Samsung is among the few manufacturers out
there who consistently place capacitive buttons under the screens of
their devices. While other smartphone builders prefer to rely on the
virtual navigation buttons, present on stock Android, Sammy and co's
decision to place hardware keys allow for larger screen real estate and a
lot of users prefer them.
The buttons haven't changed much since inception – they are LED-backlit, for ease of use, and give off a vibration feedback when tapped, so that the user can be sure that the input has been
registered. The battery saving mode that Samsung has been placing in its TouchWiz interface for more than a year now turns off the backlight and vibration feedback automatically, to conserve the most power possible. But you yourself can limit those manually. We've already looked at how you can turn off the lights, here's how to enable / disable the vibration of the capacitive navigation keys on the Galaxy S6, Galaxy S6 edge
The buttons haven't changed much since inception – they are LED-backlit, for ease of use, and give off a vibration feedback when tapped, so that the user can be sure that the input has been
registered. The battery saving mode that Samsung has been placing in its TouchWiz interface for more than a year now turns off the backlight and vibration feedback automatically, to conserve the most power possible. But you yourself can limit those manually. We've already looked at how you can turn off the lights, here's how to enable / disable the vibration of the capacitive navigation keys on the Galaxy S6, Galaxy S6 edge
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