The brightness level is also high enabling you to
read the screen even in direct sunlight.
Not exact matches
You know what they're thinking and feeling,
even if you're
reading it on a
screen.
Someone using a
screen reading program could know exactly who and what's in an image, their location, maybe
even their expressions.
For the early explorers, and certainly for those in Europe
reading their first reports, the specificity and detail of America's native flora and fauna, and
even more, its aboriginal Indian cultures, which by 1492 had already completed a long and distinguished history in this hemisphere, were swallowed up in a generalized feeling of newness which replaced that specificity and detail with the blank
screen of an alleged «state of nature.»
We
read the Bible «through the Jesus lens» — which looks suspiciously like it means using the parts of the Gospels that we like, with the awkward bits carefully
screened out, which enables us to disagree with the biblical texts on God, history, ethics and so on,
even when Jesus didn't (Luke 17:27 - 32 is an interesting example).
They never
even take their eyes away from their
screen Read more..
The backlit
screen is huge, with large numbers so you can
read it
even in a dark bedroom.
Even if you have a 60 inch
screen tv and your baby thinks its real life, the odds of your baby learning to
read that easily are slim to none.
UCLA scientists found that sixth - graders who went five days without
even glancing at a smartphone, television or other digital
screen did substantially better at
reading human emotions than sixth - graders from the same school who continued to spend hours each day looking at their electronic devices.
That's why sleep experts, doctors, and others recommend that in the
evening you avoid blue light — the type generated by computer, tablet or smartphone
screens like the one you're probably
reading this story on right now.
Even though you can download and save the e-Book to iBooks on your iPhone (not android), it's not recommended to do so because of the large file size and because it will be hard to
read it on a small
screen.
Once the app is open users can ask Alexa to
read messages, look for matches, see who viewed their profiles and
even display photos (the latter is only if they have the Echo Show, which includes a
screen.)
Easy to
read,
even on smaller mobile device
screens; Cons:
Easy to
read,
even on smaller mobile device
screens.
profiles Interface is easy to navigate Easy to
read,
even on smaller mobile device
screens.
I also want to mention Nicolas Winding Refn's The Neon Demon, which I kind of loved (
read my review)
even though critics at the first
screening were so angry they yelled at the
screen when the credits started rolling.
and despite us having nothing to do with Silva
Screen, we both eagerly nodded and said «Yes», to which he replied «I loved what you did with Cutthroat Island», so we thanked him and walked out of the room), Don Davis, Zbigniew Preisner, Trevor Jones, Lalo Schifrin, and
even Trevor Rabin, who unfortunately had
read some of my reviews.
And
even though IMDb lists no fewer than 37 directing credits for Franco (which doesn't include practically any of his multimedia art projects, from the Sundance - launched live
reading of a classic «Three's Company» episode, to the Berlin gallery -
screened short he made wearing a dildo on his nose), the bar had been set pretty low.
If you have
read Thomas Hardy's 1874 novel or seen director John Schlesinger's 1967 (and far more energetic)
screen adaption starring Julie Christie, or
even if you are a High School Literature student with the novel on your summer
reading list, you will probably be interested in this more modern - day thinking approach from director Thomas Vinterberg (The Hunt).
Granted, I have only seen the film once, and this meticulous product of years of
reading and lecturing about Deleuze's Cinéma was not finished yet (
even though it was a public
screening in CalArts» grand auditorium).
I haven't
read the novels (I've paged through some of «Dragon Tattoo» in English), but
even fans I've talked to don't make any claims for Larsson as a great writer (albeit in translation), and the Swedish movie version struck me as little more than a straightforward work of adaptation: «OK, we're going to take this story and put it on the
screen.»
«But it always hurts to
read nasty comments,
even when they're not directed at me... I've seen horrible religious and racial bigotry that comes from cowards who are hiding behind a computer
screen or a cellphone.»
I missed a recent
screening of The Sense of an Ending but I
read the book, which felt plodding and took me a while to finish
even though it's a slim volume.
I was never one to watch the television series, and a big
screen movie excites me
even less, but I thought I'd post this because someone
reading is probably interested (oh, and the news is slow today).
Everything as you would expect, is scaled down to fit on a smaller
screen and the writing which isn't all that large when the game is in TV mode is now
even smaller, with some like the words being uttered by a certain character, whilst out in the field is very hard to
read and make out, so while you can take the game out on the go and play it wherever you want on the Switch, your best bet is to only ever play it when docked.
Even graduates of Zoolander's Center for Kids who Can't
Read Good would be hard pressed to decipher what the game is telling you during battle, and with how chaotic the
screen can get, there were more times that I had to take myself out of the action to determine my next objective than I'd like to admit.
Woody Harrelson as Haymitch does a bit of angsting; Elizabeth Banks as Effie in her trademark overblown peplums gets an emotional closeup near the end after a few nondescript scenes; Stanley Tucci as smarmy broadcaster Caesar flickers briefly on the big
screen while issuing a video news bulletin; we
even get a glimpse or two of the late great Philip Seymour Hoffman as Plutarch Heavensbee who, in a nice farewell touch, has almost the last word in his final missive to Katniss which is
read aloud.
The charm of Paris fills the
screen as Matthias (Kevin Kline) heads purposefully down a street where
even the graffiti («Todayis the Shadow of Tomorrow»)
reads like a Sorbonne undergrad thesis.
Later: Multiple festival
screenings to discuss this weekend, so you might have to forgive some
even shorter - form reviewing than the piece you've just
read.
THE LAST SHOT, a movie about making movies, cries out for the acerbic tone of THE PLAYER, or the finely observed lunacy of DAY FOR NIGHT, or
even the distilled vitriol of ALL ABOUT EVE (yes, I know that film is about the stage, not the
screen, but there are so few GOOD films about...
Read More»
The script of FWWM
read very differently to the movie on
screen; maybe that's the reason it's
even more hard to comprehend than usual.
Even though As I Lay Dying is an English speaking film, the French speaking audience members at this
screening likely better understood what was being said because they at least had subtitles to
read.
Possibly
even weirder than the movie everyone's been playing in their head since they first
read a logline, Swiss Army Man (Grade: B --RRB- went over a lot better last night, in the close - to - midnight
screening I attended, than its DOA reputation suggests.
This can be done
even before a child can
read, testing things like phonological awareness, or sound awareness, which are good predictors of whether a child will have
reading problems, says John D. E. Gabrieli, director of MIT's Integrated Learning Initiative, who will focus on making the
screening tool.
The program is a five - year initiative to build a web - based
screening tool that diagnoses
reading problems before kids can
even read, and to develop a set of home and school interventions that personalize literacy support for kids, parents, and teachers.
But
even when the technology is working perfectly, it can be an adjustment for students to navigate a computer
screen, perform drag - and - drop activities, do scratch work in math or underline words in a
reading passage.
A warm - up
reading of words and phrases on flashcards or
even a
screen is often useful.
It was the first Mazda to use the new generation MZD Connect infotainment system, featuring a stylish colour display
screen high up on the dashboard (it's a touchscreen interface, but one you don't have to use), an easy to work rotary control, extra information
read - outs in the main instruments and
even a head - up display feature.
It's grille
even has a digital
screen that
reads «Hello!»
And with the top down, the
screen is hard to
read,
even on days with slightly overcast skies.
Both
screens are very easy to
read,
even in direct sunlight, and quite resistant to glare.
Presentation is a strong point considering the price —
even on the base - model cars — thanks to a mix of surface treatments, an easy - to - navigate digital instrument cluster
read - out and the placement of an eight - inch
screen (seven - inch on both the four - cylinder and V6 base models) atop the centre fascia.
The buttons are tiny and hard to
read, the on -
screen buttons are
even harder to
read, and the Bluetooth was difficult to set up.
With only four inches (diagonally) of
screen space, maps are hard to
read, and
even the energy - flow display tries to pack too much information into the limited real estate.
Print - ready PDFs have their own oddities — such as different margins for odd /
even pages, and ligatures (which impair the text's searchability)-- that make them unsuitable for
screen - based
reading.
So right now, if you want to
read books that contain pictures,
even in black and white, a backlit
screen is optimal.
I once asked book industry maven Mike Shatzkin about my rather eccentric views on all this, and he told me in an ensuing email: «You may very well be right about the differences between paper -
reading and
screen -
reading, in trerms of brain chemistry, but just as nobody in the past heeded the calls that radiation and cancer might impact cellphone use, do you think makers of device readers will listen to you or
even care if you are right?»
And
even though EPD
screens can be
read in direct sunlight, the
screen contrast is much lower than backlit LCD
screens.
The Cybook Gen3 from Bookeen is an ultra-light
reading device that uses the E ink ®
screen technology (VizPlex), giving a paper - like high contrast appearance that is readable
even under direct sunlight.
The E Ink
screen can be used for
reading ebooks, making calls, checking messages and social network feeds, displaying images and maps, weather updates, and
even videos and games.