most notably, the watch can get up to five days of battery life, which is hands down one of its best features, and something very few smartwatch makers can claim.
Qualcomm advertises «multiple days» of battery life, which is more or less true: I got exactly 44 hours between charges while the Toq was connected to a Moto X.
The sixth - generation iPad offers 10 hours of battery life, which Apple says is «all - day» battery.
More than 2 days» usage * and get even longer battery life with Watch Mode in which the watch still counts your steps.
It has lost a little rigidity in its frame due to weight cuts, but it does sport a roughly 10 - hour battery life during extended media viewing, which is enough to get anyone through a work day or a relatively long - haul flight.
You can use it in a low - power mode — which Huawei claims will get you 21 days of battery life — but the only thing it can do in that mode is tell you the time of day and how many steps you've taken.
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