As well as the obvious buttons on the front and sides, they have gyroscopes for motion controls, an NFC chip for reading Amiibos, an IR sensor for gesture controls, and a genuinely impressive set of
vibration motors which create the most finely - defined rumble effects on any console we've seen.
For those of you who don't know, the Taptic engine is
a vibration motor which gives real - time feedback to the user, based on the action taken on the screen and this has been a part of the iPhone family since the iPhone 6s.
Not exact matches
Apple introduced an improved Taptic
motor,
which sends out tiny
vibrations or pulses while using the new home button, or 3D Touch.
It also made way to include image stabilization to the cameras,
which uses a tiny
motor around the lens to counteract against both
vibration and shaky hand movement in photos and videos.
Vibration at idle is typically due to faulty
motor / transmission mounts, rough idle
which is an engine management problem (sensors, fuel, ignition), engine imbalance (harmonic balancer, etc.), or faults in any of the rotating elements (accessories such as the alternator) that...
The
motors (dual
vibration feedback) will allow you to feel all the explosion, crash and hit in your gaming in games
which support
vibration feedback.
Additional functions include a
vibration motor for a silent alarm, and a seven - day memory,
which means you won't lose your tracked steps if you're not glued to your smartphone.
It doesn't feel rattly like other Android phones,
which is a huge plus, but there's really no correspondence between the
vibration motor and the different actions on your phone.
To produce the effect, your device has to spin up a small
vibration motor every time,
which can be really draining on your battery.
It also lacks an accelerometer, gyroscope, or
vibration motor, for some reason, in
which case I hope the right joy - con suffices.
As mentioned previously, the Crosley C10 is belt driven,
which helps to separate the turntable
motor vibration from being heard through the platter and picked up by the needle.
It features a three - axis accelerometer
which can track activity and sleep, and also has a
vibration motor inside.
Sensors include ambient light —
which controls the LED backlight for the display — along with a 3 - axis accelerometer and a magnetometer; you also get the
vibration motor for notifications (we still wish we could tone down its aggressive buzz,
which could easily be half as strong and still noticeable on your wrist).
What I do love in particular about the design are the system sounds,
which border on euphoria just like the
vibration motor inside the device.
Things like the
vibration motor,
which feels great in this phone with sharp, clean
vibrations.
Note that this display and
vibration motor uses a rechargeable battery,
which is said to lasts for at least seven days.