View allAll Photos Tagged Keypad
Keypad for camera switching, cheap mouse that gets filled with clay and paint. The keypad lives in a plastic bag to keep it from getting completely covered in junk.
Keypad: amzn.to/2lavK4Y
Currently has a garage door opener with two remotes and an outside keypad.
M Kepple | none- for lease by owner | mkepple@ymail.com | 281-550-9931 Coyote Echo Drive, Katy, TX 3-2-2 Cy Fair home for lease. Friendly, quiet neighbors! 3BR/2BA Single Family House $1,250/month Bedrooms 3 Bathrooms 2 full, 0 partial Sq Footage 1,533 Parking 2 dedicated Pet Policy Cats, Dogs (any) Deposit $1,250 DESCRIPTION 3-2-2 Adorable 2-year-old home located in an over-sized cul-de-sac lot. Katy/Cy Fair area with Cy Fair schools. Huge backyard and recent landscaping. Plenty of room for a garden! Painted in neutral colors and has a formal dining plus eat-in kitchen that is a great place to entertain. Tiled everywhere, except bedrooms. Two Inch Faux Blinds on all windows.
Walking distance to: Kroger (0.3 miles), Wal-Mart (.5 miles), and MANY other businesses and fast food restaurants. Sidewalks throughout neighborhood and a park with playground and soccer field.
see additional photos below RENTAL FEATURES
Air conditioning
Central heat
High/Vaulted ceiling
Walk-in closet
Tile floor
Living room
Dining room
Breakfast nook
Dishwasher
Refrigerator
Stove/Oven
Microwave
Attic
Washer
Dryer
Laundry area - inside
Balcony, Deck, or Patio
Yard
Cable-ready
COMMUNITY FEATURES
Garage parking
Playground
New property (< 5 years)
LEASE TERMS
12 month lease. Available July 1st (negotiable).
Deposit:$1,250, Pet deposit: $350.
Must have verifiable rental and employment history and decent credit. No section 8 or DHAP accepted.
ADDITIONAL PHOTOS view from the streetfloor planlot measurementsmain entry way (tile!)master bath- garden tub Contact info:
M Kepple
none- for lease by owner
281-550-9931
Equal Opportunity Housing Posted: Jun 6, 2009, 7:46am PDT
The keypad of Logitech Harmony 650 universal remote controller. Look at the beautiful curve, very good design.
My BlackBerry Classic survived a run-over face flat down by a car with a cracked screen which I suspect should be the Screen Protector only. Indeed a tough Berry and lucky it did not damage the QWERTY keypad.
Dated: 11112015
Using a resistor ladder for single analogue input on Arduino Uno for water drop and camera controller. Still in breadboarding test stage. eBay Supplier.
4-6-11
[Press L on your keypad]
Tonight I had my friend Jenna come pose for # 204 at the city park. Finally! We had discussed another dress/shoot in the past but never made it happen partly due to the cold weather. She was 'over' the other dress anyway, and told me about another dress she had recently purchased that was more 'her'. This was one of her first times posing for the camera, other than her senior photos (which doesn't count!) so we took some time at trying different poses as she was a bit nervous. And chilly!- The temperature was a decent 60 degrees when we started at a little after 8pm but of course dropped slowly as we were in the park for over an hour, Jenna with her sandals off the whole time! She started to loosen up more towards the end of our shoot as my clowning about and doing the hokey-pokey relaxed her, then the batteries in my sb900 died! I didn't bring my spare batteries so we had to take what we got. I snapped off a few long exposures and we were off. Upon reviewing the photos for a keeper we narrowed around 80 photos down to 8, then down to this one. I thought it was really cute, as I'm not one for big cheesy smiles or direct eye contact with the camera. Well, maybe sometimes. I look forward to doing some more shoots in the future with Jenna, she has a really laid back personality. If I can just get her to stop laughing! Thanks Jenna!
This was the first shoot I've used my tripod on with a model (other than self portraits), due to the fact that I wanted to use a long exposure for the backdrop. So after the shots of Jenna with my flash, I moved her out of the frame and got the long exposure of the park pagoda & lights.
50mm 1.4
sb900/diffused/ttl cord @ 10 o'clock
Want to be a part of my 365 Project and get your photo taken? Got an idea/concept? Contact me, Don't be shy! Let's create art!
An example of the Remote Keypad controlling a monitored burglar alarm from the Alarm Monitoring Company www.Alarm-Monitoring.co.uk
The keycap for my Nimitz's keypad-0 key is shorn off. The result of this is that it flops around on the key; I can balance it on the keyswitch, but it'll fall to one side as soon as I try to press the key.
My solution? Make a splint for the key.
1. Cut two lengths of paper, each 4.5″ or 11.4 cm long and 1 cm wide. Alternative: Cut one 9″/22.8 cm length, then fold it back on itself.
2. Wrap the strip(s) of paper around the keycap, and push them/it down into the keyboard.
This is part of an automatic teller in Seoul. Aside from the usual card slot and keypad, it had some features that I hadn't seen before.
At the top is a slot for a passbook. I don't know why they still use them, but they do. A lot. In fashion stores, they sell purses for passbooks along with purses for credit cards and money. I saw a woman standing in front of this machine sorting through half a dozen passbooks before finding the one she wanted. I saw an old man put his passbook into the slot, do his banking, and then check that it had printed correctly when it came out.
Below the passbook slot there is a fingerprint reader on the right. In the middle is a red square - I'm pretty sure that this is an infra-red reader, possibly for talking to your phone.
You can't see it in the photo, but they also had a button to push for help, so that you could talk to someone if you didn't know what to do, or if something went wrong.
The new Neo keypad for people who's fingers are tied in knots.
*Check out more outrageous Photo Booth stuff here: Mac Photo Booth
Jitterbug J large button keypad compared to the Samsung T105g keypad. www.best-prepaid-cell-phone-plans.com/jitterbug-j.html
Has dmage to keyboard connections on motherboard, replaced keypad, but damage to mainboard, required board replacement.
Our local gas station decided to install newly-designed pump keypads. The old ones, like all gas pumps, weren't the pinacle of usability...but they were simple and relatively clear.
These new ones introduce a strange design: two different styles of buttons. The keypad in the center is pretty straight-forward button design (raised buttons). The two strips of buttons down the sides are flat, sort of "haptic" buttons...the confusion comes because (maybe just to me) these immediately seem like labels instead of buttons. So, if you were going to "Pay Here Credit," you'd press 4.
I can't really fathom the need to use two different types of buttons.
Extra points: the "Yes" button (which you use frequently during the transaction) looks like a label next to the "Clear" button...which seems like it would cause problems if clicked during a transaction.
Must Credit to: 'https://thoroughlyreviewed.com' not Flickr.
Copy Link Address: thoroughlyreviewed.com