Sentences with phrase «need backlighting»

Unless you need backlighting or a platform - specific layout, we think the K380 is about 80 percent as good for just 40 percent of the price.
Because these gardens need backlighting, company logos and other special touches, Amanda turns to a whole community of artisans to bring out the best in her projects.
But since they contain physical particles, they do not need any backlighting.
This huge screen makes use of OLED technology and Corning Gorilla Glass, providing for a thin, curved screen that doesn't need backlighting, making it easier to see.
The organic compounds in an OLED system emit light when an electric current is passed through them, and they need no backlight, making them thinner than traditional displays.
This means that, unlike competing electronic displays like LCDs, it never needs a backlight.
They don't need a backlight and supporting optical components so they are considerably thinner and lighter than LCD displays.
The display used in the Kindle — e-ink (electronic ink), called also «e-paper» — doesn't need a backlight to display the image.
E-paper screens like the Kindle's E Ink display don't need a backlight or a glossy screen and subsequently doesn't have issues with glare.
So, to put it simply: all LCDs (liquid crystal displays), which make up the vast majority of new screens put into televisions, monitors, and other display devices, need a backlight system.
In other words: it doesn't need a backlight throughout the day, unlike the LCD and OLED panels you get on «traditional» smartwatches.

Not exact matches

So when you press the button to lower the top — now, conveniently, without a mechanical latch that needs to be pulled — the flying buttress rear pillars lift up from the body to allow the horizontal panel of the top, and the backlight, to lower into that thin space, with all the fussiness of a Porsche 911 Targa.
(I don't ever use my Kindle Fire because the backlight gives me headaches — I need a dedicated eReader.)
Basically, the Kobo Glo combines the best of both the Kindle and the Nook, and then improves on it by giving you better reading stats, an excellent backlight when needed, and a very crisp eInk display.
The eink with the backlighting, allowing me to read in bed without bothering my wife needing a lamp on.
It can display a monochrome image with four shades of grey as well as black and white, and needs no battery - draining backlight, like LCDs.
Electronic paper technology was chosen because it uses energy only when changing content and features paperlike readability in direct sunlight, foregoing the need for backlights.
They go on to say that this «revolutionary display reflects light without the need for backlighting», which according to reviews gives a similar reading experience to an E-Ink screen.
Daylight (ambient light support) and backlight support needed.
That helps save battery life as it reduces the need for a backlight, which is used to light up conventional laptop screens.
Most importantly, eliminating the power demands of the backlighting needed by conventional LCD displays means that e-paper displays draw negligible power.
First off, the display features a newly - developed scattering layer making it highly reflective and visible without the need for a backlight which usually accounts for about 80 percent of an LCD display's power consumption.
No backlight is needed, just a higher contrast XGA screen would be lovely.
Electronic paper (e-paper) looks like conventional paper and the bright wash of color it generates uses the ambient light for rendition, just like conventional paint, so no backlight is needed.
iPad owners are going to say, «so this is what an Android tablet looks like,» Android phone owners are going to say «I could really use this thing if I could find the link to the Android Marketplace,» and Kindle owners are going to say «I don't need color and backlighting to read.»
If we're to get the most out of digital (before it gets the best of us), don't we need to make it do more for us than 4G and backlighting and swiping to turn the pages?
You can change the backlight level manually, but the automated system works so well that we never felt a need for it.
We had no specific problem activating the backlighting, but it does entail gripping the Kobo Glo with two hands to get enough purchase to press down as precisely as is needed.
The iPad specs page lists an ambient light sensor, so the OS may be able to automatically turn - down the backlight when not needed but this won't save you as much as the power saving modes of the PixelQi screen.
The establishment of the E Ink Corporation in 1997 led to the development of electronic paper, a technology which allows a display screen to reflect light like ordinary paper without the need for a backlight; electronic paper was incorporated first into the Sony Librie (released in 2004) and Sony Reader (2006), followed by the Amazon Kindle, a device which, upon its release in 2007, sold out within five hours.
Big which is nice, Amazon if your listening... needs to make something similar with perhaps higher quality control, but this is where the romance ends, laggy, slow uneven backlighting and night mode is useless on higher settings, compared to the kindle lineup this thing doesn't get nearly as dark at the lowest or nearly as bright at the highest of settings
Knowing this, Qualcomm MEMS Technologies has been working on a special technology capable of bringing high - quality color without the need for backlighting or color filters.
However, because the eInk display mimics ink, it requires no backlighting — so just like traditional books when you are reading in the dark you need a light source.
The company also noted the work it is doing in televisions and displays, using things from AMOLED technology to new dimming technology which the display uses to recognize when a backlight isn't needed on certain areas of a screen, and shuts of the LEDs in that area to conserve energy.
Because something has to drive the backlight under the screen, going with LCD also means there needs to still be a small «chin» bezel on the bottom of the phone.
Some manufacturers were really betting on OLED displays — organic light - emitting diodes, that is — which don't need a traditional backlight.
This has two advantages: one, the pixels emit light directly without the need of a backlight.
On top of that, the iPad Pro has a Metal Oxide TFT Backplane that increases the light throughput for the panel and therefore increases its power efficiency, which is particularly important for such a large mobile LCD panel with a Backlight that needs lots of battery power to keep all of its LEDs shinning.
The Carbon's keyboard backlight is a standard feature, too, so you don't need to pay extra.
If you don't need fancy backlighting, though, the $ 110 HyperX Alloy Elite will serve just as well.
Motorola's been experimenting with reflective displays recently, with the Moto 360 Sport combining a transmissive LCD display with a reflective backplate for a display that's easily read during the daytime without needing a powerful backlight while still viewable at night.
Unlike traditional LCD displays — which are currently used in iPhone and iPad — micro-LED displays do not need a dedicated backlight, which means they can be thinner.
You can trigger a backlight for when it's dark (press the center button and the display lights up for around 5 seconds), but you won't need that in the daylight at all.
It needs an LED backlight since the pixels don't emit their own light.
Using organic material to create individual light - emitting pixels, there's no need for a backlight, making for slimmer display panels that offer the deepest black levels available.
Blacks on the Note 3's display look stunning, as the display is physically off when black needs to be displayed due to the lack of a backlight in the panel's construction.
That is why the new remote features motion - activated backlighting so all you need is to pick it up and you'll never have to fumble in the dark again.
That ultrathin display panel is a trick that LCD TVs can't match, since it leverages the fact that OLED displays are self - illuminating, so there's no need for a backlight.
These keys have a very dim light when active, and they are kept dim on purpose, because there is no real need for the bright backlight on the keys once the user gets used to them.
That means there's no need for the backlight at all during ambient mode when outside, which should in theory help improve the battery life.
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