The SIM card tray sits on the left side of the device, and power and
volume buttons sit on the right side of the device.
In order to limit protrusions and keep the device as simple as possible, the device's power and
volume buttons sit almost flush with the frame.
The screen is surrounded by large bezels; there's a front - facing camera at the top;
volume buttons sit on the right edge, and a power button on the top edge.
That slick exterior does come at a price, however: The One's power and
volume buttons sit flush with the phone's chassis — which makes them difficult to press — and the 2300mAh battery is nonremovable.
You'll find the «G» logo towards the bottom of the back, while the power and
volume buttons sit on the right side.
Volume buttons sit along the right edge.
It has capacitive buttons in the front, the power key and
volume buttons sit on the right edge, and the speaker is seen at the back.
The Xoom, like the iPad, has very few buttons:
Volume buttons sit on one side, and a combined power and lock button is inconveniently positioned on the back.
Apple placed the power button on the top of the iPad Air (in portrait mode), while the Silent / Screen rotation lock switch and
volume buttons sit on the top - right edge.
The volume button sits on the right side of the phone right near the power button and exists as a rocker rather than two separate buttons.
Not exact matches
The Switch's
volume controls and a power
button sit flush along the top of the unit, along with an 1 / 8 - inch headphone jack.
The power
button and a physical
volume rocker
sit on the top right side of the tablet, while the top edge houses the various ports.
The slate's right side houses the power
button and
volume rocker, and a lone microSD slot
sits on the left.
A
volume rocker and the power
button sit at the top of the chassis.
Volume up and down
buttons sit on the left edge.
Both the
volume rocker and the power
button also have good response and aren't too easy or too difficult to press, and they
sit almost flush with the frame so they don't protrude out too much, just enough to make them noticeable by touch.
On the right side you'll find the
volume rocker nestled right in the middle of the phone while the textured power
button sits right above it.
Vivo has placed the power and the
volume buttons on the right, while the SIM tray
sits on the left.
The power
button and
volume rocker
sit up top (although not a microSD Card slot, a feature we sorely missed on the Nexus 7 as well).
Easier to find by look and feel is the distinctive, textured silver power
button that
sits beneath the
volume rocker.
The
volume controls, headphone jack, Micro HDMI slot, and microSD slot all
sit on that slope, making them somewhat tough to find with your fingers, but the power
button on top sticks up enough that it's a little easier.
On the side of the device
sit your page turn
buttons and
volume keys.
On the left side (when the tablet is held in landscape mode)
sit a power
button, up / down
volume rocker, a screen rotation lock switch, and a microSD card reader.
The
volume rocker and the power
button are placed on the right, whereas the SIM tray
sits on the left.
Volume and power
buttons line the right edge; a headphone jack, microHDMI port and microUSB port are on the top edge; and a microSD slot
sits on the left.
In stand mode, a microUSB port
sits on the left - hand side of the Yoga, between the power and
volume buttons.
A slew of ports and
buttons sits on the Venue 8's right side: microUSB 2.0,
volume up and down, and a microSIM / SD card slot.
A microSD card slot, micro HDMI and
volume rockers
sit on the right; a microUSB port, 3.5 mm audio jack and speakers line the bottom; and the power
button is on top.
The left side has a covered headphone jack, below which is a round, silver power
button, and a black
volume rocker
sits below that.
A power
button sits on the right of the Note II, the
volume rocker is on the left, and the headphone jack is on the top.
The
volume rocker
sits on the right - hand side, with a central mute / voice command
button.
In stand mode, the
volume rocker
sits on the left - hand side, with the power
button below it, right at the edge of the cylinder.
On the right side
sits a dedicated two - step camera shutter
button, which is situated nearly at the bottom of the phone, with the
volume rocker just above it.
When held in landscape mode, a covered SD Card slot and the Power / Sleep
button sit on top,
volume controls are on the left, and a stylus is housed securely at the bottom left corner.
The microUSB slot for connecting the charger is located on the bottom of the tablet, and a 3.5 mm headphone jack
sits just above the
volume button.
A chrome power
button and a black matte
volume rocker
sit at the top of the tablet embedded in a hard black plastic panel with a snakeskin pattern.
On the left are the
volume and power
buttons, while a microSD card slot
sits on the right.
A mute switch
sits on the left edge, alongside the
volume buttons, while a power
button lives up top.
The top edge of the Galaxy Player 5.0 contains a microSD slot, the bottom houses a microUSB port and a 3.5 mm headphone jack, and the
volume rocker
sits on the left, right below the power
button.
The screen lock
button sits on the top, slightly recessed, so as not to be unlocked when you slip it into your pocket; the
volume controls
sit on the right - hand side, with a shortcut «convenience» key moving from the middle towards the bottom.
On this edge also
sit the power and
volume buttons.
A silver power
button and
volume rocker
sit on the top edge of the device, along with a 3.5 mm headphone jack, a mic and a micro USB port for charging.
In that landscape orientation, the PlayBook's 3 - megapixel front - facing camera
sits centered over the top of the screen, with several
buttons flush along the edge: the power
button (which is miniscule, stiff, and difficult to use),
volume buttons, and a mute
button that doubles as a play / pause
button.
On the top left corner, in portrait mode,
sits the 5 - megapixel camera, just above the power
button and
volume rocker on the left side.
A power
button and
volume rocker rest on the FonePad's left edge, while microUSB and headphone jacks
sit on its bottom edge.
Move around the body and you'll find that things match the Fire HD 8 in many ways, with 3.5 mm headphone socket,
volume controls, Micro-USB and the standby
button all
sitting on one end, with a covered microSD card slot on the side.
Along the top right side of the tablet (in landscape mode)
sits the power
button,
volume rocker, and rotation lock switch.
The power / standby
button sits next to the
volume rocker on the top of the device; there's a Micro-USB connection, along with a 3.5 mm headphone socket on the left and over to the right is micro-HDMI, to hook up to a bigger display.
On top is a 3.5 mm headphone jack, and the power
button and
volume rocker
sit on the upper right side.
The power
button still
sits on the top edge, while the
volume and lock switches are along the top right; all are as easy to access as ever.