Sentences with phrase «touchpad feels»

The touchpad feels unresponsive compared to the previous Inspiron 15 model.
The touchpad feels about the right size, and supports multi-touch gestures.
The glass - coated touchpad feels just fine, and doesn't trigger movements when typing, telling us it has strong palm rejection.
The Precision Touchpad feels smooth and works flawlessly.
The TouchPad feels unfinished, think Motorola Xoom, we had high hopes for this tablet so we really wish that they had come to market with some slightly more polished hardware.
It not only worked on both laptops, it made the touchpads feel a lot better — in our opinion.
The touchpad felt equally excellent.
It may even beat the XPS 13, which has excellent touchpad feel, but a smaller touchpad surface.

Not exact matches

I haven't even ever used a mouse at my laptop before, but this is one of those things that make it all much more fun and now I couldn't go a day without it — it already feels pretty strange scrolling pages with the touchpad.
The art pops on the OLED screen, and the various gimmicks associated with the hardware — liberal use of the rear touchpad, puzzles involving turning the device upside - down, tricky touch mechanics — feel right at home in my hands.
Some of the advanced features on offer, particularly the touchpad, felt overwrought and gimmicky.
The centre console houses a large 10.3 - inch touchscreen which can be controlled by a touchpad on the console that has a fantastic iPhone - like haptic feedback but we feel the regular joystick that comes with the other siblings is more intuitive to use.
A central controller with rotary knobs makes control feel effortless, and you can also opt for a touchpad controller that reads swipes, pinches, and even handwriting.
In theory, the familiar touchpad should be second nature since I'm plopped in front of a laptop computer during most of my waking hours, but somehow I never really felt at ease with the Lexus» infotainment interface.
Unlike the HP TouchPad, the Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1 provides not only in functionality but also on the looks front, sporting a design which truly feels like a rival to Apple's latest and greatest.
HP is already exuding confidence that they have a sure fire hit of a device in the form of the Touchpad, which the company feels continue to emulate the success that it has achieved with desktop PCs.
That's Amazon's strategy and the online retailer should feel encouraged by of the entire TouchPad episode so far — that a product high on quality but priced low will always find buyers.
We generally prefer the resolution of Android Honeycomb tablets (1280 x 800) because they fit more info on the screen at once, but the 4:3 ratio of the TouchPad makes using the device in portrait mode feel less cramped when reading.
That doesn't sound bad for a premium ultrabook with a 10 - point multitouch panel, a 1600 x 900 IPS display and 128 GB of solid state storage — particularly one that feels this good, with a supple textured back, a leathery palmrest, a smooth glass touchpad and a comfortable keyboard.
Oversensitive touchpad lacks palm rejection; Limited app selection; Slow boot time; Feels hefty in tablet mode
The HP TouchPad is definitely feeling the pain as the old - as - the - hills tablet receives an unofficial port of Android 6.0 Marshmallow.
Viewing web - based video on any mobile device is still a shaky proposition, and though the TouchPad does a good job of navigating the modern landscape of HTML5 and Flash, it won't feel the same as watching web video on a computer with a robust connection.
The touchpad in particular is hugely improved — it's bigger, much more sensitive, and feels a lot smoother to scroll across.
None of this is to say that I cancelled my TouchPad order because I felt HP had dropped the ball.
Most Zinio titles on other devices (including the iPad, TouchPad, and more conventional Android tablets) are strictly page - to - screen conversions, and can feel a little cramped even on larger displays.
The Inspiron 11's 3.9 x 2.1 - inch buttonless touchpad gave a solid feel to each click, and it allowed for smooth two - finger scrolling as I navigated through web pages.
Early adopters of the 1.2 GHz CPU equipped HP TouchPad Wi - Fi tablets would feel disappointed, because AT&T's variant comes with a processor bump to 1.5 GHz.
The close, personal bond between the Pre3 and TouchPad, sharing SMS messages and websites does feel a little like magic.
Much like its keyboard, the small size of the hybrid's touchpad made my hands feel cramped.
The webOS on the TouchPad has a similar look and feel to the Palm mobile phones of the past, with a fast multitasking OS that effortlessly displays multiple running applications with the ability to switch between over 200 apps simultaneously with no lag whatsoever.
I just wish that the surface of the touchpad were a little smoother, because after some time putting the system through its paces, my index finger felt a little raw.
HP has offered TouchPad early - adopters a $ 50 App Catalog credit, in an attempt to stem the tide of ill - feeling after the company discounted the webOS slate so soon after it went on sale.
We will compare and contrast the Touchpad and the Transformer in terms of design, build, hardware, software, battery life, pricing and any other elements we feel that are important for tablets nowadays and we will show you the similarities between the two, but also the large number of differences.
These concave touchpads not only emulate the function of a directional pad, button, mouse, and joystick, they also emulate the feeling.
This feature is almost unnoticeable when playing in a well - lit room, and while the touchpad allows you to navigate the map as you would something on your smartphone, it also felt unnecessary and inferior to simply using the analog sticks.
This makes the game feel more at home on the Vita than on the PS4, which offers technically superior visuals but more imprecise controls (you can however use the Dualshock 4's touchpad as well, which works slightly better than the sticks, but nowhere near as well as the touchscreen).
Optional use of the DualShock 4's touchpad brings the cursor interactions at least a little closer to the still - superior touchscreen input offered in the Vita versions, but other than that the controls feel identical to the PS3 version.
The only thing that would have made this feel better on the PS4 version is if you were able to control Riley by using the DualShock 4's touchpad, in the same manner the OWL is used in Killzone: Shadow Fall, but that opportunity was lost here.
+ Comes in an attractive box + Painless setup and firmware upgrades + Analog stick works - Tiny, poorly positioned ABXY cluster - Controller grips require constant shuffling to hit ABXY or start / select / home - Noisy haptic feedback makes the controller feel cheap - The right touchpad is Literally Hitler - Inconsistent sensitivity between swipes - Valve should really know better
It feels like the controller is buzzing and rattling in my hands when I'm not actually doing anything more than running my finger over the touchpad.
They make remote play much easier and even playing PSOne classics feel more natural rather than using your fingers on the rear touchpad.
We occasionally found ourselves unsure if our mouse click had registered because we didn't feel the touchpad bottom out.
And it's quite competent at doing so across the board, with an excellent keyboard offering copious amounts of travel (1.55 mm) and a precise feel, and a Microsoft Precision touchpad that might very well be the best performer this side of a MacBook Pro.
To begin with, the keyboard is excellent with copious amounts of travel and a precise feel, and the touchpad is the best example yet of Microsoft's excellent Precision Touchpad ptouchpad is the best example yet of Microsoft's excellent Precision Touchpad pTouchpad protocol.
Though small, the touchpad is responsive without feeling fidgety.
Its Precision Touchpad is likewise responsive and accurate, but it makes a rattling noise when tapped, and physical clicks feel similarly loose and rattly rather than crisp.
The 4.5 x 3.1 - inch touchpad in the ZBook Studio G4 provides accurate input tracking and a solid feel to each click.
It's plastic, so it doesn't feel as nice as metal or glass touchpads, but it's accurate when you're navigating and using gestures like pinch - to - zoom and tapping four fingers to reach the Action Center in Windows 10.
Given the choice, I will always use the TrackPoint instead of the touchpad, but not everyone feels comfortable pushing a nub.
The 2.2 x 3.9 - inch touchpad is smoother than some ThinkPads of late, and I appreciate the new feeling (there's far less friction).
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