Sentences with phrase «facing camera too»

The fittingly large 5.5 - inch display isn't exactly impressive, at 720p resolution, but you do get Android 7.1 software, fingerprint recognition and a decent 13MP rear - facing camera too.
and it has it on the front facing camera too!
The Mini 3 has a 1.2 - megapixel front - facing camera too, which works well enough for Skype calls and video chats.
You can take bokeh images with the front - facing camera too, but because only the facial training is built into that shooter, it will only work on faces and not objects.
Since it's software that's at the heart of the system, not hardware, it means Google can extend Portrait mode to its front facing camera too.
You can capture Full HD video on the front - facing camera too, meaning that video calls will look as good as you'll ever need them to.
There are two speakers, one on either side and a nice 3 mega pixel front facing camera too.
Nice front facing camera too.
Couldn't Amazon have given us a forward facing camera too?!
The newer variant also supports a 1.4 Ghz dual - core processor, with the older model arrived with just a 1Ghz single core CPU — although both contain a 5 megapixel camera, but the Pre3 version is capable of HD 720p video recording and houses a front - facing camera too.

Not exact matches

Selfie takers will be pleased with the 5 - megapixel front - facing camera, too.
With all this pressure, and a camera thrust in his face, he still had the guts to tell BBC viewers: «Jesus loves me, and he loves you too... and he loves everybody in the world.
If you're looking to snap photos and videos, the UDI 818A HD + can do that, too, using a stationary, front - facing camera that shoots 720p HD video and takes 2MP photos.
If you wear a cropped jacket, I'd avoid having a blouse under it to avoid having too much noise around your face area — especially since you'll be at times, twisting around to meet the camera and you don't necessarily want the collar to get in the way.
The camera never veers too far away from Diane Kruger's face in Fatih Akin's riveting new film In the Fade.
Except... not to be too cynical, but I'm almost sad that the story has people in it because, at the end of the teaser trailer, the moment that the main character looks into the camera with her doll - face she looks very out of place.
You play with a traditional third - person camera (that sits too close, by the way) and you face enemies that must be destroyed with your only weapon: The Hacking Gun.
The camera lingers on Peña's face far too long, making much of the audience unwilling voyeurs.
Ben Whishaw does a pretty solid Dylan impersonation too, but he hasn't been given much of a role, as he is simply asked to sit behind a desk, facing the camera as if addressing an interrogator, and spout a variety enigmatic lines.
With the cameras hugging so close to Ethan Hawke's face and various parts of various cars, there are too few instances where the camera pulls back to give us a tight sense of space.
Yes, I've sat through far too many squeaky floors, doors and bores — but there must be some novel ways to make us jump in our seats without resorting to a kid wearing a gas mask suddenly pushing his face into the camera lens, accompanied by a barrage of ear - piercing sound.
We can see the flaws too, like the failed focus - pull as Elliott's canoe drifts towards the camera, or the visible cigarette burns at upper right (meaning this probably wasn't mastered from the negative), or the clumsy splice right through the middle of Elliott's lean and handsome face around nineteen minutes in.
Here's the camera, right in Nixon's face, and not only is he literally sweating like a pig, he's figuratively sweating, too: discomfort oozes off him so pungently that you forget you're watching Frank Langella the actor playing a part — he seems more like Nixon than Nixon.
The forward - facing camera at the heart of the collision system is doing too good a job, reading uneven terrain as an accident waiting to happen.
Okay, maybe it's a little too early to say for sure just how good the 10.1 - inch Acer Iconia Tab A500 is, but the specs — 1 GHz Tegra guts, 1 GB RAM, 16 GB storage 1280x800 LCD screen, 2MP and 5MP front and rear - facing cameras, etc. — put it up there with the elite guard of Android tablets.
You can use the front facing camera to record video too.
It certainly doesn't hurt to have a half - decent spec sheet either, and the Arc doesn't seem too shabby — it packs a 1.5 GHz dual - core TI OMAP 4470 processor, 1 GB of RAM, a 7 - inch IPS display running at 1280 x 800, and 1.3 - megapixel front - facing camera for all those late night video calls.
Too bad the X2 lacks 4G and a front - facing camera, pretty standard features nowadays for high - end Android phones.
Clicking great selfies from a distance with the 5 - MP front - facing camera is easy too.
Without going into too much detail, it is safe to say that the cameras on the iPhone 6 (both front and back) are improved, with improved sensors for Focus Pixels, face detection, and exposure control.
It can also take pictures with the rear facing 8 MP camera and shoot videos too.
the mthd will probably suck too but i just want the ffc (front facing camera) that ive been ranting about.
Supplementing the rear snapper is a 2 - megapixel front - facing selfie camera, which too can record videos at 1080p resolution.
Video, too, is basically unusable, though the front - facing camera is serviceable for Skype video chats.
The front - facing camera is better too, and while it's only 1.2 - megapixel, it took a reasonable selfie in a lightened room.
There is a front facing 1.3 - megapixel camera and we're hoping this finds some better applications — we're guessing that video calling from Skype won't be too far off - until then it offers pictures and videos of yourself.
MediaPad supports full HD 1080P video playback thanks to the accompanying chipset, with a 1.3 megapixel front - facing camera for video calling and a 5MP rear facing variant with HD video recording abilities with an HDMI port too.
The 8mp front facing camera is good too..
On the front of the Moto G6 is a 8 - megapixel selfie camera, too, which also comes with a front - facing flash to help illuminate shots in dark environments.
The Evok Power too features an 8 - meagpixel rear camera with features like auto - focus, zoom level, and a 5 - megapixel front - facing camera for selfies.
I don't think business users are too worried about having a front facing camera.
There's plenty of connectivity too, with support for wireless display and a full - size HDMI along with an 8 - megapixel camera on the rear and a front - facing camera for all that video calling.
The front - facing camera is above average, too, coping well in most conditions.
Microsoft Lumia 535 is huge improvement over Lumia 530, Lumia 535 comes with front facing camera, its screen and RAM have been bumped too.
Both have an 8 - megapixel rear camera so there shouldn't be too much difference here, but the Xperia Z4 Tablet ups the ante when it comes to the front - facing snapper in terms of megapixels and software.
With virtually every smartphone and tablet, they have a front - facing camera so to pull this feature off isn't too difficult.
On both you can find front - facing cameras for video - calls or chatting / skyping and both these tablets can shoot 720p content, but don't expect too much in terms of quality.
The two rear cameras deliver fantastic images in a variety of situations, while the front facing camera performs well too.
And besides a front - facing camera, the manufacturer has thrown in a video player to support 1080p HD video playback too.
I lost too much functionality including the forward facing camera, abillity to play many of the video codecs (I know you can download free android apps to play any codec but then you can not watch them on TV using the expensive HDMI dock) It crashed many times a day when using the internet.
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