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Where we were sitting, I heard 3 different people ask if that was a bicycle attached to the blimp, or why there was a bicycle attached to the blimp. Really?
At the Balloon Festival in Olathe, KS
Camera: Pentax Spotmatic
Lens: Takumar SMC 55mm f2.0
Film: HEMA ISO 200
Film format: 135
Scanner: Canon CanoScan 9000F Mark II
Hiptstamatic John S lens, Ina´s 1969 film, PS Mobile, SwankoLab Vinny´s BL94, Vinny´s BL 04, Noir Fixer
Diecast Model Cars - SnuffleDopple.CoM
Glossy exterior paint,Opening doors
Remote Control Range 50 meters
Goes Forward,backward,left,right
Operate fork with push of a button
Length:10 Inches (approximate)
Width: 5 Inches (approximate)
Height: 7 Inches (approximate)
Taken while riding along the Riverside section of the Santa Ana River Trail. I've been told a lot of model train enthusiasts use this bridge as a design model when they build bridges.
I had a blast the other day playing with this remote-controlled robot at the KDDI Designing Studio in Harajuku. The robot is controlled through an AU mobile phone with special software, and you either make it do pre-programmed moves, or just move around with the directional pad. Seeing it get up is simply amazing.
The Symantec pcAnywhere™ 12.5 Host and Remote Standard License software enables one computer to remotely control and access another computer, establishing a one-to-one connection. Both host and remote components can be installed together on the same computer or separately on different computers. For more information www.symantec.com/norton/symantec-pcanywhere
Remote computer access - www.01com.com/imintouch-remote-desktop - Get remote access and control your PC computer from anywhere with I’m InTouch remote desktop connection; call 1-800-668-2185 for remote control software.
11:55AM: Back to the top of the stadium to retrieve remote camera #2, a Canon EOS 1D w/ a 70mm - 200mm f2.8 AF, after the United States Military Academy's Graduation on Saturday, May 31, 2008. Times Herald-Record/CHET GORDON
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Nikon D70, Sigma 12-24.
Camera is attached to ceiling with Impact Super Clamp. Triggered by IR Remote ML-L3.
2 SB-26 attached to ceiling with Spring Clamp, and aux-powered by Nikon SD-8.
Flashes syncs with alienbees cybersync. Not a single misfire. Thanks Paul C Buff! )
these girls are good to go for the schedule a service call, chose bettwe this and the other 2 girls and guy
The CD-i also had a normal remote control for doing things like playing CDs or Video CDs. This controller was also good for games like The 7th Guest, which have a slower pace and were meant to be played with a mouse. If you tried using this for action games, you would fail horribly. If you notice, around the stick there are four action buttons. This does not mean that the remote gives you more buttons than the gamepad. Instead, those buttons are simply two copies of button 1 and button 2. And unlike the gamepad, there is no “Button 1+2″, so good luck with that if you ever find a game that uses that feature.
I don’t understand why it seems as though the designers of the controllers for the CD-i never talked to the designers of the system, and why neither group had ever talked to ANYONE who ever played a video game. I mean, wasn’t Nintendo involved in the creation of this system, at least on some level? Couldn’t someone there talk some sense into them? “Oh, you’re making a Zelda game? You need more than two buttons for that.”
The full article is located here: www.mathpirate.net/log/2011/04/02/electric-curiosities-th...