Sentences with phrase «really long battery life»

On the upfront, It has a beautiful design and a really long battery life with 3 days of capacity and it is also IP68 protected.
For really long battery life (and enhanced portability) in a budget laptop, you may want to look to a smaller - screen laptop - tablet hybrid such as the 11 - inch Asus Transformer Mini (14:14), although you may take a performance hit as well as losing some features
* really long battery life.
The $ 349 Android device also features a full - HD, 1920 x 1200 display, front - facing speakers and really long battery life.
This will allow for easy and comfortable handling for long hours, which is perhaps indicative of them having a really long battery life.
And he started talking about how the iPads had really long battery life and how you didn't have to have power cords in the classroom.
We also loved that it has a really long battery life because it was designed for low power consumption.

Not exact matches

If future Bluetooth updates really do help with battery life, the AirPods should be able to hold up long enough to power noise cancelling tech without immediately dying.
I really hope that Ms. Learned's final quote about hoping the computer would have «a long memory» is a typo (long battery life?)
There was some really promising technology that emulated the best aspects of e-ink, able to be viewed in direct sunlight and had a longer battery life.
While I have not had the Bold 9700 long enough to really test out battery life, it seems that after 2 days, the battery may last longer than the original Bold 9000.
Instead of being just another gadget tethered to another cord or charging dock, a longer battery life means more convenience for a wearable that for the past century never really required charging.
With a super long battery life, reliable WiFi, the new GlowLight feature, nice display and a large collection of available books, this e-reader really has a lot to offer.
We would have liked a better camera and longer battery life, but in general, we really like this phone a lot.
The in - depth analysis is coming in the full written CrackBerry review, which will be hitting the blogs tomorrow (it's been so long since I've reviewed a new BlackBerry Smartphone that it's taking me a bit longer than normal... and I also wanted to take a couple extra days to really use the device and see how the device performance and battery life holds up in various conditions).
The battery life on the BlackBerry Torch 9800 on the latest OS is really not all that good, so using the BlackBerry Curve 3G reminded me of just how long a BlackBerry battery should last.
The magazine also had nice things to say about the cheaper $ 159 Kindle Fire, applauding Amazon's second - generation version for its longer battery life — though what they really seemed to love best was its $ 159 price tag.
I believe that thin Windows tablets with a long battery life are here to stay, and I really wonder what would have happened if Microsoft had decided to build Surface 2 with an Intel Bay Trail processor with a full version of Windows instead.
All of this is to say, the battery life really is as long as promised.
Ironically, having the longest battery life doesn't really sell more phones, while other more visible features certainly do.
It features build quality and industrial design a cut above all other Android phones; long battery life; blazing fast performance; really nice interface customizations; wonderful camera software; and terrific sound.
But its strong performance, long battery life and comfortable keyboard are what will really draw you to this lightweight workhorse.
There are some features that really interest me like the 1.3 kg in weight, touch screen and 12 hr long battery life.
While I'm really excited to have longer battery life and Assistant on my watch, what I really want to see are smaller watches.
Pebble watches have features that no other smartwatches have really been able to crack: longer battery life, truly always - on screens, and all Pebbles (except the Round) have been water resistant, even for swimming.
Granted, the former would take far longer than two weeks to manifest itself, but the always - on mode of the stock watchfaces hasn't really made the device's battery life too bad for my use case.
When it comes to using either device as a sketchpad / writing platform, however, I don't really care about 60 FPS gaming possibilities: I want long battery life, smooth interaction with the tablet's stylus of choice, fast brush rendering in artistic apps, and comfort on my lap and in my arms.
The trade off is longer battery life, but that isn't really necessary when we are talking about a quad core CPU powered by a 4000 mAh battery.
Battery life is only a plus in that, in my experience, iPad batteries tend to last longer before they start to lose capacity, and they're smaller devices so charging lockers take less classroom space than laptop versions... But it's really not a big enough difference to accept the tradeoff in every other area.
Navigation being temperamental, an over-dependence on voice input, a lack of apps that will really define it as that much better than the competition, and in this instance battery life that's not as long - lasting as the near competition are all points of note.
For the «overcharging» myth, she points out that smartphones and laptops are smartly designed so that their batteries don't receive additional juice after they've been fully charged, so you can really just leave your phone plugged in forever and it won't have any long - term negative impact on its battery life.
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