Sentences with phrase «reading on screen seems»

Not exact matches

At night, I turn the brightness down all the way, and the Kindle app has an invert mode where it puts white on black background instead of black on white background, so it's pretty dark, and I found that a pretty comfortable experience and certainly preferable to my previous way of reading in the dark which was getting out a little AA battery — powered book light that I had to clip onto my Kindle — which seemed so backward that you have to have a second electronic device attached to your first electronic device — but [the] eInk screen on the Kindle doesn't light itself.
Xenoblade Chronicles» interface is also a little worse for wear: Menus or screens either seem unsuited for reading on a smaller display or are far blurrier and unappealing than they really should've been.
Ron Howard's film admirably represents Dan Brown's book on the big screen, and I'm sure it'll only be a matter of time before we see the prequel «Angels & Demons» up there also (since it seems everyone read the novels out of sequence anyway).
Extended text entry or reading seems to be a little more difficult on the smaller screens of iPod Touches, but a student who is familiar with the device frequently overcomes that difficulty with the experience they've developed over many hours of practice on other applications.
It just doesn't seem natural reading on a screen that small.
It seems she believes people have gotten tired of reading on their screens.
The graphics are colourful and fun, the text is very easy to read on the screen, and the animations are just detailed enough to make the game enjoyable without seeming over the top (or making you wait for them to load or play through).
The idea of adding a contrast - robbing layer on the screen just so I can read in complete darkness during one or two hours seems like a bit of a gimmick to me, but to each his own.
Many people do seem to want a color screen, but I find reading on them to be harder on the eyes — and despite improvements, I don't think they do as well in sunlight.
But it seems to me that if you pay more than 100 $, the gadget should be able to do more than read books on a small screen.
In total, it seems like I'll get 25 - 33 % more words on the K3 screen, which is great for a few reasons: having to press the page turn button less frequently (which is nice in itself) also means I should be able to read faster, and the battery will last longer, since e-Ink screens only use power when you change pages (you should get about 10,000 page turns per battery charge, regardless of how many words are on each page).
However, if you (a) like reading on an LCD screen, (b) are really interested in magazines, newspapers, children's books, or Internet surfing, or (c) are looking for an inexpensive Android tablet computer, the Nook Color may be worth a look, as it's snappy and seems to function well.
I found reading a more pleasurable experience than on the Voyage and Paperwhite, but the difference is marginal, and screen refreshes don't seem any faster than on other recent Kindles.
You'd think that the larger 7.8 - inch screen on the Aura One would make it the obvious choice for reading comics and manga compared to all the 6 - inch Kindles, but things aren't always what they seem.
Using the iPad's touch screen to buy books and start reading seems fast compared with the navigation required on Amazon.com Inc.'s Kindle, which you navigate by pushing physical buttons on the device because it has no touch screen.
Eli told me to he wanted me to sign him up for Shonen Jump Alpha, but he didn't seem enthused by the prospect of reading the latest installments of his favorite manga on the flat screen.
Also, I've read the original article a few days ago and it seemed they found a way to track your hands and fingers so they could actually show up on screen accurately.
Maybe Sci - fi MMOs should get Derek Smart to write a disclaimer that you need to read before you get to post on the forums It seems many players are happily oblivious to many of the technical limitations of having a game world that allows seamless transitions (no loading screens) between different environments and gameplay styles all the time pushing out top end graphics... on any machine they've decided to cobble together and abuse.
So they bought their own thermometer (I seem to recall it having a TWC logo on it) with a remote read out and put it in the screen instead.
Yet the old arguments remain: we like the touch, odour and aura of books and libraries; books are pleasant to own and collect; reading a book seems easier and less prone to error than viewing on screen; and it is convenient to have many books open at once.
We never really felt inclined to use the important tiles Samsung lined up for us on one of the home screens and the Papergarden app, though nice, seemed superfluous, given all the other magazine reading apps that already exist.
We won't go into detail again about the screen technology Motorola is using on its phones this year, but we're sad that the Droid 3 seems to have the same issues as the Droid X2 (read about them here).
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The color might be reading totally different on the screen, but in the pic they seem to really work with the reclaimed blue / green wood.
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