View allAll Photos Tagged Keypad

Encrypting keypad with motorized card reader.

A somewhat ominous picture of the telephone for Friday the 13th.

 

Day 119 of Project 365.

My phone provides feedback to users in two ways to let them know they've successfully pressed a key. It give visual feedback by displaying the key you've pressed above your finger, which you can see above for the letter H. It also gives you tactile feedback by vibrating slightly when you press a key.

It's a well thought out design...the keypad is one single piece so bits of food and other little things can't get caught in it.

The keypad for my telephone at work. Just in case someone was curious.

Sony Ericsson Z610i

2-car garage, Keypad for easy access.

The entry keypad at our storage facilities ensures that your belongings are kept and secure and you are the only one with access to them.

www.safehouse-ss.com/tl_files/images/inset-images/securit...

Don't you just want to press them?

Phone keypad and music player on display

Here are the first pictures of the new keypad design for the office and industrial terminals. On the right of the picture you can also see the new v10 access keypad - simple, clean minimalist designs...

That small keypad beneath the hazard lights button is the Motorola Bluetooth kit. Answer/end, Voice Activation, Mute, Volume up/down buttons let you control your phone remotely.

I just like this photo. So there.

My phone's tiny keypad does wicked things.

*beep beep. beep-beep-beep-beep beep-beep*

Mobile shot. I dunno what I was thinking, other than that I was bored this morning.

A photo of a common telephone keypad, with reversal film effect

For 1-day or 3-day membership, you need to swipe your credit card in the kiosk to get a new access code for each checkout, then enter it on this keypad.

 

For longer term membership, your Bixi card goes into the slot.

 

Yellow LED lights up, then green accompanied by a bike bell sound and you're good to go.

A blue Europa One keypad box from Sebastian Cordero’s 2013 found footage thriller, Europa Report. The film follows six international astronauts on a privately funded mission to Jupiter’s moon, Europa, in hopes of finding signs of life. Power boxes like these can be seen throughout the film attached to walls of Europa One. This power box is made of light metal with a blue coating. It features a small keypad with a metallic connector Velcro attached throughout. It shows some light ware, such as blackish spatters and chips in the blue coating, which was likely purposeful or due to the water sequence filmed on the Europa One set. The box measures 5”x4”x2” (13cm x 10cm x 6cm) and despite some ware, remains in good, production used condition.

On a safe door for the Guess What This Is group.

 

Solved immediately by eric1999a

Godby Safe and Lock supplies and installs Keypads for your Gates

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