Sentences with phrase «mm audio jack right»

Besides, they just started removing the 3.5 mm audio jack right?

Not exact matches

In terms of buttons and ports, there is a power button and a volume rocker on the right hand side, SIM card slot on the left, and USB Type - C and 5 mm audio jack on the bottom.
Topaz enabled with optional WWAN for HSPA, LTE, or CDMA maybe in the works for a release sometime later though features such as 2 integrated speakers with Beats Audio and a 3.5 mm audio jack is going to be part of the Topaz feature right now.
There's a power button on the right edge, a volume rocker on the left, a micro USB charging port at the bottom, and a 3.5 mm audio jack up top.
On the right side there's power key, on the bottom side there is Micro USB port and mic, On the top side you will find 3.5 mm audio jack.
When held in landscape, the volume rocker and a ridged power button are on the left, while the right hosts a 3.5 mm audio jack, a micro USB charging port, and a microSD card slot that worked fine with a 256 GB card.
A microSD card slot, micro HDMI and volume rockers sit on the right; a microUSB port, 3.5 mm audio jack and speakers line the bottom; and the power button is on top.
A slim dark - silver bezel runs along the sides, passing by a 3.5 mm audio jack on the top, volume controls on the left, a micro-USB port on the bottom and a power key on the right.
Placing the power button on the left side of the cylinder and the 3.5 mm audio jack on the right is another nice touch.
When it comes to buttons and port placements, you have the micro-USB port and the 3.5 mm audio jack sitting on the top, whereas the power / sleep button and the volume rocker are placed on the right.
To the right is the 3.5 mm audio jack.
Along the right - hand edge are a 3.5 mm audio jack (which doubles as a headphone output and a microphone input), the Mini-HDMI port, and the microSD card slot.
Packed with brushed aluminum back, the Dell Streak Pro comes pre-installed with tablet optimized Android 3.1 Honeycomb OS skinned with Dells» Stage 2.0 UI with Gorilla Glass protection, featuring 10.1 - inch WXGA screen display with 1280 X 800 pixels of resolution, powered by a 1 GHz Nvidia Tegra T20 Dual - Core processor for increased performance capabilities, boosted by 1 GB of DDR2 RAM, 1080p HD video playback capability, equipped with a 5 megapixels auto - focused rear camera with flash, paired up with an additional 2 megapixel front - facing camera for video chats, dual stereo speakers, two mics (left and right), Data only — modular modem, dock connector, microUSB 2.0, Bluetooth 2.1 + EDR, 802.11 Wi - Fi a / b / g / n connectivity, built - in GPS navigation system, 3.5 mm audio headset jack, Android Market, a powerful battery providing up to 12 hours of usage time, and a whole host of Google services.
There's a built in 3.5 mm audio jack for headsets, and just like the Afterglow controller there's built in audio controls which you access by holding the button located next to the right thumbstick and using the D - pad to change the volume and balance between game and chat audio, a great addition to controllers, although there's no mic monitoring available.
Power / volume rocker are on the right side, 3.5 mm audio jack on the top and micro USB port at the button.
That question can be answered in part with the same explanation for Apple's decision to remove the standard 3.5 mm headphone jack (that's right, the new iPhones won't have a regular audio port): waterproofing.
Power buttons and volume rockers are on the right side, 3.5 mm audio jack on the top and micro USB port at the bottom.
The right side contains a USB 3.0 port, a Kensington lock slot and an SD card reader, while the left side houses HDMI out, a second USB 3.0 port, a 3.5 mm audio jack and a USB Type - C port.
The right side holds a USB 2.0 port and a 3.5 mm audio jack.
The slightly rounded sides (volume and power buttons on the right, SIM card tray on left, micro USB port on base (still no USB Type - C) with speaker and 3.5 mm audio jack on base) and a flat metal back give it a very good, solid feel.
The right side contains the DVD drive, a third USB port and a 3.5 mm audio jack.
The design has been kept minimalistic — there are no buttons on the left and the base, while on the right are the volume rocker and a slightly textured power / display button and right on top of the phone is a micro USB port and a 3.5 mm audio jack.
The right side has another USB port, a 3.5 mm audio jack and a microSD card reader.
The design is largely minimalistic with only the volume rocker and the power / display key on the right of the device, the left side totally bare, the micro USB port and speaker on the base, and the SIM card tray and the 3.5 mm audio jack bang on top.
It's worth noting, however, that the Echo Dot has a physical audio out jack, whereas the full size Echo does not — if you're happy putting the Echo Dot right near the speakers and want to skip jumping through the Bluetooth hoop, you can simply use a male - to - male 3.5 mm headphone cable to link the Dot to your speakers.
On the right, you'll find a 3.5 mm audio jack, a microSD card slot and a USB Type - C port, which can output DisplayPort video.
The T470's right surface leaves room for two more USB 3.0 ports, a 3.5 mm audio jack, HDMI out, a full - size Ethernet port, a Kensington lock slot and an SD card reader.
On its right side, there's a USB 3 port and an SD card reader; the left side has a micro HDMI port, a second USB 3 port, a 3.5 mm audio jack and a USB Type - C connector.
The metallic display / power button is on the right, the volume rocker and Alert Slider button on the left, and the USB Type C port, speaker grille and 3.5 mm audio jack are on the base, leaving the top plain.
Buttons are placed on the right and are metallic, the USB port is on the base of the base and the 3.5 mm audio jack on top — pretty much as we saw on the Mi 3.
The volume rocker and the power / display on / off buttons are on the right, the left side is totally plain, the micro-USB port and a speaker grille are at the base of the phone and bang on the top are the 3.5 mm audio jack and the SIM card tray.
The volume rocker and power / display button are on the right, the micro USB port on the base and the 3.5 mm audio jack on the top.
The layout of buttons, remains largely similar — three touch navigation buttons (backlit) below the display in front, metallic volume rocker and power / display button on the right, 3.5 mm audio jack and IR blaster on top, dual SIM card slot (one of them hybrid) on the left, and speaker grilles on the base, only this time flanking a USB Type - C port rather than a micro USB one.
The right side has a volume rocker and a power / play button, the top has a 3.5 mm audio jack and the base has a micro USB port.
The sides are relatively sparse, with one feature on each — the right has the power / display key, the top 3.5 mm audio jack, the left the volume rocker and the base the microUSB port.
On the right, you'll find two more USB 3.0 ports, a 3.5 mm audio jack, HDMI - out, an SD card reader and a Kensington lock slot.
Volume rocker is placed on the left, power button on the right along with SIM slots and micro USB port with 3.5 mm audio jack at the bottom.
The top of the right side of the Intercept has a 3.5 mm audio jack.
Yes, it will attract fingerprints (there is a transparent case in the box, though), but it is also perhaps the most notice - able device we have seen from YU apart from the Yutopia, even though it looks relatively routine in front (5.0 - inch display, fingerprint scanner below it, on - screen navigation buttons and front - facing camera above the display), and has the usual combination of buttons and ports on the sides (volume and power rocker on right, hybrid SIM card slot on left, 3.5 mm audio jack on top, micro USB on base).
The volume rocker and power / display button is on the right, the top houses the micro USB port and the 3.5 mm audio jack, with the other two sides being left plain.
The sides are relatively plain in best Moto tradition — the right has the volume rocker, just below which is the slightly textured display / power key, the top has the 3.5 mm audio jack and the base the micro USB port and a speaker grille.
As for the controls and ports, you get a power button, and mute and pairing button, game and voice - chat volume knobs, micro-USB charging port, and 3.5 mm audio jack along the right earcup.
The top of the iPhone 6 doesn't have anything, while the bottom comes with the Lighting port flanked by a 3.5 mm audio jack on the left, and mono speaker grilles on the right.
There are metal volume rocker and power buttons on the right, a dual SIM card tray on the left, a type USB - C port on the base flanked by a speaker grille and a 3.5 mm audio jack, and an infrared port on the top.
Power button and volume rocker are on the right side and micro USB port and 3.5 mm audio jack are placed on the top.
Lenovo has opted to keep two of the sides of the phone totally blank, placing the 3.5 mm audio jack and micro USB port bang on top of the device, and the volume rocker and power / display button on the right.
The iPad Pro 10.5 is cut from the same design cloth as its predecessors — display with a fingerprint scanner just below the display, volume rocker and SIM card try on right, connector on right side, 3.5 mm audio jack (yes!)
The right side has the volume rocker and power / display keys; the left the SIM card tray slots; the top has the 3.5 mm audio jack; and on the base is the micro USB port.
Design is largely minimalistic — volume rocker on the left, power / display button on the right, 3.5 mm audio jack on top, and micro USB port on the base.
Volume rocker and power button are placed on the right, 3.5 mm audio jack on the top and micro USB port plus mic at the bottom.
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