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Extra security for online banking. Per online sign-in numbers are generated using your bank-card and the card reader. No need for cables....

Padded case for ebook reader (BeBook Mini). Cause I wasn't so keen on the standard leather etc ones around. Braid on edge and used for knots was made using a fingerloop braid technique (#8 A lace bend rounde of 8 bowes - 1475, CA 108)

Photo: Rob O' Connor (rocshot.com)

© Andy Matthews

I got bored and took my card reader apart. It bugs me that they don't make these things smaller. The plastic casing around this makes it twice as thick, an extra third in length, and ugly.

There was a palm reader across the way, with a very interesting tent. Besides the really colorful frame with the hand on it, the front piece had some interesting details, including a suavastika (see left panel). I inquired and it appears the item was acquired in England, though they think it originally came from India, where there is positive meaning to the Suavastika. FWIW: The both the swastika (counter clockwise rotation) and suavastika (clockwise rotation) is an ancient symbol - the reference I downloaded from google books, and use, was a report of the national Museum, 1894.

 

Civil War Days

Wauconda, Illinois

7-2007

Dear Reader play The Hare and Hounds pub in Birmingham.

www.myspace.com/dearreadermusic

 

© 2009 www.flickr.com/wayne_john_fox, please FlickrMail me for the original images.

Thank you.

Thrift Town, Mission St., San Francisco

A benchful of readers near the London Eye

 

www.ejlphotos.co.uk

enjoying first sunny day of this year:)

Congratulations to Hilliard Elementary’s Accelerated Reader winners for the 2nd nine weeks.

 

Kindergarten - Tyler Nobles 41.1,

1st Grade - Kinley Bullard 91.8,

2nd Grade - Kennedy Geiger 57.9,

3rd Grade - Trevor Silcox 65.4,

4th Grade - Alex Lewis 226.2,

5th Grade - Hannah Simpkins 300.1

 

www.thenassaunews.com

Readers Digest rebound. Custom shrinky-dink bookmark tag. All paper retrieved from shop garbage.

Camera: Canon AE-1

Film: Agfa Vista 200

june, lalibela 2015

part of my "readers project" (see set description)

Principals Ken Essay and Chris Bellmont read Dr. Seuss books to children at Nicollet Commons Park on July 26, 2018 during a Rockin' Readers event through District 191 Community Education.

it's a Kindle!

This picture belongs to my ongoing project "Readers": since 2005 photographing readers all over the world with whatever mobile I have at hand, no editing. See the set "Readers".

The recumbent reader in patent no. 90,124 may be ill. The device is to hold the weight of a book and position it to facilitate reading.

LO for the Reader Challenge with this month's Digi Files:

HeatherT-Tendresse-Paper8

sclingerman-chipper-paper5

awall_bemine (15)

wm2_crlo_banner

ange_wa02

MMullens_SocialButterfly_button3

nettiodesigns_thedigifiles-page1

Fonts: Century Gothic and FO Free Refill.

TFL

I thought I'd try and work-around Twitter's abduction of my tweets by subscribing in Google Reader. Unfortunately that seems to have stopped working a week ago. Seriously worried this isn't accidental breakage.

A reader and his pipe in Italy

Reader out near the Cold Storage Building.

The M2-S1 fingerprint reader utilizes best-of-breed radio frequency swipe sensor technology and enhanced imaging to capture even the most difficult to read fingerprints.

 

> Reads below the skin surface level at the

corium where the fingerprint patterns

remain constant

> High level of anti-spoofing: the reader

simply will not read gummy fingers or other

methods used to fool the system

> Simple, durable, sleek design with

detachable USB cable

thewalrus.ca/foundation/projects/poetry-prize/

  

SCARECROW MAINTENANCE

by Brent Raycroft

 

The old man’s itchy greatcoat fell to me

and given his complaint of its intransigence

I landed on the notion of storing it in the open.

Now that he can’t feel the elements

why not put this remnant of him in them?

There’s acid in the rain enough, enough UV,

that what outlasted him may not outlast me.

 

Get a pole and cross-pole. Fix them together.

Fence wire, screw nails, duct tape, whatever.

The less seen of this part the better.

There’s no need for carpentry. Let him be

haphazard. Let him fail in a high wind,

collapse with the weight of a cloudburst.

He should need maintenance.

 

When the pumpkin rots it’s shocking. Try a

punctured soccer ball. Or a mask from art class.

When the straw hat’s gone, tack on a baseball cap.

When you find him flattened by some enemy,

reach your arm beneath his backbone,

thin within the war-green wool, and heave.

Stamp your heel down hard where he is planted.

 

Crows come regardless.

Deer and rabbits act as though he’s harmless.

But I’ve seen men and women startled.

I’ve backed into him, hoeing in the garden,

felt a poke between my shoulder blades.

He’s got hypervigilance. Low-level PTSD.

Those sleeves held wide show no sign of fatigue.

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