The other key element of the Mate 10 Pro is its wide screen - or Huawei FullView screen, as the company's marketeers will say. Unrelated to the fancy name, the ultra-trim bezel means that the 6-inch screen completely dominates the face side of the device. It is superb because there are not too many heads and shoulders, as you will find on the big Pixel 2 XL.
Huawei also joins other manufacturers in transitioning to an elongated screen, adopting a ratio of 18: 9 for better one-handed fit, with resolution loads for the first time in the Mate series. Yes, the 10 Pro stands out from the Full HD shackles of Mate 9, with a resolution of 2160*1080 which looks great (if it rings low on the vertical, it is because of the thin ratio 18: 9).
The special feature of the Huawei Mate 10 Pro is the absence of physical buttons on the front. Many have become so accustomed to using a Home key, or even gestures, that the removal of such a key seems strange at first. Huawei has tried to tackle this problem with what they call a "floating key" - a software version of a home key, which you can position anywhere around the screen to meet your needs. Press to go back, press and hold to return to the Home screen, drag to open applications.
The idea of the floating dock is interesting, but the execution is not perfect: we think that Huawei should offer customized commands in the settings of this soft button, as you do in Windows for trackpad commands, for micro-adjust its sensitivity that a press needs to be - because we have too often moved the dock to a new position rather than dragging it.
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