Not exact matches
It's simple: changes made to a Web
page are instantly translated to different
screen sizes.
Speak with your webmaster or designer, and get a sense of what it might take to make every
page on your site responsive to
screen size and user device.
Open the dinosaur book and hold it in front of a webcam attached to a computer, and the live image feed on the
screen displays a pint -
sized 3D T. tex roaming across the
page.
In the next
screen, you can share the picture with the Cameroid public gallery, save it as a jpg, print a full
size page, or trash it.
Currently, the Kindle is our top - rated e-reader, based on the combination of its compact
size, next - generation «Pearl» e-ink
screen, affordable price, and improved performance both in terms of battery life and
page - turn speed.
Replace the
page margins with a margin -
sized bezel that looks like a margin, e.g. same colour and covered by the outer layer of the
screen.
With a resolution of 1872 x 1404 pixels, the
screen offers crisp, sharp letters and high contrast with rich blacks and light whites.Even the smallest font
size can be read perfectly, allowing you to display more text on a
page than ever before.
The capacitive touch
screen is multi-touch: tap to open a menu item, drag to navigate or rotate
pages, and pinch - to - zoom to change the
size.
2 whole
page do not fit
screen as font style,
size, line margin n spacing etc do not work.
The all - new Kindle has an electronic - ink
screen with 50 percent better contrast than any other e-reader, a new sleek design with a 21 percent smaller body while still keeping the same 6 - inch -
size reading area, 15 percent lighter weight at just 8.5 ounces, 20 percent faster
page turns, up to one month of battery life with wireless off, double the storage to 3,500 books, no glare even in bright sunlight and built - in Wi - Fi - all for only $ 139.
Loss of
page breaks is okay in an ebook, because you can't predict the font
size or
screen size the reader is using, and you want to have continuous reflowable text.
Personally, I find the standard 2 -
page «spread» in comics problematic in a digital format, so making sure we're not using them often (or if we do, doing so in way that makes best use of the
screen size / format) so the reader doesn't have to keep zooming in and out to get the necessary story information is a concern.
Now there are the iRex readers, with a
page -
size screen.
And then to make things even more interesting when I am tired I magnify the font
size so now I can only see 80 words per
page on the
screen.
Sony's Digital Paper has a 13.3 inch display that shows full -
screen views of letter -
sized forms and documents in the PDF format, eliminating the need to zoom or scroll when reading a
page.
While I did find Manga Rock pretty convenient when I tried it some months back, it didn't have the option to automatically scale
pages to width or height like the older reader Mango (formerly Pocketmanga) did, which really adds a lot of convenience to reading on different
sized screens.
Up till now, I have seen Guided View mainly as a way to make a print comic readable on a
screen that's smaller than the standard
page size: It allows the reader to pan across the
page and zoom in on one panel at a time.
Won't a small ereader, like a six - inch, likely have a smaller battery than its larger cousins, and won't the smaller
screen -
size and use of larger fonts increase the number of necessary
page - turns and therefore drain the battery quicker than on a larger device?
Personally I want to see what is coming before I reach a
page break so I will not go paperless until I can get a two -
page life -
size display either on dual hinged tablets or on a large enough
screen.
Size-wise, the full eOneBook is in the A5
size format, and the actual «
pages» (
screens) are 155 mm length x 113 mm width.
And so as the
screen shrinks, so does the
page size, and with it the
size of the words, and with them both the readability.
Touching the pyramid / carat /
page number at the bottom of the
screen (the
screen seems forgiving for elderly shaky or pudgy fingers) results in a simple pop - up array of options, including for changing font
size, type and line spacing.
It's generously
sized, and supports multi-touch gestures, which enable you to navigate the multiple
screens of the Android home
page with ease.
Below the
screen are four more controls: Home, Back, Text
Size, and four - way directional buttons used for flipping
pages.
There are tradeoffs that come with the small
size, though — a smaller device means you get less
screen, five inches, rather than the Kindle's six — but once I got used to turning
pages a little more frequently, there wasn't a real difference in the reading experience.
Features include the ability to lend certain ebooks for 14 days, there are eight font types and five font
sizes, read in landscape or portrait modes with a lock for the
screen orientation, choose what
page to got to or use the scroll bar, and sync your library of ebooks and last
page read across devices.
Page counts are irrelevant since
screen size is determined by the reader's device and choice of font
size.
Adobe attributes the rise of tablet
page views to how well - suited the form factor is for web browsing, with the most obvious attribute being tablets» larger
screen size vs smartphones (albeit, that gap is closing as some tablets shrink and some smartphones swell).
Here I selected the largest print
size for the same
page, but, of course, not as much of it shows on one
screen.
The biggest USP of the e-reader is perhaps the large
size of the
screen, which is almost as much as an average magazine
page.
Most of the time due to
page size and
screen size the ebook
page numbers might be different from the printed version of the book.
The
screen size is perfect, it has two SD slots, touchscreen, physical
page turn buttons, built in audio player, and a really sturdy aluminum case.
Split
screen for notes is also nice, although I would want really either to toggle between the two full
size pages rather than reduce a
page size for note taking.
When you have a picture comparing two devices with different
screen sizes side by side, why is it not standard practice to show the same book, at the same
page, with the same font
size, margin
size and line spacing, so as allow
size comparison in a clear and simple way?
Its letter -
size screen can display a double -
page spread and even full PDF files, while the 206dpi resolution displays print - quality text in clear detail for long reading sessions.
The
page size is about the same as a mass market paperback and there really isn't any need for the larger
screen.
Settings for: Interface language, 360 degree
screen view rotation, 6 font
sizes, Multiple language encoding,
Page alignment, Line spacing, Line break, Date format, Time format, Auto power off time, Clock
Absolute
page numbers would be used to refer to a particular portion of a book in a way that would be consistent on different
screen and font
sizes and independent of the format of the eBook.
Analysis of
page view consumption by
screen size found a strong positive association between
screen size and content consumption.
Rendering
page numbers that change with font
size is typically using a
screen display as a
page.
-- High
screen resolution and / or good scaling algorithms, allowing PDFs with hardcover / comic book -
sized pages to look good in fullscreen.
They use the same exact text
sizes so the difference in text on -
screen and the frequency of
page - turns differs a lot between the two.
For instance, to get to the main configuration options
screen, where you can change not only display options but also toggle
page numbers and
page turn animations, you must tap the font
size icon, then tap «More.»
Although, if an affordable reader came out that could read normal PDFs, text files (ie, Project Gutenberg stuff), and web
pages, with a reasonably -
sized screen, then I would be interested.
Manypdfbooks / documentsareformatedasA5ortwocolumnsA4, soshouldbee asilyread (in terms of font
size) on6 «screeninlandscapemode (zoomedwithoutmargin s; two / threescreensperpage) andusingtwo - columnmode (four
screens per
page).
On this
size screen you can fit more text on a
page while still giving yourself generous margins, wide line spacing, or a bigger font.
Just an ereader with a
screen large enough to see the digital equivalent of a whole
page at a time with a readable
size font.
But 7.8 ″
screen would be probably immediate purchase for me because I read with large font -
size, and large
screen would show more of a
page.
Our Galaxy Tab product
page on Carrypad always shows a list of 10 comparable devices (based on
screen size) so check it out for the latest device alternatives.
Those who can afford to spend more, and don't mind a larger, heavier device, however, should consider the Kindle DX; its 9.7 - inch
screen better approximates the
size of a hardcover book, thus requiring fewer
page turns.