View allAll Photos Tagged wireless
Straight Talk Wireless, Cell Phone Mobile Vending Machine. 9/2014, pic by Mike Mozart of TheToyChannel and JeepersMedia on YouTube.
Straight Talk Wireless, Cell Phone Mobile Vending Machine. 9/2014, pic by Mike Mozart of TheToyChannel and JeepersMedia on YouTube.
The latest version of my wireless temperature sensor using ATtiny84, RFM12B and DS18B20. Sitting on top of a 2 x AAA battery holder. With SD card for scale.
Straight Talk Wireless, Cell Phone Mobile Vending Machine. 9/2014, pic by Mike Mozart of TheToyChannel and JeepersMedia on YouTube.
Wizarding Wireless Network at Wizarding World of Harry Potter - Diagon Alley in Universal Studios Florida.
Finally done with the wireless Canon XTi Remote project.
I gave up on the fart machine and went with the 2-way radio setup. The fart machine was too erratic when activating the shutter. The 2-way radio setup is much more reliable. Wished this radio had an ear piece jack. Having that would of kept me from opening up the receiver walkie and soldering wires to the speaker connection.
Can't ever seeing myself using it from 2 miles away, but you never know... :-)
See photo for notes.
[Guy's turn] An illustration for an article on the politics, commerce, and social aspects of open wireless networks.
Straight Talk Wireless, Cell Phone Mobile Vending Machine. 9/2014, pic by Mike Mozart of TheToyChannel and JeepersMedia on YouTube.
Straight Talk Wireless, Cell Phone Mobile Vending Machine. 9/2014, pic by Mike Mozart of TheToyChannel and JeepersMedia on YouTube.
Car to car wireless network, using Mikrotik Routerboard.
by: Mikrotik Indonesia (citraweb) and Indonesia Special Force.
feeding underground transformer (13kv-4kv).Should power go out at 4kv sub, for example, this transformer can switch in to the 4kv underground network.
wireless in the toilet --if you don't belive me, first green led below the screen indicates wifi turned on and bolded entries with small squares on the contact list on the right means that I'm online /Lake Buena Vista WDW
I have it on good authority that Earthlink plans to put an aggregation point/tower at Palm and Short (near Xavier), and this tower would provide free wireless internet for a radius of about 3-5 miles. I drew these circles to help myself understand what this would mean. The inner and outer circles represent the three and five mile radii respectively. Earthlink may have plans to build other towers elsewhere but I don't know about that.
When %$#! alkaline batteries ate my last timer release, I ordered a new one and swore I wouldn't run anything but NiMH batteries in it. This Yongnuo MC-36R is what I wound up getting.
Functionally it's identical to my previous timer release. I suspect they come off the same production line. The buttons on the Yongnuo are much better, though, and the slide lock for the shutter button actually works whereas my previous one required thumbnails and brute force to make it lock.
I don't know what the wireless range is on this, but I suspect it's close to what their wireless flash units will do.
One nice thing about this release: There's a 1/8" phono jack at the top of the unit so you can connect a cable to it in the event you want to use it as a wired timer release.
One other nice thing about this is that the wireless receiver doubles as a wired shutter release. In the event the batteries in both units die, that switch will still trigger the shutter.
The only bummer is the receiver uses a CR2 battery. At least the one it's got is a lithium prime cell, not alkaline.
Camp Evans
Wall Township, NJ
Camp Evans is a former military base associated with Fort Monmouth, in the U.S. State of New Jersey. It is located in Wall Township, although it is often said to be located in Belmar (its postal zip code is Belmar's, although it lies outside the borough). The property overlooks the Shark River.
Camp Evans is named after Lt. Col. Paul Wesley Evans of the Signal Corps, who worked in the development of wireless transmission at the Belmar Station in the early 20th century. After World War I, Evans was reassigned to the Panama Canal Zone as the presiding Signal Officer.
The original buildings were built by the American Marconi Company under a contract to the J.G. White Engineering Corp. between 1912 and 1914 as part of Guglielmo Marconi's "Wireless Girdle" around the Earth. It was then known as the Belmar Station.
The Belmar Station served as Marconi's receiving station, "Duplexed" with his New Brunswick high power transmitting station. An operator in Wall keyed the New Brunswick transmitter, 32 miles to the northwest, through a landline connection. Edwin Armstrong and David Sarnoff tested and perfected the regenerative circuit at the Wall site, on the night of January 31/February 1, 1914.