With its screen and backlight, the Elite uses a rechargeable battery that replaceable in case it goes kaput. Sarah Tew/CNET Backlight good, battery life badĪside from the screen, one of my favorite extras on the Elite is full backlighting behind every hard key, making it much easier to use in a darkened home theater than the Home Control.ĭropping the backlight allows the Home Control to achieve tremendous batter life, however - you'll typically go half a year or more before you have to replace its watch battery. Stashed at the bottom, where they belong, are the less important color-coded keys and smart-home keys. They're right under the screen on the Elite, above the main four-way cursor pad. I give the Home Control and now the Elite a big thumbs-up for moving those controls within easy reach. The original Harmony Touch and Harmony Ultimate had the same screen as the Elite, but I complained about the nonsensical button placement, with the "transport" keys - play/pause, fast-forward/rewind, stop and record - mounted a far to the top, necessitating an inconvenient stretch of the thumb to reach. I also liked the haptic feedback, so you get a little jolt of reassurance when you select items or long-press a button. At times it was a bit too responsive, and more than once I engaged an activity more than just by picking it up. I found the Elite's full-color screen easy to use and relatively responsive, although it didn't feel as sensitive as a phone or tablet screen, and the resolution is much lower, leading to chunkiness in some icons for example.
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