The longer a full
page refresh takes, the more likely you will see text superimposed.
Not exact matches
Josh demonstrates how you can boost channel views by automatically
refreshing a
page with a FireFox plug - in, but
take a moment to travel back to the wilds of circa - 1997 HTML with me: I bet you can do the same thing right quick with a meta
refresh tag and a frameset.
This is really
refreshing because I remember only a few years ago where I frequently had to put up with full
page refreshes that
took ten seconds and clunky interfaces that were counter intuitive.
The web browser
took forever to display most
pages (like... 30 seconds per new
page), and very often, it would not properly
refresh pages when
paging up or down.
Sadly, on an e-Ink screen they are underwhelming due to animated
page turns and the e-ink
refreshing on these turns equates to 3 to 6 seconds it
takes for a
page to turn.
The E Ink display
took a second or two to
refresh when we scrolled out of the visible area or moved to a new
page.
Especially how it handles
page turns (because it looks like it
takes a few seconds to
refresh and display the next
page).
It would not be just a simple
refresh but the
page turn
takes a little bit longer then rival programs.
One is to
take advantage of the touchscreen, which tends to have ghosting issues and makes the entire
page refresh each
page you turn.
Every six
pages there is a full -
page refresh and it
takes a few seconds for the
refresh process to complete.
It normally
takes a few seconds and then you will see a full
page refresh.
We have them all, we've
taken some big pictures, and we'll show you which one has the best
page refresh rate, how long each one lasts, and which has the crispest text.
When you have an e-book open, tapping the screen brings up a set of controls, including text - size settings, a button for adding bookmarks, a button that
takes you to the table of contents from anywhere, a
refresh button (which resyncs the e-book with your Kindle, turning to the last
page you read), and a slider control that allows you to jump around the e-book (along with a «snap - back» button that will return you to the last
page you read).
The only power is
taken when the
page is turned and the screen
refreshed.
The
refresh on Kindle
takes very little time — you can synchronize blinking with it so you won't notice it or just use the time to move eyes from the bottom of the
page to the top.
If you're willing to
take the risk that you can order one online, these are the
pages worth
refreshing:
For example, if you navigate to the notification tab and
refresh the
page, Metal will simply reload your notifications, where the mobile site will actually
refresh the entire
page and
take you back to your feed.
«With this change, Penguin's data is
refreshed in real time, so changes will be visible much faster, typically
taking effect shortly after we recrawl and reindex a
page,» Illyes said in the post.