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SYMA 601 RC HELICOPTER 300 SCHWEIZER

SYMA 601 RC HELICOPTER 300 SCHWEIZER

 SYMA 601 RC HELICOPTER 300 SCHWEIZER

To day I find introduce you this SYMA 601 RC HELICOPTER 300 SCHWEIZER I make this product appeal to young people

BuZZ from Customer Shopping

battery life is a joke1
just got one today charged it up per specs,battery only lasted about 10 minutes but charging it a second time was a joke the plug does not want to mate together and does not want to charge up,charge out of box ok to re-charge a bigger joke.was a good deal for a one or two time toy now all it will do is sit and go to waste until the garbage shows up to take away.

About SYMA 601 RC HELICOPTER 300 SCHWEIZER detail

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #25261 in Toys & Games
  • Model: SYMA601
  • Dimensions: 12.35 pounds

Features

  • Flies about 100 feet High
  • Proportional Control
  • Flight Stabilising System
  • Flying time - About 10 minutes
  • Two Channel Radio Control.

SYMA 601 RC HELICOPTER 300 SCHWEIZER Description

Schweizer Hughes 300 RC helicopters by world renowned Syma factory are great 2 channel beginners helicopters. Great for beginners as it gets them experienced in controlling helicopters before the time comes to graduate to a more expensive model. This electric Radio control helicopter is very sturdy and will have you hovering and flying with ease. Flight time is about 10 minutes and this Hughes RC helicopter will keep you amazed for hours. Perfect for ages 14+. You will love this rc helicopter!- high build quality and good performance. Measures about 20 inches long. This amazing RC Helicopter features Proportional Control, Altitude & Rotor Speed Control, Flight Stabilizing System, & Lightweight Airframe. Comes with remote control assembled and ready to fly out of the box! (charge time is around 3hrs for full charge) This rc helicopter flies about 100 feet high. Suitable for flying outside or in a larger indoor space. Rc helicopters have been around for many years but now they have become affordable and you can get decent rc helicopters to suit most budgets. RC helicopter hughes 300 provides the best in class of this type of helicopter as it allows freedom to learn and master your technique so when confident you can use your new found radio controlled helicopter skills to impress.
Bye Bye
Cheers and Care


Transformers Premium Series - Bumblebee From Hasbro Toys

Transformers Premium Series  Description

Ever since the final battle against the DECEPTICONS, BUMBLEBEE has been meticulous about his appearance. With Sams help, he immediately buffs out every scratch he gets in his finish, and he gets detailed once a month. Hes even convinced AUTOBOT RATCHET to learn a little bit more about cosmetic upgrades to AUTOBOT systems, so that he comes out of any post-battle repair looking just as good as he did before.

Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #5398 in Toys & Games
  • Brand: Transformers
  • Dimensions: 1.00 pounds

Features

  • Prepare this bold hero for a battle between good and evil and take on the DECEPTICON forces!
  • Arm this mighty robot figure with a fierce cannon that converts to a blade, or convert the armed warrior to Camaro concept vehicle mode and display the super-detailed deco with black racing stripes accenting the bright yellow paint job!
  • No matter which mode you choose, this BUMBLEE figure is ready to rumble!
  • For age 5 and up
  • Customer Reviews

    Pointless!3

  • I finally found this premium edition at a local Walmart the other day. Definately the hardest one to locate out of the new bunch of premium edition figures that Hasbro has put out. I thought the new paint app. would be much better next to the original, boy was I mistaken. As soon as I got home I compared the premium bumblebee to the standard one I have and the difference is very minor. The supposed new gold metallic finish isn’t that much greater in comparison to the original. All you get is a little darker finish ( yellow ). The black stripping has changed a little ( big deal ). Now the gas cap and the windshield wipers are painted silver ( wow ). The paint app. really isn’t all that metallic to be honest. Probably due to the fact that Hasbro always seems to do crappy paint jobs on all of their figures as of late. My major gripe and advice to all other collectors out there is why didnt Hasbro just make this the standard Bumblebee from the very begining. Actually thats a dumb question, because they want more money " duh ". Not saying this Bumblebee isnt decent or anything. If you dont have one yet try to get this one instead of the regular one if you can find him. If you already have the standard edition I would recommend, if you can comparing the two and making sure that it is absolutely worth youre hard earned cash first.
  • Transformers Premium Series


iPhone: The Missing Manual

iPhone: The Missing Manual
By David Pogue

This "manual" was helpful. It reaffirmed what I had taught myself before it arrived. It is very easy to understand and follow.

List Price: $19.99
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Product Description

As you’d expect of Apple, the iPhone is gorgeous. iPhone: The Missing Manual is a book as breathtaking as its subject. Teeming with high-quality color graphics, each custom designed page helps you accomplish specific tasks — everything from Web browsing to watching videos. Written by New York Times columnist and Missing Manual series creator David Pogue, this book shows you how to get the most out of your new Apple iPhone. The name iPhone may be doing Apple a disservice. This machine is so packed with possibilities that the cellphone may actually be the least interesting part. The iPhone is at least three products merged into one: a phone, a wide-screen iPod and a wireless, touch-screen Internet communicator. The iPhone’s beauty alone may be enough for you to dig for your credit cards, but its Mac OS X-based software makes it not so much a smartphone as something out of the film "Minority Report." The real magic, however, awaits when you browse the Web. You get to see the entire Web page on the iPhone’s screen. All of this is cooked up with Apple’s traditional secret sauce of simplicity, intelligence and whimsy. Written by New York Times columnist and Missing Manual series creator David Pogue, iPhone: The Missing Manual shows you everything they need to know to get the most out of your new Apple iPhone. Full of humor, tips, tricks, and surprises, this book teaches you how to extend iPhone’s usefulness by exploiting its links to the Web as well as its connection to Macs or PCs; how to save money using Internet-based messages instead of phone calls; and how to fill the iPhone with TV shows and DVDs for free.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #2077 in Books
  • Published on: 2007-08-06
  • Format: Illustrated
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 304 pages

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com

iPhone: The Missing Manual Sneak Preview: David Pogue’s Favorite iPhone Tricks

David Pogue with his iPhone

The iPhone’s finger-driven interface seems natural and obvious. But when you really think about it, making it seem that way was no easy task. There are no menus in the iPhone software, for example, and no checkboxes or radio buttons. Everything on the screen has to be big enough for a fleshy fingertip.

On the other hand, the finger makes an outstanding pointing device; heck, you’ve been pointing with it all your life. It’s much faster to scroll diagonally with a fingertip, for example, than with fussy adjustments on two different scroll bars.

Here, then, are some of the iPhone’s unadvertised taps, double-taps, and other shortcuts, all culled from iPhone: The Missing Manual .

Double-Tapping

Double-tapping is actually pretty rare on the iPhone. It’s not like the Mac or Windows, where double-clicking the mouse means "open." On the iPhone, you open something with one tap.

A double tap, therefore, is reserved for three functions:

  • In Photos, Google Maps, and Safari (the Web browser), double-tapping zooms in on whatever you tap, magnifying it by a factor of two.
  • In the same programs, as well as Mail, double-tapping means, "restore to original size" after you’ve zoomed in. (Weirdly, in Google Maps, you use a different gesture to zoom out: tap once with two fingers. That gesture appears nowhere else on the iPhone.)
  • When you’re watching a video, double-tapping eliminates or restores letterbox bars.

See, the iPhone’s screen is bright, vibrant, and stunningly sharp. It’s not, however, the right shape for videos. Standard TV shows are squarish, not rectangular. So when you watch TV shows, you get black letterbox columns on either side of the picture.

Movies have the opposite problem. They’re too wide for the iPhone screen. So when you watch movies, you wind up with letterbox bars above and below the picture. Some people are fine with that. At least when letterbox bars are onscreen, you know you’re seeing the complete composition of the scene the director intended. Other people can’t stand letterbox bars. You’re already watching on a pretty small screen; why sacrifice some of that precious area to black bars? That’s why the iPhone gives you a choice. If you double-tap the video as it plays, you zoom in, magnifying the image so that it fills the entire screen. Part of the image is now off the screen; now you’re not seeing the entire composition originally broadcast. You lose the top and bottom of TV scenes, or the left and right edges of movie scenes. If this effect winds up chopping off something important–some text on the screen, for example–restoring the original letterbox view is just another double-tap away.

Secrets of the Sensors

The iPhone has three cool sensors. First, it has an accelerometer that detects when you’ve rotated the iPhone into landscape orientation. In programs like Photos, Safari, and iPod, it triggers the screen image to rotate as well.

Camouflaged behind the black glass where you can’t see them except with a bright flashlight are two more sensors: a proximity sensor that shuts off the screen illumination and touch sensitivity when the phone is against your head (it works only in the Phone application), and an ambient-light sensor that brightens the display when you’re in sunlight and dims it in darker places.

Apple says that it experimented with having the light sensor active all the time, but it was weird to have the screen get brighter and darker all the time. So the sensor now samples the ambient light, and adjusts the brightness; it does this only once–each time you unlock the phone after waking it.

You can use that tip to your advantage. By covering up the sensor (just above the earpiece) as you unlock the phone, you force it to a low-power, dim screen-brightness setting (because the phone believes that it’s in a dark room). Or by holding it up to a light as you wake it, you get full brightness. In both cases, you’ve saved all the taps and navigation it would have taken you to find the manual brightness slider in Settings.

Earbud Cord Switch

Without close inspection, you’d have a hard time telling the iPhone’s white stereo earbuds apart from a regular iPod’s–but don’t get them mixed up. The iPhone’s earbuds have a tiny, embedded clicker/microphone partway down the right earbud cord.

That’s right, "clicker/microphone." The tiny bulge is the microphone for phone calls. But if you pinch the bulge, you’ll find that it clicks.

  • Pinch once to answer an incoming phone call. Pinch for a couple seconds to dump the call to voicemail. (You can also double-tap the Sleep/Wake switch on top of the iPhone to send the call to voicemail.)
  • During music or video playback, pinch once to pause the music; pinch again to resume playback.
  • During music playback, double-pinch to skip to the next song.

Customizing the iPod Buttons

The iPod module on the iPhone starts out with buttons along the bottom for summoning four lists: Playlists, Artists, Songs, and Videos.

But what about Albums? Genres? Composers? They’re there, all right, but hidden; you have to tap More to see them.

But what if you use those lists more often than Artists or Songs? No problem: you can replace one of those starter buttons with a list of your own.

Tap More, and then tap the Edit button (upper-left corner). You arrive at the Configure screen. Here’s the complete list of music-and-video sorting lists: Albums, Podcasts, Audiobooks, Genres, Composers, Compilations, Playlists, Artists, Songs, and Videos.

To replace one of the four starter icons, use a finger to drag an icon from the top half of the screen downward, directly onto the existing icon you want to replace. It lights up to show the success of your drag.

When you release your finger, you’ll see that the new icon has replaced the old one. Tap Done in the upper-right corner.

Keyboard Speedups

Don’t bother using the Shift key to capitalize a new sentence. The iPhone does that capitalizing automatically. Don’t put apostrophes in contractions, either; the iPhone will put those in for you, too.

Force Quit, Reset

The iPhone is pretty darned simple and stable, but it’s still a computer. In times of troubleshooting, these tips may come in handy:

  • Force quit a program. Press and hold the Home button for six seconds to force-quit a program that seems to be stuck.
  • Reset. If the entire iPhone locks up–it can happen–press and hold both the Home button and the Sleep/Wake switch for eight seconds. You’ll see the screen go black, and then the Apple logo appears as the iPhone reboots.

McCallum’s Awesome iPhone Period-Typing Shortcut

I have in my possession a nugget, a secret bit of iPhone information that’s so valuable, such a headache- and time-saver, that I don’t know what to do with it.

One voice in my head says, "Hoard it! Keep it a secret until your book is published! If you reveal it, it’ll be all over the Net in hours, and all your competitors’ books will have it, too."

But another voice says, "But this information is too good to keep quiet. Plus, you didn’t discover it yourself. And besides, you’re not gonna starve, either way."

Eventually, the second little voice prevailed. I’m going to share with you the solution to one of the most annoying things, if not THE most annoying thing, about typing on the iPhone:

The punctuation keys and alphabet keys appear in two different keyboard layouts.

So every time you want to type a period or a comma, it’s a three-step, awkward dance: (1) Tap the ".?123" key in the lower left to summon the punctuation layout. (2) Type the period. (3) Type the ABC key in the lower left to return to the alphabet layout.

Imagine how excruciating it is to type, for example, "a P.O. Box in the U.S.A.!" That’s 34 finger taps and 10 mode changes!

And therefore imagine how thrilled I was to receive an email from reader Andrew McCallum, containing a method of typing a period or a comma with only a SINGLE finger gesture.

The iPhone doesn’t register most key presses until you *release* your finger. But Andrew discovered that the Shift and Punctuation keys register their taps on the *press-down* instead.

So here’s what you can do, all in one motion:

1. Touch the ".?123" key, but don’t lift your finger as the punctuation layout appears.

2. Slide your finger a half inch onto the period or comma key, and release.

Incredibly, the ABC layout returns automatically. You’ve typed a period or a comma with one finger touch instead of three. In fact, you can type ANY of the punctuation symbols the same way.

This makes a HUGE difference in the usability of the keyboard.

Type on, bro.


Book Description
About the Author
David Pogue is the personal-technology columnist for the New York Times, a contributor to CBS Sunday Morning, a frequent guest on NPR’s Morning Edition, and a Discovery Channel series host. As the creator and primary author of the objective and entertaining Missing Manual computer book series, David is also one of the world’s bestselling how-to authors. Titles in the series include Mac OS X, Vista, Windows XP, iPod, Microsoft Office, iPhoto, Dreamweaver, the Internet, iMovie, and many others.


Customer Reviews

Book Review and Extra Resources5
Given that the iPhone doesn’t come with a manual, this book is a good shortcut to figure out ways to use your phone, so I highly recommend it.

In case you’re interested in learning more, you may also take a look at free eBooks such as the EverythingYou Need to Know About Your iPhone. Using the phone is really exciting when you learn some of the tips that are available in the book and online.

MLT in CA4
This "manual" was helpful. It reaffirmed what I had taught myself before it arrived. It is very easy to understand and follow.

iohone: the missing manual5
A+. This man should get a prize. I have been dissapointed in the past with this type of help book, but this is a great book. If you own the iphone you have to buy this it!

iphone manual pdf



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