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Testing the Nokia Bluetooth keyboard with the Sonyericsson P¹ - It works for basic text entry and simple navigation - no application shortcuts. The Nokia KBD supports up to 5 paired devices at a time without loosing snyc - a nice feature! The Nokia Bluetooth keyboard is a stylish design, and works particularly well with the Nokia N series phones. It folds up smaller than the Stowaway floding kbd. The keys are slightly smaller tahn a full kbd and take a little to used to the restricted spacing. PS - the photo is of my m600 not the P¹as i used the P¹to take the photo!
- Taken at 10:23 AM on September 19, 2007 - cameraphone upload by ShoZu
A DIY Oak box for my Big Jambox, bluetooth audio/podcast from my phone, take it anywhere, sounds awesome!
Every gadget deserves a little enclosure. Since this was Bluetooth, I figured a blue floss container was appropriate. (geddit? "blue" "tooth" ahahah, I crack myself up)
It works so nicely. As soon as I turn on the car it connects to my phone. If I make or receive a call, I just press the phone button on the steering wheel to pickup/hangup. Music playback on the phone automatically pauses/resumes.
See also: flickr.com/photos/mroach/2985573566/in/set-72157611251220...
Probably the most accurate sounding bluetooth loudspeaker that you can enjoy in your living room.
You can connect with Spotify, Apple Music and even listen to uncompressed music with Tidal.
my totally ridiculous a2dp solution for my non-a2dp phone:
- s9 motorola headset (on sale, got one for sy too)
- bluetooth but not stereo a2dp-friendly phone that i love (with existing wire for fm and such)
- sony bluetooth transmitter
totally not slick, but it works, and i can answer calls. i figured my next phone will be a2dp-friendly (cmon iphone, you can do it!) and this way i'm in compliance when talking and driving... (and still cheaper than some bluetooth headsets plus i can listen to music...)
when i'm better at soldering, i'm gonna shorten the wires and make the whole thing more streamlined.
handhelditems.com held a sale on their Samsung Tab leather case with attached Bluetooth keyboard for a reasonable $30 using the coupon code "tabbluetooth." I predict you'll also find these sorts of cases on Amazon.com and other mobile retailers, as I've seen similar keyboards affixed to iPad cases.
Without modification, the Nook Color fits the case with some material overlapping the screen. In the first image, I have marked two areas with black ink that overlap when the Nook is oriented with the "n" button to the right side of the case. Also in the first picture, I made two cuts to the left and right spans of material that connect the upper and lower halves of the case frame together. These cuts are visible in the first picture. I found these cuts allowed me to move the frame further apart and eliminate the need to trim additional material. The halves do not need to be joined to securely hold the Nook Color in place.
My new phone not only took this photo but synced to my computer so I could upload it. I'm loving the Bluetooth.
I only recently noticed you could get tiny bluetooth adapters that can remain on a laptop all the time without risk of snapping.
My experience of bluetooth drivers is not good, I can recommend going against the usually provided instructions and don't install the drivers from the accompanying disk if your on XP Service Pack 2.
I got a warning during the installation that there were problems with the device and although at first it seemed to work ok, after a while multiple errors would appear from mainly my wifi drivers which would eventually hang the machine entirely. The solution was to uninstall the provided Bluetooth Stack by Toshiba. Then XP's own bluetooth drivers pick it up on insert, they seem to work well and be relatively stable.
What is it with device manufacturers and blue leds? Even when the bluetooth is disabled it comes on for 5 seconds twice a minute, if its communicating it flashes continuously. Distracting and annoying, otherwise a good addition to a laptop which doesn't already have bluetooth and for when you don't have a usb cable for your phone. The linksys adaptor is going free if anyone wants it.
Small, compact, crystal clear sound quality.
Unlike many Bluetooth headsets, the earpiece on the HS850 doesn`t sit inside your ear – instead it sits against your ear with rubber cushioning to keep it comfortable. The ear clip can be switched around so that you can mount the headset on either ear. It also flips forwards to make it easy to place on your ear, even if you wear glasses.
- Increased performance for up to eight hours of talk time and up to 200 hours of standby time
- Foldable boom microphone for compact storage
- Removable ear hook for placement on either ear
- Multi-function button to control several functions including receive/answer/end calls, call hold and 3-way calling
An excellent earbud from SonyEricsson that worked with every Bluetooth phone in the woods with the Tipperary Regional Youth Service. It's very durable.
Olá meninas!
Quanto tempo, né? Estou estudando e estagiando, na maior correria, então estou sem tempo pra postar aqui e visitar a galeria de vocês =(
Claro que continuo esmaltando como sempre (risos!!), mas nem tempo de tirar fotos tenho tido..tanto que vim desempoeirar minha galeria com essa fotinha de péssima qualidade que tirei em junho!! =O
Minhas unhas nem estão mais quadradas assim...estou usando elas mais arredondadas pra não ter que perder muito tempo lixando...
Bom, vamos ao esmalte. Esse azulão é lindo, dá um pouco de trabalho pra pintar, mas o resultado compensa!
1x base
3x Bluetooth
1x Extra brilho (nem lembro mais qual)
É isso meninas! Espero encontrar um tempinho pra postar mais!! Beijos!!
If the BlueSMiRF could take the +16VDC the Roomba puts out, the voltage regulator circuit below wouldn't be needed and we'd save a lot of space.
Note the header receptacle is sorta custom (see notes)
Sending a message via bluetooth from the NXT to OSX.
More info:
juju.org/articles/2006/08/01/mindstorms-nxt-bluetooth-on-osx
This setup consists of a HD-S (high speed green) phosphor screen, and a 90kV, 15 milliamp real X-ray tube with a 1.5 amp 12 volt hot cathode.
I took the photo running the tube at 60kV and around 2 milliamps.
The exposure took 30 seconds, and the green phosphor shadow was post-processed to turn it into the more recognisable negative cyan X-ray transparency.
I use an old 20D camera because X-rays DO in fact damage CCD's as I found an increasing number of hot pixels on my new camera when I first started making X-ray images.