Sentences with phrase «physical power button and a volume»

On the right are what appear to be a physical power button and a volume rocker, and it is completely black in color.
The patent applies to the oval - shaped physical button but not for the physical power button and volume rocker.

Not exact matches

The power button and a physical volume rocker sit on the top right side of the tablet, while the top edge houses the various ports.
Volume controls and a power / standby button are the last of the physical keys.
The right hand side features physical volume buttons and a power button.
There are physical volume buttons, a power button and a «n» Nook button on the face of the device, just below the screen.
There are no physical buttons on the unit other than the power and volume buttons.
From the image above, it looks like the Galaxy Tab S2 features a physical home button (which may also double up as a fingerprint sensor), with the power and volume buttons on the right hand side.
The power and volume buttons — the T408's only physical buttons — reside on the right.
There is a power / standby button, volume rocker and dedicated camera button on the right - hand side and that's as far as physical buttons go.
A Touch - Sensitive Reading Interface The Nook Color comes with few physical buttons: just Volume controls on the right panel, a Power button on the left, and the «N» logo below the screen that serves as your Home button.
In terms of physical ports you have a micro HDMI and Micro-USB on the bottom of the tablet; the right - hand side offers a 3.5 mm jack along with a volume rocker and power / standby button.
The Nook Color comes with few physical buttons: just Volume controls, a Power button, and the «N» button that serves as your Home button.
Volume and power aside there are no physical buttons on the tablet, though the keyboard dock has more than enough and then some.
On the left is a headset jack and physical buttons for volume and power.
The physical buttons appear to be what you'd expect from any other Android phone: back, menu, home, and search are coupled with your standard power button and volume rocker.
There are only three physical buttons on the Xoom: volume up, volume down and power / lock.
The only physical buttons present on the device are the power button and volume rocker located in the recessed area on one side.
The right side of the phone is home only to a power / sleep button and a dual SIM card tray, while a volume rocker and a physical toggle button are found on the left side.
With hardware keys you have a volume rocker, power / unlock, and physical camera shutter button running down the right hand side.
The sides have physical buttons for volume up / down and power function.
The Sony (again shown on bottom) has a light switch, a physical power port, a mini-USB port, a headphone jack, and awkwardly situated volume - up and - down buttons.
And as this tablet lacks any physical face buttons, it can be tricky at times to tell which way you should grab it to power it on or adjust the volume.
The first big change is having physical power and volume keys on the front of the left edge of the machine — the volume rocker is there for use when in tablet mode (there are standard keyboard volume keys), but the power button is actually the only way to turn the laptop on and off with a physical switch.
The device utilizes on - screen buttons, while it sports a couple of physical keys on the right, its power / lock, volume up and volume down buttons.
The volume and power buttons are located on the top - right corner of the device (assuming you're holding it in portrait orientation) and the only other physical input is the home button, which also doubles as a surprisingly fast and accurate fingerprint scanner.
It looks like the device will have its power button on its right side, while its left side will have the volume keys and another physical button.
Despite the significant departure from the norm, there's no mistaking either the Galaxy S6 or the S6 Edge as anything other than a Samsung device, with both devices retaining key signature elements, with classic layout of a physical home button flanked by Back and Recent Apps keys still found up front, along with the power button and volume rocker found on their usual sides, to the right and left respectively.
The only physical buttons are the textured power / standby switch and the volume rocker, which are both located on the right side of the device.
But now, it's simple: press volume down and power at the same time to take a screenshots (or the home button and power on Galaxy devices with physical buttons).
The placement of the physical buttons such as the mute switch, the volume controls, and power button are similar to that of the iPhone 7, but the Touch ID sensor is built into the front display.
The Epic 4G's other physical controls are the volume rocker on the left spine, and the power / screen lock key and camera button on the right.
Both the power / lock and volume rocker physical buttons will be located on the phone's right - hand side, and that's pretty much it everything we know about the device at the moment.
The right side of the phone is home only to a power / sleep button and a dual SIM card tray, while a volume rocker and a physical toggle button are found on the left side.
On the tablet are physical power and volume buttons for quick access without the keyboard attached, and a fingerprint reader in the bezel allows for speedy Windows Hello sign - ins.
Both the Galaxy S9 and S9 + utilize a combination of the Bixby, volume, and power buttons to enter into either recovery mode or download mode, absent the physical home button not seen since the S7 series a few years back.
The power and volume buttons are still located on the rear, and there's no physical home button.
On the right there's the volume rocker switch, followed by the power / lock in the centre and a physical camera shutter button towards the base — a rarity among smartphones these days, but something Windows Phone handsets stick with.
, as well as a USB Type - C connector, power and volume buttons placed on the left side of the two handhelds, and a right - side physical key that we're pretty sure will be used to engage Bixby.
The physical power and volume rocker buttons are going to replaced by virtual ones to reduce repair and increase resistance.
The only real physical annoyance about the X Play is its loose volume rocker, which rattles when I move the phone around and feels nowhere near as nice and tactile as the ridged power button.
The only physical buttons here are the power and volume keys, and they're well situated mid-way up the left - hand side.
Instead, Google sticks to the tried and true method of using the physical power and volume buttons as well as the Assistant to help capture content on your screen...
Apart from the volume buttons and the power / sleep / wake button, the Galaxy Note 8 is also rumored to sport a Bixby dedicated physical button.
Both physical keys are placed on the right - hand side of this smartphone, the power / lock key, and the volume rocker buttons which are placed above it.
There's just two physical buttons on the HTC Desire C, a volume rocker switch on the right hand side and a power / lock key on top, which sits opposite a 3.5 mm headphone jack.
The right frame has all the physical buttons for volume and power functions.
According to OnLeaks, the back features twin cameras in a vertical orientation for better depth sensing for AR, while the placement of the physical buttons such as the mute switch, the volume controls, and power button are similar to that of the iPhone 7.
The power button and volume rocker are both on the right - hand side of the device but that's it when it comes to physical buttons.
Both have USB Type - C and both have no physical buttons on the front, with the power and volume rocker positioned on the side.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z