Not exact matches
Since there is a very slight delay in on - screen response to
input (barely longer than the similar delay when using the physical
keyboard on older Kindles) it can be slightly strange at
first, but that fades quickly with continued use.
this was the one thing with move that seemed to stand on its own... I don't mind the idea of HD wii sports either, as long as it really is 1:1... that was my only real complaint with the wii when it released... there was motion control, but it was gimmicky and registered «wiggles» into canned animations... not to mention the gamecube visuals... still not sold on Move though... for me to really want one, I want to see what they are doing with shooters... Socom 4 and killzone 3 could be very special for core gamers and motion controls if they are done right... if you can aim on screen in true 1:1 fashion while sitting comfortably at a «normal» gaming distance... it could rearrange how I play
first person shooters on a console... developers are saying the Move has
input latency of 21ms, which is roughly half of a DS3... and second only to a wired mouse /
keyboard... need to see how it works though, as it is not always that simple... just saying that if it does what its supposed to... it could end up being the answer to shooters on a console... as much as I like playing shooters with 2 sticks... I can't argue that I miss the days of a mouse and
keyboard (as well as PC being the only platform to get the best shooters on... no longer the case by any means)... but with a
first person shooter, there is no wiggle room... pun intended... it has to register every mm of movement on screen... and do it quickly... not sure if it can yet...
Such experimental features are usually found on Android
first — you can find a wide variety of different
keyboards, all with their own ideas of how to make text
input faster and more efficient.
We fixed an issue where
keyboard and mouse
input might not work correctly in Game bar when playing a
first - person game (e.g. Minecraft).
The Lumia 930 is Microsoft's
first flagship device to ship with Windows Phone 8.1 out of the box (the Lumia 630 and 635 also ship with the newest OS) and as such, it offers key improvements over Windows Phone 8, like support for a Swype - like
keyboard input (called «Word Flow Keyboard») as standard, better control over your home screen (the ability to add a background and more Live Tiles), a pull - down «Action Center» notification
keyboard input (called «Word Flow
Keyboard») as standard, better control over your home screen (the ability to add a background and more Live Tiles), a pull - down «Action Center» notification
Keyboard») as standard, better control over your home screen (the ability to add a background and more Live Tiles), a pull - down «Action Center» notifications panel.
We
first saw code snippets hinting at the
keyboard input back in January.