View allAll Photos Tagged computermouse
* Santa Mouse is the newest edition to my little family of retired computer mice.
* Santa Muis is het nieuwste lid van mijn kleine familie van gepensioneerde computermuizen.
* You can find the other family members in this album (Je kunt de andere leden hier vinden):
* Santa Mouse is the newest edition to my little family of retired computer mice.
* Santa Muis is het nieuwste lid van mijn kleine familie van gepensioneerde computermuizen.
* You can find the other family members in this album (Je kunt de andere leden hier vinden):
* Santa Mouse is the newest edition to my little family of retired computer mice.
* Santa Muis is het nieuwste lid van mijn kleine familie van gepensioneerde computermuizen.
* You can find the other family members in this album (Je kunt de andere leden hier vinden):
* Santa Mouse is the newest edition to my little family of retired computer mice.
* Santa Muis is het nieuwste lid van mijn kleine familie van gepensioneerde computermuizen.
* You can find the other family members in this album (Je kunt de andere leden hier vinden):
* Made from used wireless computer mice.
* Gemaakt van gebruikte draadloze computermuizen.
* I posted pictures of these mice before. You can find them in my 'Animals' set.
* Ik heb al eerder foto's van deze muizen gepost. Je kunt ze vinden in mijn 'Dieren' set.
Made Flickr's Explore on Feb 21, 2008!
Highest Position: 142/500
Haha.... an opportunity presented itself and I couldn't resist. I just had to set this up and photograph it at the expense of my Alfie.
The computer mouse was immediately snatched out of Alfie's cage after I snapped this shot. He was starting to gnaw on it!
Computer mouse front view. 530 EX III rt at 1/4th power; tech pro soft box directly behind gobo'd with black posterboard covering approximately 3/4 of softbox. Subject on glass table with black fabric below.
Princeton, playing with my computer mouse!
Had a hard time dulling out the flash, which impacted off the curve in the desk
Two Microsoft Wireless Mobile Mouse 4000 mice mirrored on a black background
PERMISSION TO USE: Please check the licence for this photo on Flickr. If the photo is marked with the Creative Commons licence, you are welcome to use this photo free of charge for any purpose including commercial. I am not concerned with how attribution is provided - a link to my flickr page or my name is fine. If used in a context where attribution is impractical, that's fine too. I enjoy seeing where my photos have been used so please send me links, screenshots or photos where possible. If the photo is not marked with the Creative Commons licence, only my friends and family are permitted to use it.
Inventor of computer mouse and pioneer of human computer interaction.
©Robert Holmgren, all rights reserved. bobholmgren@gmail.com
Dr. Douglas C. Engelbart is an American inventor and early computer pioneert. He is best known for inventing the computer mouse, as a pioneer of human-computer interaction whose team developed hypertext, networked computers, and precursors to GUIs; and as a committed and vocal proponent of the development and use of computers and networks to help cope with the world’s increasingly urgent and complex problems.
His lab at SRI was responsible for more breakthrough innovation than possibly any other lab before or since. Engelbart had embedded in his lab a set of organizing principles, which he termed his "bootstrapping strategy", which he specifically designed to bootstrap and accelerate the rate of innovation achievable.
Open up a computer mouse and this is what you'll find inside. This is from our article on how computer mice work.
Compare with our photo of the parts inside a ball and wheel mouse.
Our images are published under a Creative Commons Licence (see opposite) and are free for noncommercial use. We also license our images for commercial use. Please contact us directly via our website for more details.
Photo of using a mouse in order to click and select items on a computer screen.
I've used this photo to illustrate a blog post about website usability research.
Photo by Bernd Hutschenreuther (Hutschi) at Wikipedia - Creative Commons Share Alike Attribution 3.0 License.
Microsoft Wireless Mobile Mouse 4000 mirrored on a black background
PERMISSION TO USE: Please check the licence for this photo on Flickr. If the photo is marked with the Creative Commons licence, you are welcome to use this photo free of charge for any purpose including commercial. I am not concerned with how attribution is provided - a link to my flickr page or my name is fine. If used in a context where attribution is impractical, that's fine too. I enjoy seeing where my photos have been used so please send me links, screenshots or photos where possible. If the photo is not marked with the Creative Commons licence, only my friends and family are permitted to use it.
This page from Mobilizing Generation 2.0 by Ben Rigby demonstrates a number of problems in URL design and communication. See this image larger. For example, who among us would voluntarily type in the New York Times URL for endnote 7? How long might that New York Times URL take to communicate over the telephone? For endnotes 3 and 12, how many people will type the period at the end of the URL? Which of these URLs takes the least amount of time to type? Presumably the book's website has these URLs somewhere so that you don't have to type them. (I do recommend the book -- it's a great layperson's overview of Web 2.0 technologies with a focus on using them as political motivational and communication tools.)
Here's a closeup of the mechanism that allows an old-style ball mouse to detect your hand movements. There's a light beam running between the transparent square (an LED-style light emitter) and the black square (a photocell/light detector). As you move your hand, the mouse ball moves too. It pushes against a roller that turns the spoked wheel, breaking the light beam repeatedly. Counting the number of times the beam is broken gives a precise measurement of how far your hand has moved.
This photo is from our article on how computer mice work.
For a bit more context, see the photo of the same mouse taken from overhead.
Our images are published under a Creative Commons Licence (see opposite) and are free for noncommercial use. We also license our images for commercial use. Please contact us directly via our website for more details.
March 2010 - Just 'cause there's a mouse, doesn't mean that a pencil is obsolete quite yet.
Used in my blog on March 12, 2010 [LINK]
I comment about my life and opinions in my eJournal and images every single day.