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Nexus 7 and sunlight?

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Old 03-22-14 | 08:01 AM
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Bikes: 1992 Serotta Colorado II,Co-Motion Speedster, Giant Escape Hybrid, 1977 Schwinn Super Le Tour

Nexus 7 and sunlight?

A question to those who have a tablet and use it outdoors. Is there something that will allow me to see the screen? As one who is non tech oriented I am at a loss.
Thanks!
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Old 03-22-14 | 08:13 AM
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Bikes: Giant Excursion, Raleigh Sports, Raleigh R.S.W. Compact, Motobecane? and about 20 more! OMG

I have used anti- glare screen protectors that help reduce glare, the best bet is to find a shady spot to read it in, sometimes just turning your back to the sun is enough.

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Old 03-22-14 | 09:33 AM
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Originally Posted by Tandem Tom
Is there something that will allow me to see the screen?
Shade (hand, trees, overpass, buildings, etc). Other than that, nothing works particularly well. Today's LED devices just aren't bright enough to complete with the sun...
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Old 03-25-14 | 01:27 AM
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Bikes: Hand built Dave Yates steel tourer, Specialized Allez Comp, Lots of bits

I have a Nexus 7 for our forthcoming tour around the coast of Britain. I don't anticipate too many problems with glare from sunlight.
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Old 03-25-14 | 07:05 AM
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Bikes: 1992 Serotta Colorado II,Co-Motion Speedster, Giant Escape Hybrid, 1977 Schwinn Super Le Tour

After doing a few internet searches I ordered, on EB, a scree protector/anti-glare product called Tech-Armour. At the least it will provide some protection and hopefully some anti-glare .
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Old 03-25-14 | 08:29 AM
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I've used anti-glare screen protection on some of my devices. It's better than nothing, but it's still not great. Screen brightness all the way up and angle it away from the sun when possible. Map reading might be tricky in direct sunlight, but I seem to do okay with a black-and-white cue sheet. Of course full brightness drains the battery faster, so I've never tried to use my device like a dashboard GPS, just as a reference source to determine where and what the next turn is.
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Old 03-25-14 | 08:58 AM
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Bikes: 3 folders, 2 recumbents (1 is electric), 1 recumbent trike, 1 touring, 1 mountain, 1 road bike -- So many bicycles, so little time.

The problem with almost all tablets and smart phones is that their screen is a transmissive display. That is, the light comes from behind and through the screen. What you need to see easily outdoors in bright ambient lighting is a reflective display; that is, one that uses a difference in reflectivity of the image versus the background. The "eInk" type of display is reflective. But they have their limitations. To view them in dim light or darkness, you need an external source of light. (Some are transflective, meaning that they basically are reflective but they are transparent too so a backlight can be built into them for viewing in darkness.) They are slow in changing the display, so they don't work for video. And they usually are monochrome, not color.

I've tried using my car GPS and my Android pohone on my bike in a handlebar holder. They're too hard to see, so I just put them into a small handlebar bag and run a power cord to a small solar panel that I mounted in the handlebar phone holder instead of the navigation device itself. I use the voice output to hear the turn-by-turn instructions, but they're a little hard to hear. I haven't yet tried a Bluetooth earphone, but that may be the solution.

Here's a product to watch. It's a "survival" GPS with a reflective eInk touch-screen display: https://www.meetearl.com/. The engineers seem to have thought of everything that's wrong with existing devices for using them outdoors and solved those problems. The crowd-sourced project is well beyond its goal, awaiting FCC approval before going on the market.
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