Not exact matches
You can easily move it around to different positions
because you just push the
button and
turn it where you want it.
The Mr. Coffee 4 Cup Coffee Maker here is actually super simple to use
because it just
turns on or off without all the extra
buttons and features.
I love this white shirt
because in the front it looks like a classic
button down, but once I
turn around it has a beautiful crisscross detail.
It's also so fast that you can't really control Sonic's
turning, but that never matters
because the game either puts up barriers or helps to guide Sonic round corners in these segments, meaning all you are literally doing is holding down one
button and are able to defeat Eggman's forces.
Bored and cooped up, Thomas, age seven, teaches his four - year - old brother how to play Mouse Trap; Eva's father, during a typical before - school routine, must teach her to
button a coat
because she's only ever snapped one; and Claire, a veteran classroom teacher, skillfully
turns a student's witty remark into an engaging way for her students to choose summer reads: speed - dating their books.
Good: Comfortable, Adaptive Cruise Control, spacious interior, plenty of USB slots, driving visibility Neutral: Adaptive Cruise Control (cuts out at 20 mph), push
button shifter, mediocre
turning radius Bad: No analog dials for audio or A / C, horrible touch screen, no way to permanently disable Auto Stop / Start I purchased the Pilot
because of the safety features not available on the Sorento like forward collision mitigation with automatic braking system and LED daytime running lights, and mostly
because of Honda's reliability.
Of the touch readers, only the Nook has hardware page -
turn buttons that you can optionally use, but they're uncomfortable to use
because they require too much pressure.
I don't think the Kindle Voyage is for me, at any price point,
because the haptic feedback on the page -
turn buttons would surely jolt me out of my book world and right back into real life.
Their hardware used to have the ability to add your own fonts, allow SD expansion, audio input and Audible integration, text to speech ability, physical page
turn buttons (not lousy sensors) in other words things that are tangible and useful (unlike a light sensor) All that is gone now and they can do it
because no one is stepping up to Challenge them.
The Voyage is interesting
because in the past, all e-readers either had physical page
turn buttons or a touchscreen to
turn pages.
They managed to pull this off
because they decided to forgo manual page
turn buttons and instead relies exclusively on the touchscreen display.
Even the Kindle Voyage «page
turn buttons» don't work with gloves,
because they're based on capacitive technology too,.
The page
turn buttons provide a great amount of synergy with the gyroscope
because it makes the Oasis compatible with people who are left handed.
I have a feeling they might do away with the Haptic feedback page
turn buttons, since they weren't able to market this device in a lot of countries
because it could not get the patent for it.
I have wondered this myself
because I liked the
turn buttons on my old kindle.
The page
buttons can be programmed for a number of functions in the settings menu, which is nice
because that gives you more control over how to use the device and it makes the
buttons useful with apps like Kindle that require using volume
buttons to
turn pages.
The physical page
turn buttons really give it the edge
because they are slim and optimized for right or left handed people.
This device has a competitive advantage
because it has a 3.5 mm headphone jack and manual page
turn buttons.
I thought that I would really like the PagePress sensors for
turning paging
because I favor using hardware
buttons for
turning pages like on the Onyx Boox T68, just resting your thumb on a
button and not having to move it every thirty seconds to page forward is nice, but so far the page sensors on the Kindle Voyage really aren't doing it for me.
If you decide to «de-synchronize»
because you want each device in the classroom (or at the house) to operate independently of the others, then look for the
button on the right that allows you to «
Turn Synchronization Off» (see illustration, # 2).
Because your thumb rests so comfortably on that page
turn button, you can make your way through a book without ever having to lift your thumb unless you want to go backward to read something you missed.
Those are differences you'll feel every time you
turn a page — even if you don't have a hypersensitive sense of touch —
because the Paperwhite doesn't have those elegant PagePress
buttons.
And while the right side's Next
button ran the length of my thumb and was comfortably situated in relation to where my hand rested while holding the device at its midsection, my hand tired more quickly on this device than it did with the Kindle 1, particularly
because I had to hover my finger in a specific place just to
turn the page.
In fact, I deplored the removal of the wifi on / off
button from the outside of the device
because it made it more difficult to manage battery life, meaning that you had to
turn the device on and
turn off the wifi using an internal menu item when the Kindle 2 arrived.
The sideways screen orientation is odd
because of where the page
turning buttons are.
If I haven't said much about reading books on the Nook itself, it's
because it feels very much like a Kindle, right down to the page -
turn buttons.
It's a bit annoying having to flip the device over for a hearty left - handed grip, but overall I prefer the design to the other Kindles — in part
because it actually keeps satisfyingly clicky page
turn buttons.
The Reader Wi - Fi brings along that same touch - screen technology and looks and feels more similar to the Kobo Touch than to the new Nook, which has rounded corners and is a little wider
because it has «hard» page -
turn buttons on the sides of the screen.
I definitely like their smaller size
because in the past when you grabbed your K2, you often advanced the pages by accident
because the page
turn buttons were so large.
It doesn't have the page -
turn buttons on the sides of the screen, it doesn't have speakers or a headphone jack
because audio is not supported, and it lacks advanced features, layout settings, notes, apps, etc..
My joy of pressing that «buy»
button over and over again
because everything was reasonably priced,
turned into a chore of making decisions about which books I really wanted to read, what I could afford, and what was a good deal or not.
Because the Master System's controller only has two
buttons compared to the Mega Drive's three, the game automatically fires for you (the Genesis version had autofire available, but it can only be
turned on in the options menu).
Sniper Elite 4 has
turned out to be everything I had hoped for, and
because of the inclusion of an option
button to
turn off the gratuitous meat show, none of the things I was afraid it would be.
It's also so fast that you can't really control Sonic's
turning, but that never matters
because the game either puts up barriers or helps to guide Sonic round corners in these segments, meaning all you are literally doing is holding down one
button and are able to defeat Eggman's forces.
As well as the app launcher, which shows all the games you've played and installed, there are a few more icons down the bottom: a picture viewer, for all the images you've captured; a newsfeed, for Nintendo to send chatty updates to you; the eShop, which we couldn't use
because it wasn't
turned on yet; and system settings, controller settings, and an off
button.
When I tried to plug in my controller (
because it wasn't responding although it was on), I accidentally hit the power
button, which is very sensitive, and
turned off the console.
Because no, there's no power
button either, so it's either the Touch ID or a different way to
turn on the laptop.
The Toq's capacitive touchscreen never
turns off,
because like E Ink, it draws effectively no power when it's not changing states — you can glance at it and always know that you'll see the time without having to press a
button or perform any wrist gymnastics.
«We didn't want to just build a Dislike
button because we don't want to
turn Facebook into a forum where people are voting up or down on people's posts.
The Bixby
button is actually a feature for me, i use it every day on my Note8
because with the app BxActions you can make it do whatever you want, i press it once to switch from vibrate to sound and vice versa even when the display is off i press it twice to
turn on / off the flash light and press and hold it to go full screen on any app which lets let's you use the entire display and it works flawlessly.
Because you can
turn on the Galaxy S8 by tapping on the invisible home
button (Samsung's term, not mine) and have the phone automatically begin scanning for a face, the sequence, while not quite as fast as a front - facing fingerprint sensor, is just as seamless, and when it works, it's a remarkable achievement.
When it first unveiled a phone with a side - mounted fingerprint scanner, Sony defended its decision by claiming that this is the most convenient location
because usually, people tend to hit the power
button when
turning their devices» display on and off.
On the other hand, if you're a veteran computer user, you'll cringe at the idea of
turning off your NAS with the power
button because in the PC world, pressing and holding the power
button is the physical shortcut for a hard power reset.
Huawei says this is
because it's a
button, not a traditional watch crown that would be
turned.
For example, you can
turn on something called the Navigation Dock, which creates a movable software
button to replace the Back, Home and Recent Apps row you know, love and understand how to use
because it's on every other Android phone.
When the phone is
turned off, it is bit difficult to find the
button because you have to slowly tilt the device until the marked area is revealed over the display.
Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg explained back in 2015 that they didn't want to add a dislike
button because they didn't want to
turn the social media site into a forum «where people are voting up or down on people's posts.
That functionality has been added to the noise - cancelling
button which is handy,
because you can switch to ambient mode or
turn noise - cancelling off really easily.
The irony is that while Path suffered a moment of outrage, Facebook is only facing a major privacy backlash now — after it's spent so many years calmly sucking up people's contacts data, also without them being aware
because Facebook nudged them to think they needed to tap that big blue «
turn on»
button.
But the most common reason for pressing the Bixby
button to date has been an accidental click when people have wanted to
turn the phone's volume down (
because the volume rocker is just above).