Not exact matches
The Galaxy Tab 3 10.1 clearly wants you to use it in landscape mode; its speakers are embedded into the side edges; the Samsung logo and front - facing camera are centered above the display; and a
slightly raised home
button is flanked by two soft navigation
buttons, centered beneath the display.
It has several
buttons that are
slightly raised and placed placed at the bottom side.
The same premium, slim metal build is present with the Apple logo on the rear,
slightly raised rear camera lens in the top left - hand corner and the Touch ID home
button beneath the display on the front.
It's thicker, has more ports and
buttons and a
slightly raised screen.
On to the right is the power
button and a pair of volume rockers — the latter being
slightly raised that the former.
Each is
slightly raised too — Fitbit presumably thinks this will help you find them more easily when you're fumbling around for the
buttons while sweating and gasping for breath when pushing yourself.
And in terms of design too, looks rather similar — the front has a 5.2 - inch display that is
slightly raised from the rest of the body, with speakers above and below it that curve out
slightly, and no touch or hard
buttons (all the
buttons are onscreen).
Slightly raised similar to the camera setup makes it easy to locate, it has a solid click to it once you push the
button.
Above the
buttons sits the G4's 16 - megapixel optically - stabilized rear camera, which is
raised ever so
slightly from the surface of the phone.
The back, home, and multitasking
buttons are
raised slightly above the body of the phone and feature a nice, tactile clickiness.
Adding to that, the power
button and volume rocker are positioned along the top half of the left edge, which is the opposite of most devices, and will take some getting used to, and while the
buttons are metal, they're only
slightly raised, and offer very little in the way of travel and tactility.
You'll find glossy, black power and reset
buttons with a bright - blue status light just above the PC's
slightly raised Drift insignia.
This one sits in a
slightly raised hump with a micro-grooved ring around it, and ultimately the
button sits
slightly nestled inside for ease of finding.
The plastic exterior is almost completely smooth: the keypad
buttons aren't individual, but a flat grid delineated by small, but effective
raised bumps and the round control pad, situated in the middle of the phone's face,
raises slightly on the outside and actually dips in to make a concave dish.
At the bottom of the screen are a
slightly raised, round navigator pad along with two menu
buttons, a call
button and a cancel / backtrack key.
Towards the right side, the volume
button and the cover around it is
slightly raised, and just above that is the volume rocker
button.