Sentences with phrase «gets weeks of battery life»

And with just one charge, it gets weeks of battery life, not hours, so you never need to stop doing what you love — reading.
Jepsen says it's even possible to get a week of battery life from LCD tech, of course depending on the device the screens are embedded in.

Not exact matches

Magnets in the earbuds allow you to clip the Latitude around your neck when you aren't using it, and the eight - plus - hour battery life will get you through more than a week of hour - long workouts before you have to recharge.
Plus 4 weeks of battery life is a revelation considering that today's handheld devices could barely get past another day without having to be recharged.
The Battery life on the DX is great, dispite the fact that it uses 3G and WIFI you can litterary leave this unit on for 2 to 3 weeks, with WIFI turned off, if you leave the WI - FI turned on, you get about 1 week of constant use.
and you will get around eight weeks of battery life out of the e-Reader.
The long battery life should also be an endearing factor, if you are on your phone lots, you should get a full week out of it, which is quite amazing.
You should get around 3 weeks of battery life and it connects up to your iPhone via Bluetooth.
It comes with 4 GB of memory, gets up to 3 weeks of battery life, and has free 3G global wireless but no WiFi like the Kindle 3.
It's got an eight - hour battery life, compared to the battery life of monochrome ebook readers measured in weeks.
The overall benefit of getting the Kindle e-reader is that you would be able to get a better reading experience, plus the longer battery life of several weeks on a single charge.
Like the Kindle, the Nook, and many other e-ink based readers, the Kobo boasts solid battery life; the company estimates that you should get about two weeks of typical use on a single charge (or about 8,000 page turns).
The Next Web reports that the Paperwhite will get 8 weeks of battery life with the light on.
The Paperwhite gets eight weeks of battery life even with the light on, and has capacitive touch.
It's 12.9 ounces and you'll get around 3 weeks of battery life.
the battery life is exactly as advertised, and I am still trying to get used to the pleasant option of being able to go weeks between charging the device — even though I am an avid reader and spend many hours of the day enjoying my books on my new Kobo.
Barnes & Noble claims that you can get six weeks of battery life on a single charge, based on 30 minutes of reading per day.
Battery life proved very variable with us getting a week of light use on only Wi - Fi yet hammering it with everything on killed the Flyer within a working day.
Second, whereas Apple's iPad gets 10 hours of battery life, Amazon's new Kindle is rated for up to three weeks of life with the 3G radio on.
What's more, Amazon says the Kindle Paperwhite can get up to 8 weeks of battery life even with the light turned on.
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).
The battery life of the Kindle Oasis is less than other Kindle devices thanks to the slimmer design, with Amazon claiming you'll get two weeks of usage from a single charge.
For $ 139, you could get a Kindle 3 that's much less expensive, easier on the eyes, can be read in sunlight, weighs half as much, and has a battery life measured in weeks instead of hours.
My only «beef» is that the battery life is not what is advertised as I am getting a few weeks of use before I need to recharge the device.
You get two weeks» battery life from the device itself, but that has been pared down from almost a month on other Kindle devices in the pursuit of thinness.
And the battery life was already phenomenal — I'd get 2 or 3 weeks out of it — but a full month without recharging is absurd.
If you're not using GPS mode, you can get up to 5 days of battery life — a week's worth of workouts without needing a single charge.
Magnets in the earbuds allow you to clip the Latitude around your neck when you aren't using it, and the eight - plus - hour battery life will get you through more than a week of hour - long workouts before you have to recharge.
Fitbit also stretched the next - generation Alta's battery life from five days to seven days, so you can get up to a week of continuous wear on a single charge.
These are the two things I could point out blindly after a week of continuous usage where I could find no option to extend the battery life, while although the strap is changeable, who would really like to do that when they already are paying quite a lot to get a smartwatch?
The little gizmos get nearly a week of battery life (even more with the Force) and count your steps, activity intensity e.g. running versus walking, sleep quality by tossing and turning, stairs or floors climbed and more.
In my week long testing, I was able to get close to five hours of battery life and had to charge them on a daily basis.
Fitbit promises that the Surge will get up to a week of battery life on a single charge.
I've been using the iPad for a little less than a week, and I can report that it feels fast, lasts all day (Apple claims 10 hours of battery life, and it gets close), and runs everything I've thrown at it well.
Garmin promises one week of battery life in smartwatch mode; you'll get 13 hours in GPS mode.
The buds also benefit from long battery life that will get you through a week's worth of 1 - hour workouts.
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