Sentences with phrase «device standby button»

You can now just poke your device standby button and swipe the screen down to see what alerts you have.

Not exact matches

I know that a lot of people don't like the Xoom's placement of the lock / power button, but having used several Android tablets, it is my favorite placement for a power button because it limits the frequency with which a user accidently hits the button and wakes the device up or sends it to standby.
Once again you'll find the standby button in place on the right hand edge of the device with volume controls just below.
Around the side of the device you'll find volume buttons and across the top the power / standby button, micro HDMI and 3.5 mm sockets.
It has the same design touches as its smartphone sibling too, with the use of an aluminium standby button and a similar volume rocker, giving a family feel to these devices.
This will fire up the camera from standby, a little like a long press on the camera button on Sony Xperia devices.
Otherwise the One X is rather minimalistic, featuring only microUSB and 3.5 mm headset ports, a volume rocker and power on / off / standby button, and an 8MP camera with LED flash framed in the middle of the device's upper rear.
The power / standby button sits next to the volume rocker on the top of the device; there's a Micro-USB connection, along with a 3.5 mm headphone socket on the left and over to the right is micro-HDMI, to hook up to a bigger display.
Anyone know how to make the power button on Clover Trail devices to just turn the screen off without entering Connected Standby?
The good news here is that you don't actually have to use the power button when bringing the device out of standby (the device is on but display is powered off).
Flip the Xoom over and you'll find a 5 - megapixel camera, supported by a dual LED «flash», grills for the stereo speakers and the only proper button on the device, which is the power / standby button, working in the same way as the power button on every other Android device.
The device's power / standby button, which also operates as the IR blaster, sits on the top of the device, and while the placement isn't horrible, the button could have been raised a bit more to make it easier to press.
There are no onboard controls — not even a power button, since the device remains in constant standby mode.
Around the outside of the device you can find the standby button, the new microSIM slot (which has some improved benefits over the standard SIM card), a speaker, a microphone, another microphone (that helps remove background noise), a headphone jack, a silent toggle, and two separate volume buttons.
There's the option to lock the device as soon as the screen goes to sleep or when you press the standby button.
The only physical buttons are the textured power / standby switch and the volume rocker, which are both located on the right side of the device.
Moving around the sides, the power / standby button sits above the volume rocker on the right side of the device, while the top features a center - mounted 3.5 mm headphone jack — a design element we've come to expect from Motorola devices.
Now, for a tour of the physical particularities of the tablet: the device houses the power / standby button and volume rocker on the top side on the left.
Many Android Wear devices also feature a button, often used like a standby button for the display, waking it up or dimming it.
Note that this is different to the Galaxy S7 and previous devices that used a combination of the standby button and the home button.
This will fire up the camera from standby, a little like a long press on the camera button on Sony Xperia devices.
Like every Windows Phone device you are able to start the camera in standby mode by pressing and holding the dedicated camera button.
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