Sentences with phrase «page turning buttons for»

Use the capacitive touchs screen or dedicated page turning buttons for browsing through your books.
This e-reader also has a dedicated home button and physical page turn keys.Advanced settings lets you remap the page turn buttons for those of you that are left handed or want to read digital manga.
The device also comes with page turn buttons for added usability.

Not exact matches

Nine tips to create a landing page for your business that turns visitors into leads, instead of sending them toward the back button.
This fun toddler board book encourages kids to learn how to count and has interactive buttons that turn each page into a unique sensory experience for babies who are developing fine motor skills.
A book that reads itself to your toddler as she turns pages or pushes buttons leaves little room for a parent to interact.
The Sit - to - Stand Alphabet Train features letter blocks, a book with turning pages, five colorful number buttons, one movable elephant character, a motion sensor, a ride - on carriage and a drop - space for sending the blocks from the train to the carriage.
Others who were otherwise happy with the feature set asked for minor improvements, like better page turn buttons, improvements to backlight quality, and a home button to access books easier.
«Regarding new features, I don't have much and can't tell you, for example, if we'll be treated to... the return of «real» page turn buttons
The addition of hardware buttons, along with a 6 - inch Pearl e-ink display, means turning pages is a breeze, while the 2 GB of storage along with Micro-SD expansion is ample room for your books.
The issue of using the volume buttons for page turning has also been overhauled so that it now allows for better and more refined control.
Navigation is now done via a touch screen, which has allowed the number of external controls to be reduced to just five slim line buttons, that are needed for core functions such as page turning, zooming, accessing the options and a master home button.
That's really handy for showing moving images — you can animate page turning and buttons, that sort of thing.
I wish they all had good page - turn buttons — you'd think the hardware would be optimized for the most common action that people perform when using e-readers, but that's unfortunately not the case.
As for why page turns take longer when using the buttons, the answer is fairly straight forward.
I don't think the Kindle Voyage is for me, at any price point, because the haptic feedback on the page - turn buttons would surely jolt me out of my book world and right back into real life.
The main selling points for the Kindle Voyage are the high resolution 300 ppi screen, the frontlight, the page turn sensor buttons, the lightweight, portable design, the capacitive touchscreen, and flush display.
The top and bottom buttons are mainly used for turning pages forward or back when reading ebooks.
There is a dedicated home button on the front of the Note and no others, whereas the MAX2 has two other buttons beside the home, which is used for turning the pages of ebooks or accessing other features.
I can see how audio would be popular, but I think it better could be improved instead with: — page turn buttons; — greater processing power / speed for better responsiveness; — better pdf support for manga / comics / textbooks; — and color e-ink and higher ppi for displaying maps and book covers as well reading manga / comics / magazines (which are still sometimes fuzzy or hard to read at 300 ppi, in my opinion).
6 ″ lightweight e-reader 300ppi with frontlight, SD card, WIFI, page turn buttons, audio & TTS with good library management (or good interaction with Calibre), great dictionairies (or possibility to install), easy way for annotations, adaptable fonts, and... a way to have a good screen protector without having to add the weight of a whole cover (so maybe something like on some of the Samsung phones).
The Kindle Basic for the first time ever has a new touchscreen, all prior models of the entry level Kindle has had a D - Pad and physical page turn buttons.
It has physical buttons for easy page - turning.
It did away with physical page turn buttons and incorporated a touchscreen for the very first time.
I have a feeling they might do away with the Haptic feedback page turn buttons, since they weren't able to market this device in a lot of countries because it could not get the patent for it.
I'm also craving for actual buttons strategically positioned in a way so that I don't need to raise my hand to touch the screen to turn the page.
Although that arrangement isn't so bad for navigation, it is an awkward position for page turns, unless you're grasping the e-reader by the lower third (only then is it clear that the 2 - inch long centred button is situated so that it's in reach of either your left or right thumb).
For turning to the next page of the book, there is one button on each side of the kindle.
Also, if I heard right, the buttons for turning pages don't work for all reading apps.
The touch screen is a perfectly good substitute for physical controls; it was as quick to turn pages by swiping the screen as it was to press the button, and both methods were faster than the Kindle by a slim, but noticeable margin.
The page buttons can be programmed for a number of functions in the settings menu, which is nice because that gives you more control over how to use the device and it makes the buttons useful with apps like Kindle that require using volume buttons to turn pages.
Take for instance the case of page flipping, which can be accomplished in utmost ease with the help of three conveniently located page - turn buttons.
The physical page turn buttons really give it the edge because they are slim and optimized for right or left handed people.
Also it takes sometime to respond after pressing the button for turning page.
The device also comes sans any scrolling feature and needs a push button action to turn the page with no method available to jump to a particular chapter or page except jumping through every chapter without opening its page contents up for reading.
This is tremendously useful for people who want to exclusively rely on the manual page turn buttons.
My wishlist for Paperwhite 4 ~ MUSTS: Flush screen - PLEASE Please keep the more tactile - friendly rubberized back Page turn / Pagepress buttons Smaller / No bezel 8 / 32G Storage BE NICE: Waterproof ~ but it's not a deal - breaker Warmer lighting system, with more LED's — I DO like that the Oasis has 12 LED's, as opposed to Paperwhites» 4
It also has physical page turn buttons, which are useful for people who like to hold their e-reader with one hand.
The one thing this e-reader has going for it is that it has physical page turn buttons on the left and right sides.
On the conference table before us were the dozens of iterations of possible page - turning buttons for the new Kindle Voyage, buttons that would have been on the back of the Kindle, a switch button, and also arrows alongside the screen — a > for forward and a < for back — the most visually pleasing design and by far the most intuitive, but then in testing it turned out that people liked to turn the Kindle and read horizontally, which meant that the arrows were pointing, confusingly, up and down.
I'm working on posting reviews for the Android - powered InkBook Prime and InkBook Classic 2, and it turns out the Kindle app works pretty well on them, but it takes some work to get the page buttons setup and it's entirely not obvious unless you know exactly what to do.
The buttons that really matter, the ones for page turning, aren't good.
The tiny joystick has been replaced by cellphone - like four - way control buttons, and the page - turn Forward and Back buttons, which flank both edges, are silent now, for the benefit of sleeping spouses.
Thin and light ergonomic design with dedicated page turn buttons and adaptive front light so you can read even more comfortably for hours.
There should not just be buttons for page - turning, but great buttons.
The Kindle Paperwhite lacks physical buttons for page turning and does not perform auto - hyphenation.
I have had the exact opposite problem with the buttons on my PB 360 (all buttons too stiff, page - turn buttons to the point of being very inconvenient, D - Pad, which I actually use for page turning, sufficiently stiff that I've worn a grove in one side with my thumbnail page - forwarding, and that side now «squelches» rather than clicks on that side).
The only two minor design flaws I could find so far are the lack of page turning buttons (at least you can adjust your options for page turning a bit) and the lack of adjustable back light colors.
I especially miss the microSD slot (especially if only 500 MB is available for sideloaded content), plus the page turn buttons (I didn't use them as intended, but instead as shortcuts to apps after I rooted the device).
Nielsen also derided the Kindle Fire's lack of physical buttons for turning e-book pages, but again, that's true of every tablet on the market (and I don't think it's as frustrating as Nielsen makes it out to be).
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