Thứ Ba, 19 tháng 4, 2011

what types of cell phones use the same batteries.?

what types of cell phones use the same batteries.?

I have a chocolate cell phone and was wondering what other kinds of cell phones use the same batterys as the chocolate LGX8550
thanks

Answer by gwenni94
Any LG Verizon phone.
Such as the…
LG Dare
LG Versa
LG enV (all models)
LG Explorer

What do you reckon? Answer below!

ICP Exercise 5 (Feb 2010), day 6, candidate photo 06
types of cell phones

Image by Ed Yourdon
Note: this photo was in print in an undated (Feb 2010) EveryBlock New York City blog, titled "622 – 640 block of West End Ave." It was also in print as an illustrations, for reasons I don’t know at all, in an undated (Mar 2010) Squidoo blog titled "Reverse telephone lookup." It was also in print as an illustration in an undated (Mar 2010) Squidoo blog titled "Nikon D700 Digital SLR Camera." And it was in print in an Oct 7, 2010 blog titled "Q&A: I need to find a site that tells you about all types of cell phones in america and phones that arnt out in yet?" It was also in print in an undated (late Nov 2010) Digital Camera Product Reviews blog, with the same title and detailed notes as what I had written on this Flickr page.

Moving into 2011, the photo was in print in a Jan 17, 2011 blog titled "Cool 7 Digital Photo Picture Frame Images."

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For our final exercise in my February 2010 International Center of Photography (ICP) workshop free "On Seeing What’s Right In Front Of You," we were given the following assignment:

"By the improvisation workshop we did tonight as a jumping off point, shoot another pool of same type of everyday object, person or setting each day for the next six days. You can use the same subject as you did for a previous assignment or you can pick a new one. Pick something that intrigues you. KEEP IT SIMPLE.

"But do one thing differently this time: use an autofocus camera (or pre set a focusing distance on a manual camera) and shoot your photos without looking at/through the camera’s viewfinder.

"Don’t cheat by by the viewfinder to shoot. Don’t do any post-production cropping with Photoshop. Don’t use work that you shot before this week.

"Try to reckon about not just what the subject looks like, but also what it feels like when you encounter it. Use your body and reflexes to shoot … not just your eyes. The pictures will doubtless be off-centered and skewed looking … don’t worry, that is the point!

"Use your "Is It Alive?" handout to edit and bring your favorite six photos as full frame images with you to class next week. Feel free to place a title and words with the photos.

"Trust your instincts. Explore. Be playful."

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With that in mind, I stationed for myself on a street corner near my apartment building building on the Upper West Side of Manhattan. It’s a busy intersection, with an express IRT subway stop, a new subway station under construction, two public schools within a block or two, and a highway lobby onto the West Side Highway just a couple blocks away. So there are tons of people all around, all the time — walking and talking to one another, taking their kids to and from school, rushing to catch the subway, chatting on their cell phones or listening to music without paying attention to anyone around the. All I had to do was stand in one house for 30-60 minutes, and hundreds of fascinating people wandered by (along with thousands of not-so-fascinating people).

On the first 3 days of the 6-day assignment, I took between 300 and 800 photos; on the fourth and fifth days, I took numerous hundred more on this corner, plus numerous hundred in Inner Park; and on the sixth and final day here, I took approximately 400 photos.

I’ve winnowed the first and second days’ pool down to 10 "candidate" photos for uploading to Flickr, and I’ll be doing the same with each successive day’s pool of "raw" images. From each set of 10 candidate photos, I’ll eventually pick one "keeper" to form the vital set of six photos for the class exercise. I’ve taken the liberty of cropping, straightening, and color-adjusting the Flickr "candidates," but whatever gets submitted in the final set of six will be a non-cropped, non-straightened format.

A couple minor technical notes, for those who care about such things: I used a 24-120mm full-frame zoom lens on my Nikon D700, but set it to maximum wide-angle in order to be able to capture the desired subject(s) by just pointing the camera in their general management. I set the gap to somewhere between f/8 and f/11, to ensure a excellent depth of field (DOF), and used the gap-priority setting on the camera to ensure that the camera would not take me by bolt from the blue with a soft-DOF gap like f/5.6. To ensure that I got a crisp image, even if people were walking quickly (and/or rain was coming down), I cranked up the ISO setting to anywhere between 1600 and 3200, depending on how bright or dark the day was…

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If you have any thoughts or suggestions about these "candidate" photos, or opinions about which ones should be selected for my final submission in the ICP class, feel free to send me a Flickr note, or an ancient-fashioned email message. Thanks!

I’m looking for a new phone and I would like some feedback from those who have had this phone before. You can tell me anything about it…likes and dislikes and everything.

The phones I’m looking at are:
1) Nokia 6236i
2) Nokia 6215i
3) Samsung SCH-a870
4) Verizon Wireless PN-215pp

THANKS

Answer by fawcett1101
1) Nokia 6236i = rubbish
2) Nokia 6215i = rubbish
3) Samsung SCH-a870 = rubbish
4) Verizon Wireless PN-215pp = rubbish

get a nokia N80 instead they r soooooo coooooll

Steven Fawcett
http://www.pat-services.org.uk
http://www.pure-chocolate.co.uk
http://www.purechocolate.co.uk

What do you reckon? Answer below!
Our ‘Toxic’ Like-Despise Relationship With Plastics
Science writer Susan Freinkel chronicles the rise of plastic in consumer culture — and its effects on the environment and our health — in Plastic: A Toxic Like Tale . Freinkel says plastics leach potentially harmful chemicals into our bloodstream — and that scientists are now figuring out what that does to our bodies.
Read more on NPR

Learn about the different types of text messaging with expert cellular and mobile phone tips in this free text messagingvideo clip. Expert: Rick Kennedy Bio: Rick has 15 yrs of computer & internet schooling & experience and is also a web designer. He has owned a cell phone & beeper shop for 5 being & worked with all types of phones as a service technician. Filmmaker: Richard Kennedy
Video Rating: 1 / 5


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