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Just an idea that I had for giving instructions on how to use the remote controls to people who aren't that tech-minded. You just scan the remotes, load the images into your favorite drawing program, and add some arrows & instructions.
You can kinda see his cool dude outfit in this picture. He's got a tracksuit like shirt and pants and I turned up the collar on his polo.
I just received in the mail a new toy: a remote control for my D40. It took a little experimentation to figure it out, but I think I can make it work.
So, that's how my Flickr friends do it!
I need both to run my TV. One is for DirecTV and for some reason it won't pair up with my TV. The other one turns the TV on/off and controls the volume. 2/
Assignment: Entertainment remotes come in all shapes and sizes, show us your press button entertainment control, post it then Tag it with #TP457
toy boat rentals, ritan park. that clock is wrong by the way - i shot this before 4pm. if it were really 6:35 this photo would be dark.
I rigged up a ghetto-stylee remote flash for the Holga, by taping an optical slave to the on-cam flash, then plugging it into a PW transmitter. $20 camera with $400 radio slaves, rock and roll baby
Sacramento International Airport, Remote Central Receiving Facility, Dreyfuss & Blackford Architects.
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Today’s Daily Shoot assignment is:
Electronic gadgets pervade our world. You've probably got several. Make a photo of your favorite gadget today.
Honestly, I can't live without my iPhone, but I wasn't inspired to photograph it today...so though I'm not a bit TV watcher, the remote (dusty lint and all!) is an integral component for that system! Naples, FL
Each spring, remote areas in Oregon's sagebrush steppe attract scores of greater sage grouse (Centrocercus urophasianus) for elaborate mating rituals. These areas - called leks - provide wildlife biologists a golden opportunity for census-taking, because they host the largest annual gathering of male and female sage grouse.
Since the males are in full display - strutting their uniquely shaped pin-like tail feathers, inflating and deflating distinctive golden throat sacs, and cooing and clucking a range of sounds - they stand out in the landscape and are more easily identified and counted.
This counting is critical. The BLM and its partners are taking steps to protect the greater sage grouse and more than 350 other species that rely upon the sagebrush steppe landscape for their survival, and these annual censuses - called lek counts - provide vital information about sage grouse population health.
At one of many lek counts in the spring of 2016, wildlife biologists from the Bureau of Land Management and the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife teamed up near Steens Mountain in southeastern Oregon to count and record the population of greater sage grouse in two nearby leks.
The biologists traveled several hours to the lek site, arriving to begin their count at first light - a time when the birds are most active. Using spotting scopes, the biologists meticulously counted sage grouse and recorded them for later study.
The biologists also noted the presence of forbs favored by the birds, including some of the 17 species of buckwheat found near Steens Mountain. In addition to sagebrush, greater sage grouse rely upon many plants within the sagebrush steppe environment for food. Forbs - herbaceous plants (excluding grasses) with flowers and nutritious leaves - provide important seasonal alternatives to the sage grouse's year-round sagebrush fare.
Oregon is home to 6.3 percent of the nation's sage grouse population, but the effect of rangeland fire and invasive plants on sagebrush habitat continue to threaten the bird's survival. In 2015, following concerted efforts by the BLM and partners to address these and other threats, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service determined that protection for the greater sage-grouse under the Endangered Species Act was no longer warranted, and they withdrew it from the candidate species list.
This decision was not an end to conservation measures, though. Within the next five years, the USFWS will conduct a status review to evaluate the greater sage grouse conservation efforts. That's where the importance of lek counts factors in. It is critical that the BLM has the capacity to document how greater sage grouse plans are being implemented and can demonstrate that they're effective at conserving the bird's habitat by reducing threats, minimizing new surface disturbance, and improving habitat integrity.
Lek counts are like a blood pressure monitor for the greater sage grouse and the sagebrush ecosystem: they provide important data that indicate health, and also inform prescriptive paths toward recovery.
- Story and photos by Greg Shine, BLM, gshine@blm.gov
For more information on greater sage grouse, visit www.fws.gov/greatersagegrouse/
Cliftons Appliance store is Clifton Hill is a great place to purchase products with remotes.
© Anne Holmes
"Remote Access"
Bronze, Copper, Brass
6"H x 3"W x 1"D
Pendant with cast bronze safety ladder, brass found object, and fabricated bronze on a copper chain with brass micro-hardware.
Ray's 1:10 Scale Radio Controlled Touring Car Series. He was inspired by our ex-neighbour to own one. The car is possible to go up to more than 50km/h.
Jet Thruster America is performing wireless Remote Control Docking (jetthrusteramerica.com/download/price-list) for its clients in North America. We ensure the appropriate position for hanging the boat safely at harbors by sitting at distant places. Our company offers an assorted range of services with affordable pocket needs of the sailors. For further details, please visit our website.