Speaking of apps, if you want to quickly hop into another one
without going to the home screen, you can hit the menu button to bring up a window of running apps.
The ability to make the navigation bar and the keyboard appear by touching the bezels is great, and
going to the home screen from any application is easy: you just have to swipe vertically on the bottom part of the bezel.
Conversely, I can't count the number of times I was reading a webpage in Chrome and, instead of
going to the home screen as intended, I ended up having to reload the previous page and then go forward again before finally ending up on the home screen after a frustrated, determined long press.
I didn't really lose too much luckily, but I hate to think about if I had... In addition, while in the Microsoft edge app, I was trying to watch something (on a site that doesn't have its own app), and every 10 minutes or so, it would leave the app and
go to the home screen unless I moved the cursor around.
So, if you want to go back, you would force - touch in the bottom left, the middle
for going to the home screen and the right for showing the recent apps menu.
He showed a number of screenshots which showed how easier it is to use and to multitask including seeing the clock and the battery life indicator without the need to
go to the home screen as described in a report from Power Up Gaming.
There's no physical Home button, and you have to swipe up to
go to the Home screen, but it works fine.
Go to your home screen and swipe right or select Your Story from the top of the screen.
When unlocking, you can drag the ring upward to
go to the Home screen or drag an app icon into the ring to launch the app immediately.
Opening books,
going to the Home screen and browsing through menus is laggier than on Kindle 3.
Even iOS devices like the iPhone, iPad, and iPod Touch have hardware buttons for volume control and, of course,
going to the home screen.
A series of discreet buttons just below the display allow you to (in left - to - right order) go up one screen level, page back, page forward,
go to the home screen, do a search, change the text size and go to a general options screen so you can go to a specific page, create or edit notes, go to the table of contents, etc..
Go to your home screen and swipe down from the top.
If you are not able to delete any book than
go to home screen and shift the «Five Way Controller to left».
Swipes are used to
go to the home screen, navigate apps, change settings, and access the BlackBerry Hub, which contains all user notifications, including email, BBM, and Facebook activity.
Go to the home screen, press the menu button, and select «Settings».
To open BlackBook for the first time:
Go to your home screen, and hit the red END CALL button 5 times.
Instead, users will need to learn a new series of gestures in iOS 11 — like swipe up to
go to your home screen; double press on the side button to activate Apple Pay; and hold the side and volume button to power off.
This means if you are checking the trophies required for an elusive platinum you can switch easily between the game and the trophy application without having to
go to the home screen and trawl along to the desired section.
This would allow the user to make a movement or gesture that would do something in the game, such as hit a button,
go to a home screen or anything else Nintendo can find use of such an interesting gimmick.
Rather than raising the phone, waiting for the padlock to unlock, and then swiping up to
go to the home screen, simply swipe up the lock screen when you want to go to your home screen.
To confirm the controller is working after you've connected it,
go to the home screen and move the joysticks — they should allow you to select icons on your home screen and navigate Android's interface.
You will have to hold, and slide to the left or right to bring up the multi-tasking window, one single touch to go back, and a hold, and long press to
go to home screen.
For iPhone users, new notifications will pop up on the lock screen when locked, but once
you go to the home screen or an app, then return to the lock screen, they're no longer obvious.
You will have to swipe left or right to bring up the multi-tasking window, one single press to go back, and a long press to
go to home screen.
If you have a PIP window already running and press Home again, you won't get a second PIP window, you'll
go to the Home screen.
If you don't see the HomePod Set Up Assistant, put your iOS device to sleep, then wake it,
go to the Home screen, then hold your iOS device next to your HomePod and wait for the set up screen to appear.
Those gesture controls will feel oddly familiar to anyone who's used an iPhone X: It's the same kind of upwards swipe to
go to the home screen, and a swipe - and - hold for multitasking.
You can double tap the screen to wake it up or to turn it off, swipe to the left of the lock screen to
go to the home screen, or swipe to the right to launch HTC's news aggregating tool BlinkFeed.
Single tap on the sensor to
go to the home screen, leave your finger on the sensor for a split second to lock the phone, or long - press to launch Google Assistant.