One is located along the top edge, facing upward, and the other grill, split around the micro USB
port along the bottom edge, is facing downward.
There's also a USB Type - C charging
port along the bottom of the phone, volume rocker and power button on the right edge, headphone jack at the top, and a place to slot your SIM card on the left.
One is located along the top edge, facing upward, and the other grill, split around the micro USB
port along the bottom edge, is facing downward.
You'll find a single speaker, 3.5 mm audio jack and centered USB Type - C
port along the bottom, while the dual nano - SIM card tray sits on the left side.
Not exact matches
Along the
bottom of the phone you'll find speaker holes on both sides of the Lightning
port.
On the
bottom you have a micro USB
port and dual speakers, and on the right are volume and power buttons,
along with a microSD slot that supports cards up to 128 GB.
Along the
bottom edge of the display sits Mini-HDMI and Micro-USB
ports.
Running
along the
bottom lip are two tiny stereo speakers and a proprietary Samsung
port.
Along the edges you'll only find two buttons (power and volume toggle on top) and just one
port (the 10 - pin proprietary connector) on the
bottom.
Along the
bottom edge are micro-USB and headphone
ports, plus a power / sleep / wake button.
While the last few generations of Curve have not had any charging contacts
along the
bottom for use with a Charging Stand or Charging Pod accessory, we're guessing we should see some BlackBerry or third party charging stands show up for the 9380 which will slot nicely into this
port.
Along the left side is a MicroSDHC card slot for adding up to 32 GB of storage; at the
bottom is the Micro-USB
port for charging and for sideloading content via a computer.
The Vivo V9 has a Micro-USB
port at the
bottom along with the loudspeaker, a 3.5 mm headphone jack, and a microphone.
Along the
bottom bezel sits the headphone jack and a Micro-USB
port for charging the tablet and for transferring data from your PC.
A microUSB
port and a 3.5 mm jack are both included
along the
bottom.
Along the left side is a MicroSDHC card slot for adding up to 32 GB of storage, and at the
bottom is the Micro-USB
port for charging and for sideloading content via a computer.
There are holes cut out of the case for the rear camera, the stereo speakers
along the
bottom, the volume rocker and 3.5 mm headphone socket, as well as the power button and Micro USB charging
port.
Now the On / Sleep / Off slider is on the
bottom — less convenient, but only a minor annoyance —
along with the microUSB
port, headphone jack, and volume toggle.
All of the Kindle's buttons and
ports — the volume rocker, headphone jack, micro-USB, and power switch — are now neatly in a row
along the
bottom edge.
The MP3 player produced decent audio through a headset (the jack is on the
bottom edge
along with the Mini-USB
port).
The image is also revealing a front facing camera, a micro USB
port at the
bottom along with a three speaker set up that seems to be designed to output stereo quality sound both in landscape and portrait mode.
Like any good phone in 2017, the ZenFone 3 Zoom includes a USB Type - C
port on the
bottom,
along with a handy headphone jack and a conveniently located fingerprint sensor around back.
The IdeaPad design favors a landscape orientation, with the micro-HDMI
port, headphone jack, and docking
port running
along the
bottom edge; power, volume buttons, screen - rotation lock and microSD card slot running
along the left side.
At the top are the power button and the single, woeful - sounding monoaural speaker; at the left is the volume rocker, and
along the
bottom are the headphone jack and the Micro-USB
port for charging and data transfers.
There are powerful dual speakers at the
bottom,
along with a USB - C
port; they blast out sound significantly louder than both the ZenPad Z10 and the Samsung Galaxy Tab S2.
Last but not least is a pair of docking
ports for the optional cover
along the
bottom.
Along the edges of the Tab 10.1 you'll only find two buttons (power and volume toggle on top) and just one
port (the 10 - pin proprietary connector) on the
bottom.
The
port for the power adapter sits on the
bottom of the tablet,
along with a pair of slots to connect the Pro 700T to its keyboard dock, and a magnetic connector.
It has holes cut out of it for the 2 - megapixel rear camera, the single mono speaker
along the
bottom, the volume rocker and 3.5 mm headphone socket, as well as the power button and Micro USB charging
port.
Along the
bottom are power, Micro-USB, and Micro HDMI
ports; the stereo speakers, oddly, both sit on the top of the tablet (in portrait mode) or the left.
Along the
bottom edge are, from left to right, a Mini-USB
port (for charging the Libre Touch and connecting it to a PC), a MicroSD card slot (if you want more than the internal 4 GB of memory), a volume rocker control, and a standard 3.5 mm headphone
port.
Along the
bottom is a wireless on / off switch, mini-USB and headphone
ports, volume controls, and the power
port.
Along the
bottom are two stereo speaker grilles flanking a micro USB
port for charging and syncing with the included cable and power adapter.
Other inputs onboard include a dock connector, a micro-USB
port, and a Mini-HDMI connector
along the
bottom edge (right side in landscape mode).
Along the
bottom edge are two more covered
ports: one protecting the microUSB
port, and the other covering a microSD / microSIM card slot.
Buttons and
ports are kept to a minimum, with a slightly textured power button and volume rocker on one side and a microSD slot
along the
bottom.
Along the lower left (portrait), or
bottom edge (landscape), sits the full - size USB 2.0
port for use with USB devices like a flash drive or hard drive.
For starters, like Apple's iPad 2, it has no
ports beyond its docking
port, located centered
along the horizontal
bottom edge.
When held in the landscape orientation, the tablet has its power and headphone jacks at the left edge, towards the top; Micro-HDMI output
along the left edge, at the
bottom; and, micro-USB
port for tethered data transfers and USB - A
port at the lower right edge.
The proprietary charging / docking
port sits on the
bottom as you hold the device in landscape,
along with a headphone jack and a microSD card slot.
At its
bottom you'll find a USB Type - C
port, and
along its long right - hand side you'll find a Nano SIM and microSD card slot.
Along the
bottom edge are microUSB and HDMI
ports, a headphone jack, reset button and microphone.
The 3.5 mm jack and micro USB
port are on the top and
bottom edges, respectively, while the Volume and Power buttons, IR emitter, and microSD card slot are all
along the right edge.
Along the left side of the Galaxy S II is a long volume bar; the right has a tiny power key within easy thumb reach, the
bottom has a microUSB
port, and a headphone jack graces the top edge.
Along the
bottom of the tablet are three
ports: HDMI Micro, microUSB, and a magnetic rapid charger connection.
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.
Along the Tri-Fi's
bottom edge, you'll find two antenna inputs and a microUSB
port.
Joining the camera on the back are stereo speakers, while up top is a headphone jack,
along with the power / screen lock button, and the
bottom edge is home to a microUSB
port.
Looking at the hardware side of things, the device looks to include four speakers — two top and two
bottom ones —
along with a Fingerprint scanner integrated into the home button, a USB Type - C
port and a keyboard dock connector on the side of the device.
Like the iPad 2, it has no
ports beyond its docking
port, which is centered
along the horizontal
bottom edge.