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The power button to my Xbox 360.

A coworker unearthed an SWTPC 6800, a computer that came out in 1975.

Picture of an old, dusty Nintendo 64's power button pulled from a closet that I used for a little retro gaming session with some friends. I used a Canon 500D close up lense on a Nikon 70-300mm VR lense mounted on a tripod with the VR off. I also used this for an entry about macro photography on my blog.

 

www.onebrightspot.com/blog

 

Lighting info: SB800 shooting through a white umbrella almost directly overhead. Triggered via Nikon CLS.

IMPORTANT TIP #1:

Keep your screws organized. I used 2 pieces of masking tape. One taped upside down to hold the screws, and 1 right side up just to label where each section of screws came from.

Most of the screws are differant sizes/lengths.

 

I usually start from one corner and work clockwise, labeling almost everything.

Osterley Park, Middlesex

Multiple group 1 winner Starspangledbanner has a "power button" spot, as seen before his 10th-place finish in the Breeders' Cup Turf Sprint (Gr. 1) at Santa Anita Park racetrack in Arcadia, California, U.S.A. (Nov. 3, 2012)

 

Photo © 2012 Marcie Heacox, all rights reserved. FOR PERSONAL VIEWING PURPOSES ONLY.

The power button on my screen.

Pentax K-x + Chinon 35 - 70mm Macro | Sony Vaio FW power button

Close up picture of the power button on my Bread Machine. Could you figure it out if I would not of told you?

Here is the first batch of cast silver buttons I picked up today. They need a little cleaning and polishing, but look exactly like the originals. I will post a photo with spun finish soon. And you also may notice, the tab is now top dead center! I am also looking into tie tacks and cufflinks.

We also did a pair in 18k Gold...WOW are they nice. Very expensive though.

My brother & I just spent an hour and a half going silly with light, hahaa

fun fun funn... Except for the weird noises the abandoned elevators make..

   

eeeeeeeek.

Close up picture of the power button on my Bread Machine. Could you figure it out if I would not of told you?

Close up picture of the power button on my Bread Machine. Could you figure it out if I would not of told you?

First motherboard I've ever owned with its own built-in Reset and Power buttons. Made the build much easier, as I didn't have to hook up the power button / reset button / harddrive led until I was sure everything was working. You can also see the 2 digit error code display to the right -- this is how they get away with not including a PC speaker. It's actually a much more demonstrative way to display a boot-up error. Of course I still wanted a PC speaker, so I gutted an old computer for one. Then I found out that was a computer that had been functional since 1991 -- upgraded so many times that 0 of the original parts remained. But it had the soul of a 286, and I killed it. R.I.P. Mist. Maybe your computer name will be used again in the 2020s or something.

 

My Motherboard is one of the VERY few motherboards on the market that has all the features I want, like on-board 7.1 sound with optical digital out: ASRock X99 Extended-length ATX Motherboard with LGA2011-3 CPU socket: $280.48 (after $40 rebate) from NewEgg. Other misc specs: Chipset: Intel X99 / Memory: 8x288pin, DDR4 3200+(OC), MAX:128G, channel supported: Quad Channel / 5xPCI Express 3.0 x16 Slots / 1xPCI Express 2.0 x16 slot / SATA 6Gb/s: 10xSATA 6Gb/s / M.2: 1xUltra M.2 Socket / Onboard Audio: Realtek ALC1150 7.1 Channels / Onboard LAN: LAN Chipset Intel I217LM, Second LAN Chipset Intel I210AT (both 1Gbps,with teaming functionality) / Rear Panel Ports: 1xPS/2 keyboard/mouse port, 2xCOM Port Headers, 2xRJ-45 LAN Ports / USB 3.0: 4xUSB 3.0,4xUSB 2.0 / eSATA: 1 / S/PDIF Out: 1xOptical / 2xCPU Fan Connectors (1x4-pin, 1x3-pin), 3xChassis Fan Connectors (1x4-pin, 2x3-pin) (Smart Fan Speed Control), 1xPower Fan Connector (3-pin), 1xHDD Saver Connector / Dimensions: 12x10.5" / XXL Aluminum Alloy Heatsink, Premium 60A Power ±Choke±, Premium Memory Alloy ±Choke±, Ultra Dual-N MOSFET (UDM), Nichicon 12K Platinum Caps, Sapphire Black PCB / Supports Intel Core i7 and Xeon E5-1600/2600 v3 Processor Family for the LGA 2011-3 Socket, up to 18 Cores / Supports AMD 4-Way CrossFireX and NVIDIA 4-Way SLI / 10 SATA3, 1 eSATA, 1 Ultra M.2 (PCIe Gen3 x4 & SATA3) / 6 USB 3.0 (2 Front, 4 Rear) / 8 USB 2.0 (4 Front, 4 Back) / 2 COM Port Headers / 1 Thunderbolt AIC Connector / Limited Warranty period (parts/labor): 3 years / Dimensions: 332x352x87mm.

 

building computer.

ASRock X99 WS motherboard, power button, reset button.

Thailog. close-up.

 

upstairs, Clint and Carolyn's house, Alexandria, Virginia.

 

March 17, 2015.

  

... Read my blog at ClintJCL at wordpress.com

... Read Carolyn's blog at CarolynCASL at wordpress.com

  

BACKSTORY: Building my new computer! We decided to name it Thailog. Thailog ("Goliath" spelled backwards) is the evil twin of Goliath from the cartoon Gargoyles. Carolyn's computer is named after Goliath, so it just makes sense that Clint's computer is the evil twin of Carolyn's computer. A quick summary of the computer's specs is: Intel Core i7-5820K Haswell-E 6-Core 3.3GHz with an Arctic Freezer I30 cooler on a ASRock X99 WS EATX motherboard with 24G of Crucial Ballistix Sport DDR4 2400mHz RAM, a Radeon R9 270 video card, and a Crucial M500 240GB M.2 SSD...all inside a massive NZXT Phantom 820 case. It was a $1560 build, summarized on my blog at clintjcl.wordpress.com/2015/03/06/journal-hardware-purcha...

Now you're playing with power. You're also playing with Reset, too.

A busy June thirteenth, so I got an early start as We're Here! finds the number 13 for your viewing pleasure.

My new monitor! I now realise that my laptop was very poor for colour - everything is so much more vibrant on this one.

 

Also my new PC doesn't giveup and die like the old one did with photoshop, so I've now learnt how to add a frame!

The power button to my Xbox 360.

Simple filler for the blog, so I don't miss a day

I know this really has nothing to do with spring, except normal Toronto spring weather is back in full force and I was too much of a wuss to go outside.

My sister's 360 controller

We are what we secrete.....

 

Turn off Lame Stream News, turn off the TV period and turn on life.

Not literally, of course. But sometimes, more often than people think, the reset button is the best approach.

 

I liked making this Keep Calm the best. I couldn't find a source SVG for the on/off button, so I made one and put it on Wikimedia Commons.

 

The font was initially Century Gothic but I messed with it a bunch to recreate the hand-drawn feel of the original.

Royalty-free technology clipart picture of a white power symbol on a red electronics button, bordered by chrome, with a red shadow.

It's been doing this a lot, beginning with me opting for another 'Prestige' level on COD4. Time to send it back to Microsoft.

 

After all the years of hatred and fear, Is it finally time for me to get a PS3?

Entirely done in Photoshop. With help from PSDTUTS.COM's "creating a cool brushed metal surface in photoshop" tutorial.

12 days later. Healing nicely :) You don't know how many people wanted to press it the first couple of days... Hehe.

Power-Button of an MacBook

The power light from my old Xbox. I have since upgraded to the 360, which is a cool machine.

Plastic Coke bottle in front of the illuminated power button on an external hard drive. Straight from camera.

The only camera to pass the macro test. The photo is focused and you can make out all the textures of the dashboard and power button.

 

Part of my test of three cameras. Macro photography test.

My second tattoo at age 18. Power button

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