Not exact matches
It's very chunky - looking compared to the 2016 Paperwhite and Oasis, however after a few minutes your eyes don't care that it's such old technology or has less PPI (I have
physical buttons, an
audio jack, and a speaker too).
New Fire phone has a 2.8 - inch touchscreen display with QVGA (240 x 320) resolution, a full
physical QWERTY keyboard, a 3 megapixel camera, dual - band HSDPA / quad - band EDGE, FM radio with RDS (radio data system), Wi - Fi 802.11 b / g / n, GPS, microSD card support (up to 32 GB), and a 3.5 mm
audio jack.
Other features include
physical page buttons,
audio support via a headphone
jack, IVONA text - to - speech, a microSD card slot, and up to 8 weeks battery life.
Aside from a small charging indicator light, that's it — there are no
physical page turn buttons, no headphone
jack or volume control (the Paperwhite has no
audio features), or any other
physical controls.
Physical connectivity comes in the shape of a 3.5 mm
jack for
audio, and a micro-USB 2.0 port for connection to a computer or for charging the battery.
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.
With just three
physical buttons to its name, the HTC Explorer's compact form factor is left largely untarnished, with the minimalist collection of hardened controls joined by a 3.5 mm
audio jack connector and a micro USB charging port on the otherwise smooth, round - edged finish.