The shortcuts along the bottom of the screen can be set to recall radio stations, destinations, or contacts for hands - free calling.
Not exact matches
Along the
bottom edge
of the
screen is a bank
of five customizable
shortcut softkeys that can be used to store radio presets, as you'd expect.
Along the
bottom of the
screen are large virtual button
shortcuts to hands - free phone controls (which also reads SMS text messages via text - to - speech), climate controls, seat heat and cooling controls, and the audio sources.
While I'm not a fan
of the aesthetics, I loved that the system is well organized with
shortcuts to the major functions ever - present at the top
of the
screen and customizable «presets»
along the
bottom that can be programmed to call up radio stations, audio sources, destinations for navigation and more with a single tap.
CyanogenMod adds to the
bottom of every
screen an Android 3.0 «Honeycomb» — like bar with Home, Menu, and Back buttons,
along with a quick
shortcut to the Android notifications window.
To aid navigation, B&N has added a new «
shortcuts» bar at the
bottom of its home
screen, similar to the
shortcuts arraigned
along the top
of the Fire's
screen, to quickly access books, newsstand, movies, music and apps.
Tiled
along the
bottom of the home
screen are nine customizable
shortcuts, which are, by default, Chrome, Gmail, Google Maps, Play Store, Apps, News Place, Books Place, Toshiba File Manager and Settings.
Along the
bottom of the
screen are a row
of tabs, one each for content like Entertainment (which contains widgets for music and videos) and communications (which includes an e-mail widget, and app
shortcuts for contacts, a dialer (which may not be on the U.S. version), and a call log).
No, it's actually in a pull up drawer from the
bottom of the
screen,
along with all the other
shortcuts.
Hook up to a monitor and you can either
screen - mirror or get a desktop view with app
shortcuts and a
shortcuts bar
along the
bottom of the
screen — similar in many ways to Huawei's desktop view.