enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Pointing device gesture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pointing_device_gesture

    The mouse gesture for "back" in Opera – the user holds down the right mouse button, moves the mouse left, and releases the right mouse button.. In computing, a pointing device gesture or mouse gesture (or simply gesture) is a way of combining pointing device or finger movements and clicks that the software recognizes as a specific computer event and responds to accordingly.

  3. Multi-touch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multi-touch

    In computing, multi-touch is technology which enables a touchpad or touchscreen to recognize more than one [7] [8] or more than two [9] points of contact with the surface. Apple popularized the term "multi-touch" in 2007 with which it implemented additional functionality, such as pinch to zoom or to activate certain subroutines attached to predefined gestures.

  4. Pull-to-refresh - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pull-to-refresh

    Pull-to-refresh in the Wikipedia mobile app. Pull-to-refresh is a touchscreen gesture developed by Loren Brichter.It consists of touching the screen of a computing device with a finger or pressing a button on a pointing device, dragging the screen downward with the finger or pointing device, and then releasing it, as a signal to the application to refresh the contents of the screen.

  5. ThinkPad - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ThinkPad

    ThinkPad is an American line of business-oriented laptop and tablet computers produced since 1992. The early models were designed, created and manufactured by International Business Machines (IBM) until it sold its PC business to Lenovo in 2005; since 2007, all new ThinkPad models have been branded Lenovo instead [5] and the Chinese manufacturer has continued to develop and sell ThinkPads to ...

  6. Dual-touchscreen - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dual-touchscreen

    A dual-touchscreen is a computer or phone display setup which uses two screens, either or both of which could be touch-capable, to display both elements of the computer's graphical user interface and virtualized implementations of common input devices, including virtual keyboards. Usually, in a dual-touchscreen computer or computing device, the ...

  7. Swype - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swype

    Swype was a virtual keyboard for touchscreen smartphones and tablets originally developed by Swype Inc., [2] founded in 2002, where the user enters words by sliding a finger or stylus from the first letter of a word to its last letter, lifting only between words. [3] It uses error-correction algorithms and a language model to guess the intended ...

  8. Double-click - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Double-click

    The maximum delay required for two consecutive clicks to be interpreted as a double-click is not standardized. According to Microsoft's MSDN website, the default timing in Windows is 500 ms (half a second). [6] The double-click time is also used as a basis for other timed actions. The double-click timing delay can usually be configured by the user.

  9. Smudge attack - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smudge_attack

    An iPad used by children with its touchscreen covered with fingerprint smudges. A smudge attack is an information extraction attack that discerns the password input of a touchscreen device such as a smartphone or tablet computer from fingerprint smudges.