We can also see an iris scanner on the top,
the standard volume rocker and power button on the left and right side as well as an additional button, which is rumored to provide quick access to Samsung's own digital assistant called Bixby.
Not exact matches
The device is so slim it has no room for
standard - sized ports, except for the audio jack on its right edge, which also holds a
volume rocker and the
power button.
The physical
buttons appear to be what you'd expect from any other Android phone: back, menu, home,
and search are coupled with your
standard power button and volume rocker.
This white plastic area is host to various connectors
and buttons: a
standard 3.5 mm headphone jack, secondary mic
and power / lock key on top; a micro-USB / MHL port, primary mic at the bottom; a
volume rocker on the left;
and nothing on the right.
The first big change is having physical
power and volume keys on the front of the left edge of the machine — the
volume rocker is there for use when in tablet mode (there are
standard keyboard
volume keys), but the
power button is actually the only way to turn the laptop on
and off with a physical switch.
Other features seem pretty
standard with an USB Type - C port, a headphone jack, loudspeaker, microphone,
volume rockers and a
power button.
Meanwhile, you're looking at a fairly
standard port
and button arrangement — a textured
power key
and smooth
volume rocker on the right edge, below the nano - SIM slot,
and a microSD tray over on the left.
The right side of the handset is
standard issue for a Lumia, with the
power button at the mid-way point
and the
volume rocker above.
Credit: Keith Agnello / Tom's GuideOn the right, you'll find a
standard power button, while the left sports a
volume rocker and a quick
button that by default is set to open the Outdoor Essentials app, though you can reprogram it to launch any app installed on your phone.
On the left side of the device you'll find all of the
buttons, including the
standard volume rocker and iconic Xperia metal silver
power button.
On the right side of the phone are the
standard power button and volume rocker,
and on the left side you'll find the fingerprint sensor.
The positions of the
buttons and ports are a pretty
standard affair, with the
volume rocker and power button on the right edge, the SIM card slot on the left, the micro-USB port at the bottom,
and the 3.5 mm headphone jack at the top.
Most of this is
standard, but the
power button and volume rocker is unique to the Mi Box compared to the rest of the Android TV devices we've seen on the market.
On the right side are the
power button and volume rocker —
standard stuff.
There's no mistaking the S6 for anything other than a Samsung device though, with the signature physical home
button, flanked by capacitive home
and recent apps keys, still present, along with the
standard button layout of the
power button and volume rocker to the right
and left respectively.
On the right side you'll find a USB - C port
and a charge indicator LED,
and on the left, you'll see another USB - C port with indicator light as well as a 3.5 - millimeter
standard audio port that supports headphones
and a mic in any combination along with a
volume rocker switch
and a
power button.
On the right side of the device, you'll find a
volume rocker and power button, which is pretty
standard placement.
OnePlus switched out the
standard black option for a white color scheme,
and added subtle design flourishes in the form of a bright red Alert Slider along with a black
power button and volume rocker.