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L-0253, cleared straight in runway 01.

AZ-5431, line-up and wait runway 01.

H-0023, line-up and wait runway 01.

L- 0274, line-up and wait runway 01.

L-1005, back-track approved. Cleared takeoff runway 01.

Just experimenting. Very grainy and high ISO.

I'm not sure if I'm happy with how this picture turned out. I tried something different in Photoshop. I kinda like how the controller hangs into the dark and creates contrast. Also, I like how it just reaveals a little bit of where the cables go. But overall I might have gone to far...

 

Please tell me what you think.

Fokusstacking aus 50 Bildern

Amazing controller pictured... Thanks for the laughs man!

Got my order with the four remaining bricks I needed for this creation. I shortened it by one stud so it's just a little bit less over sized. Also the start and select buttons aren't centered on the actual controller. I will take a photo of this next to my Lego SNES later. Enjoy.

Now that the main UI work for OpenEmu is complete... attention turns to doing some controller graphics for the 'Controls' section.

 

Tired today after doing client work I thought I best start with an easy one. So, started with the controller that defined my first video game experience... the NES controller.

 

I have fond memories of carefully and tightly wrapping the wire around the body of it...

A combat controller team from the 720th Special Tactics Group exits a C-130 Hercules during a high-altitude, high-opening jump during Joint Exercise Flintlock Feb. 28, 2014, over northeastern Niger. Flintlock is an annual, African-led, military exercise focused on security, counter-terrorism and military humanitarian support to outlying areas hosted each year by a different government in western Africa. (U.S. Air National Guard photo by Tech. Sgt. Eugene Crist/Released)

Play Station 4 controller

 

Taken with Samsung Galaxy Note 5.

Got my order with the four remaining bricks I needed for this creation. I shortened it by one stud so it's just a little bit less over sized. Also the start and select buttons aren't centered on the actual controller. I will take a photo of this next to my Lego SNES later. Enjoy.

I almost missed her :)

 

Realizada con iPhone 5

App PureShot

Editada con Snapseed, Vscocam y over

Atari controller custom made by customBRICKS.

Xbox 360 hand controller.

  

Xbox 360 hand kontroll.

Minolta XD11, Kodak 800

Point, click and enjoy!!

 

Stay Safe Everyone!

 

Our Daily Challenge ~ What A Con ...

 

Thanks to everyone who views this photo, adds a note, leaves a comment and of course BIG thanks to anyone who chooses to favourite my photo .... Thanks to you all!

Strobist:

sb-800 to the left at 1/16th shot through an umbrella

fired by skyports

Remote Controllers (1/52)

 

Please have a look at my 'Project 52 2019' photo set www.flickr.com/photos/29663856@N03/albums/72157702107071042

 

Please have a look at my previous projects:-

'Project 52 2013' photo set www.flickr.com/photos/29663856@N03/sets/72157632445195620/

'Project 52 2014' photo set www.flickr.com/photos/29663856@N03/sets/72157639407666594/

'Project 52 2015' photo set www.flickr.com/photos/29663856@N03/sets/72157650090374041

'Project 52 2016' photo set www.flickr.com/photos/29663856@N03/albums/72157660757070783

'Project 52 2017' photo set www.flickr.com/photos/29663856@N03/sets/72157677419784130

'Project 52 2018' photo set www.flickr.com/photos/29663856@N03/albums/72157689104924052

This device runs Portland's Kennedy School. Don't touch.

 

U.S. Air Force Staff Sgt. Stephen Barker, 23rd Special Tactics Squadron combat controller based out of Hurlburt Field, Fla., performs a communications check during training at White Sands Missile Range, N.M., Dec. 4, 2014. Barker and three team members set up a landing zone at the missile range as part of an integrated training with A-10C Thunderbolt II fighter squadrons. (U.S. Air Force photo by Airman 1st Class Chris Massey/Released)

PlayStation analog controller

My strobe controller project finally got soldered up in a nice project case. In short, it's a programmable strobe controller for high-speed photography. You can load it with simple scripts to (usually) wait for a certain input condition, and then switch the outputs with very precise timing.

One particularly elaborate example: Have it trigger an electronic water valve for a few milliseconds, just long enough to let one drop of water through. Wait until it sees a drop fall through a photogate, and then open the shutter on the camera. Wait until the contact mic under a bowl is triggered by the drop impacting on the bowl, fire the flash, wait a few milliseconds, and then close the shutter on the camera. Perfect water drop pictures every time.

 

I bought a Koala protoboard, a matching case, and a compatible LiPoly battery from Sparkfun, plus a whole bunch of 3.5mm headphone jacks and some other odds and ends from JB Saunders, and soldered it up last weekend.

The board is pretty cool- it comes with USB-serial (an FTDI FT232R, regulated 3.3V and 5V from battery or USB, and battery charging from USB. The battery is tucked under the board.

Everything is wired into a TI EZ430-RF2500 target board (I really only wanted the MSP430-F2274 micro on it; the wireless is going to waste at the moment). It communicates with a desktop app I've written in C#, where you can see and control its status in real-time, write scripts, and send them to the device. I've created a simple little scripting language (and corresponding bytecode language) so the device can do interesting and precisely-timed things with its outputs (the five jacks on bottom) in reaction to stuff happening on its inputs (the button and the two other jacks). It needs some polish still, but it really works quite well.

 

I'll do a proper writeup on my website when I'm closer to being truly done.

A closer look at the Tron arcade game controllers

Minolta Dynax 4

Maxxum AF 50mm 1.7 lens

Fomapan 400@1600 + Rodinal 1:50

 

These are my badges of Video game controllers and Handhelds from the Atari 2600 to Nintendo Wii.

They were for sale at Prickie.com (Prickie is out of business now):

www.prickie.com/index.htm?artist=e28

 

Play Station 4 controller

 

Taken with Samsung Galaxy Note 5.

Diego Rivera, Man Controller of the Universe (or Man in the Time Machine), 1934, fresco, 4.85 x 11.45 m in the Palacio de Bellas Artes, Mexico City

 

Learn more on Smarthistory

My DIY MIDIBox64 based controller. ( www.ucapps.de )

 

12"x12" Faux Walnut Case

16 Knobs

5 Faders

16 Arcade Buttons

32 MIDI controlled LED buttons

This is part of an old Westinghouse hydraulic elevator controller. Layered on top is a partial page, one of about 30 pages, that is the wiring diagram. It's a obsolete nightmare that we have to keep running. Just part of the job.

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