View allAll Photos Tagged controllers
Not for the idiot box, for those fun badass battery-eating cars from my childhood. This build was on the simple side, fun and nostalgic, but I'd forgotten why I hate building with black...old camera is old.
Built for my Iron Builder competition with Bruce Lowell using the dark red fez piece.
Follow me:
Got my order with the four remaining bricks I needed for this creation. I shortened it by one stud so it's just a little bit less over sized. Also the start and select buttons aren't centered on the actual controller. I will take a photo of this next to my Lego SNES later. Enjoy.
The Merseyside Tramway Preservation Society Limited’s former Wallasey Corporation Tramways 78, a Brush Electrical Engineering Company Limited tram with a The J.G. Brill Company 21E truck, two motors and Dick, Kerr & Company Limited DB1 controllers with a Brush Electrical Engineering Company Limited H40/24R body built 1920 departs from the Angelina’s cafe terminus on the reserved track by Shore Road in Birkenhead with an Angelina’s cafe to Wirral Transport Museum service during the Wirral Transport Museum’s 100 years of Wallasey Corporation Transport event. Sunday 9th April 2023
Note, 78 was originally operated by Wallasey Corporation as number 78, a Brush Electrical Engineering Company Limited tram with a Peckham Truck & Engineering Company Limited P22 truck, two Brush Electrical Engineering Company Limited 1210J 45 horsepower motors and Brush Electrical Engineering Company Limited 8B controllers with a Brush Electrical Engineering Company Limited H42/24R body built 1920. It was withdrawn from service in 1933 (Wallasey Corporation’s tramway closed on 30th November). The remaining trams, including 78 were sold for scrap by Grahamsleys of Newcastle upon Tyne in March 1934. 78 was one of many bodies sold to a North Wales dealer later in 1934 who sold 78’s saloon to a North Wales farmer for use as a farmyard store. The saloon was acquired by the Merseyside Tramway Preservation Society in 1985 who rebuilt it using an upper deck recovered from Welshpool, a The J.G. Brill Company 21E truck and two motors acquired from Lisbon, Portugal, and Dick, Kerr & Company Limited DB1 controllers motors. The Merseyside Tramway Preservation Society’s operations passed to The Merseyside Tramway Preservation Society Limited in February 2002 and 78’s restoration to working order was completed in August 2002
Ref no Nikon D7200 6th series - DSC_3271
Previously I had always liked the more fat rounded shape of the Xbox Controller so I'm really happy with the new PS5 controllers!
You can find me at the locations below:
Model-View-Controller (MVC) is a software design pattern. It separates objects into one of three categories:
Models for maintaining data,
Views for displaying models into form of UI,
Controllers for process to events and user actions
Model - Masha Gumenyuk
View - Portable TV
Controller - Glock 17
Wondering what to do with the packaging that your wiimote and nunchuck controller came in? Why not fill them with chocolate! We did.
They're both stuffed with sponge fingers to fill them out a little, otherwise we'd have used a lot more chocolate. Not a bad thing in itself, but we didn't have that much chocolate.
Master the 8-bit games all over again with this minifigure sized NES classic controller.
Pad printed on a 1x2 tile.
NASA's Virtual Airport Tower is located at the Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, California. The Virtual Airport Tower's two-story structure is a full-scale, highly sophisticated simulation facility that will emulate Level 5 air traffic control towers and the busiest airports. It provides the platform to conduct in-depth human factors studies with quantifiable results using actual air traffic controllers, airline dispatchers and airport managers.
Credit: NASA
Image Number: ACD99-0095-1.1
Date: Circa 1995
Live at Vinyl, Atlanta, GA.
© 2016 Theodore Lee
Thanks for viewing my work!
See my portfolio at tedleephoto.us
Follow me on Twitter: @twlatl
Read my Tumblr at twlatl.tumblr.com
It may look a little wonky, but I've completed the Nintendo label for the outside of my giant LEGO NES Controller. In the first edition of this controller from 2013, I printed out stickers for the A and B buttons, START, SELECT, and Nintendo -- and as a result, received a lot of flak from the nerd community for cutting corners. This time around, I've rebuilt the outside of the controller to use LEGO pieces for building letters. The hard part for this line of text? The O: I spent a few hours trying to work on that specific letter alone. I'm also currently rebuilding the internal circuits of this controller to be Arduino-based!
I'm quite sad I can't get a gray border around the D-pad. Revamp of an old MOC, and I think it's quite a bit better. Video
I'm quite sad I can't get a gray border around the D-pad. Revamp of an old MOC, and I think it's quite a bit better. Video