View allAll Photos Tagged Keypad
Removing the keypad.
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â–¶ An NFL playoff game.
A glass full of beer next to laptop.
A thrilling play.
Beer is spilled on keyboard.
Keys stick and cease functioning, but, fortunately, computer's innards and motherboard remain un-drunk.
â–¶ A friend recommends her IT 'guy.' For the cost of the replacement keyboard (and some cider), he replaces the keyboard, repairing the laptop in 15 minutes.
â–¶ See the rest of the story.
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â–¶ Photo by Yours For Good Fermentables.com.
â–¶ For a larger image, type 'L' (without the quotation marks).
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â–¶ Camera: Olympus Pen E-PL1.
— Lens: Olympus M.14-42mm F3.5-5.6 II R
— Focal length: 24 mm
— Aperture: ƒ/4.4
— Shutter speed: 1/20
— ISO: 1600
â–¶ Commercial use requires explicit permission, as per Creative Commons.
A variation on the famous "Hello World" example sketch.
I still haven't figured out how to print out the number of seconds since reset . . .
This Arduino shield by Bulgarian company Olimex is a rather strange beast which incorporates an onboard PIC microcontroller to read serial data in and display it on the 16x2 LCD using a custom library (amongst other things).
I'd mistakenly read the manufacturer's name as Olimerx, not Olimex,
So my photography has taken a bit of a creative dive.
I'm collecting number images for the numbers project that will soon follow.
They'll be in sequence and I have to see how high a number I can get to.
This is but just a taster of numbers to come...
False keypad and credit card ATM pt 3
Momentarily I thought he was going to fight with me over the bag , I got up and squared off to him but he legged it and a cab driver said I'll call the police has he mugged you? I said no I am the Police and I've mugged him, i've got his Hole in the wall device.......which is what you are now looking at.
A closeup of the keypad of an old Linotype machine. Prior to the advent of computerized typesetting, these machines were able to cast whole lines of type as a single lead slug, all done via a ponderous mechanical process. Note the ever-popular Etaoin Shrdlu, RIP. Taken at the Museum of Printing in North Andover, Mass.
From QWERTY to keypad, from big to small. The Eseries range now offers a decent portfolio of business focused devices. Nokia have come a long way since the announcement of the E60 (hideously blocky), E61 (a bit big and square with a barely adequate keyboard) and E71 (nice concept, but not mainstream)... although much of the improvement is in the performance and extra hardware. The new phones makes the old ones look very slow, and the multimedia upgrades are very welcome.
The CX-85 keypad (ca. 1982) was designed for the Atari 800 computer. It turns out to be extremely simple to interface with modern elecronics.
Ow. Ow. OW. THIS CONTROLLER HURTS.
For the 7800, Atari clearly started with the Atari 5200 joystick, then made some changes. The keypad is gone, which is fine, because only a small handful of games used that. The Start/Pause/Reset buttons are also gone, which is a huge loss. They’ve kept the side buttons, but cut their number in half and made them large and decidedly non-mushy. The failure-prone analog stick is also gone, replaced with a standard 8-way digital stick. It’s also smaller than the 5200′s stick. The major problem with the 7800′s stick is that is rapidly becomes very painful to use. The size is small, so you have to grip it tightly, but the stick is stiff, so when you move it, it tends to move the base, as well, twisting your hand. Additionally, side buttons are misplaced on any controller, but on this one, they’re especially bad because you have to grip the base so tightly. Basically, if you enjoy severe wrist pain after about ten minutes of play, this is the controller for you! Of course, I don’t use the Pro-Line…
The full article is located here: www.mathpirate.net/log/2011/04/02/electric-curiosities-th...
Not sure how the keypad while a call is in progress got messed up, but it fixed itself after reboot.
The slim, lightweight Motorola F3 compared to the fat, heavyweight Motorola MR1.
My, how things have changed...
I think this was from a C stock train, which had been brought in to the Upminster depot especially for the open day. I could be remembering incorrectly now, though. From the archives.
Why are the numbers on a telephone in the opposite order to a numeric keypad on a computer or calculator?