Remote Control Essays

  • Alicia Zakon’s Poem, Remote Control

    602 Words  | 2 Pages

    Two of the main elements in any poem are theme and symbolism. This holds true in Alicia Zakon’s poem titled “Remote Control”. It essentially tells about the relationship between a man and a woman, and how the man has the remote control to the woman's life. The symbols used are very meaningful to the overall theme. The theme of "Remote Control" is also very important, and not just a topic for a good poem but a real problem in society too. The writing would be much less effective if not for the symbols

  • Remote Control Software Used in a Local Area Network

    8706 Words  | 18 Pages

    Remote Control Software Used in a Local Area Network Introduction Remote control software can solve many of the problems that an administrator or user can encounter on a local area network. Using a remote-control program, one can access a PC remotely to exchange files between systems, run applications, take control of a client PC or server in order to troubleshoot a problem, and much more. Remote-control software is an application that you install on two PCs that permits one system (the guest)

  • History of the Remote Control: The Downfall of Western Civilization

    2395 Words  | 5 Pages

    History of the Remote Control: The Downfall of Western Civilization History of Technology Research Paper The typical American family has on average four remote controls in their household. Look around the room and count how many you have in your house. I count five in just this room alone, not including the wireless mouse and keyboard I am using right now to type this paper. Everyone has seen remote controls for televisions, VCRs, and stereos. However, can you imagine a remote control that can also

  • Essay On Life In The 21st Century

    1275 Words  | 3 Pages

    So what is it like to lead a life in the 21st century??!! I may say, hectic schedules, jam packed traffic, pressure cooker lifestyle, diluted dreams, great aspirations, less to little comfort, ranting neighbors and an upside down world. The list is practically endless and we can discuss until the cows come home. But amidst these, lie the opportunities to have a welcoming but secured home, comforting atmosphere, relieving lifestyle, peace of mind and a greater chance at enhancing the quality of our

  • Lazy Lady

    822 Words  | 2 Pages

    Lazy Lady It seems that the lazier people are, the more I can't stand them. One thing is for sure; I can't stand my mom. "Maxme or MOM" is how I would address her, or should I say have to address her. I would have preferred boss or master. Yes sir, she's the queen of them all. She could probably write a book titled What it Takes to be Lazy. In her case, I guess you could consider it a lifestyle but try not to compare her to Martha Stewart or anyone like that. My mom is lazy from the hairs on her

  • Personal Narrative- Television Remote

    666 Words  | 2 Pages

    Personal Narrative- Television Remote Those who are recognized as having authority earn power because of strong leadership skills and the drive to make the world a better place. When people use power to do good deeds they gain respect. A typical leader also holds something in his or her hands, like a staff, that yields power. It is amazing to see people follow an individual who is holding on to something. If they could possess that object then they too could have power. I agree that one must

  • Pleasantville

    789 Words  | 2 Pages

    Pleasantville Popular culture is the artistic and creative expression in entertainment and style that appeals to society as whole. It includes music, film, sports, painting, sculpture, and even photography. It can be diffused in many ways, but one of the most powerful and effective ways to address society is through film and television. Broadcasting, radio and television are the primary means by which information and entertainment are delivered to the public in virtually every nation around the

  • Applications of Infrared Data Association

    857 Words  | 2 Pages

    infrared measured in Terahertz or Trillions of Hertz (cycles per seconds) is modulated with information send from transmitter to receiver in short distance. Does not specify any security measures. Infrared radiation(IR) is used to control a TV set with a remote control. Infrared data communication is most use in wireless data communication due to popularity of laptop computers, personal digital assistant(PDA), digital cameras, mobile telephone, pagers and other devices. IrDA specifications include

  • Samsung Marketing Case Study

    2292 Words  | 5 Pages

    Developing a Relationship Strategy The Relationship between salesperson and customer in this field. Relationship selling is one of the best technique for maintaining consistency in business. However, Samsung is doing business with Best Buy before. Samsung is trying to increase subsidies paid to Best Buy, in order to help its retailer and to increase the publicity of its products. (Grush, 2013) Moreover, Best Buy is making a strong relationship with two companies and Samsung is one of them, Best

  • New Year Resolutions

    537 Words  | 2 Pages

    is the year that spun out of control. With an elderly, mother whose dementia rose above sanity, old friends who never made it through the year and the ghosts of those who never walked out of 1969. All this brought me to search out the prospect of going back to school, something I always wanted to do. My prerequisite for college started with money, or rather the lack of, and the need for an online college. Feet up surfing the net, while the television blared, the remote pointed at the television like

  • Comparing John Milton’s Paradise Lost to Pleasantville

    1116 Words  | 3 Pages

    Vil, Jafar the evil sorcerer, the Beauty, and the Beast came down Main Street, U.S.A. that I was more able to appreciate the prodigiousness of the procreative masque within Paradise Lost. Panorama grabs the viewer; and, with a mere touch of the remote control, it thrusts him/her into Eden, Main Street, or Pleasantville. Panorama doesn’t settle for facile spectatorship; it invites the viewer into the action and synchronizes the viewer’s pulse with the pulse of its [panorama’s] own creative slide show

  • USA vs Jeffrey Lee Parson

    671 Words  | 2 Pages

    “teekids.exe” ( which included code that directs compromised computers to attack the Microsoft domain name www.windowsupdate.com and a backdoor file “Lithium” ( which allows a way into a password protected system without use of a password and remote control a system). The worm itself targeted mostly Windows 2000 & Windows XP systems. If Windows NT or Windows 2003 servers do not have the appropriate patches, they too may be vulnerable. The function of the worm is to exploit the DCOM RPC vulnerability

  • Music Television: Modern Phenomenon or Passing Fad?

    832 Words  | 2 Pages

    into the mainstream; with 1992’s “The Real World,” it laid the groundwork for reality television. By the mid-80’s, as group of competitors enticed MTV’s young audience, the network reinvented itself. The anchor in 1987 was the pop-trivia show “Remote Control.” Even with all the shows that have stemmed out of MTV, their music videos are still a major priority. Commercialism is as showing too much regard for pro... ... middle of paper ... ...ie Allen says, “MTV made us look at the sound of music”

  • Internet Telesurgery Saves Lives

    1105 Words  | 3 Pages

    surgical operations without having the doctor in direct contact with the patient during surgery. This is made possible by giving the doctor control of robotic operating tools. The doctor can perform the surgery from almost any distance while the patient receives the surgery from remote control robotic operating instruments. What enables the doctor to control the surgery is a powerful Internet link to connect the doctor to operating tools, monitors, and to communication with other expert doctors.

  • Sensory Overload in James Joyce's Ulysses

    1190 Words  | 3 Pages

    shuttling between wide angles, and zooms, dissolving from one extreme close-up to a long slow dolly shot. Visual acuity is often distorted from Joyce's simultaneous angles of narration. As one scene abruptly "flips" to the next by Joyce's literary remote control, the reader is bombarded with an accretion of visual stimuli--not unlike watching a multi-channel television screen. What results is a sort of parallax of prose, an interesting chapter in which Dublin society is presented as both connected and

  • TV is NOT a Medium of Education for Children

    1071 Words  | 3 Pages

    (Something you should know about media violence and media literacy). When the children wants to see the cartoon, there are many channels for them to choose from. Television programs are available to everyone, because with a touch of the remote control one can turn on/off the television. The cartoon scenarios are watched by children. Children like to fantasize about being in the superhero role. Many children adopt the characteristics o the cartoon and use it in their real life, and children

  • Television and Media - Family Life With, and Without TV

    1078 Words  | 3 Pages

    TV. Every weekend, we do the shopping, finish the chores, and settle in to watch a movie. And why not? It's relaxing to hunker down on the sofa at the end of a tiring day and it doesn't take any energy to flip through the channels with the remote control in one hand and a bowl of buttered popcorn in the other. In my family, we grew up with the TV on. Every weekend, we watched Gunsmoke and Bonanza together as a family. Every year, we made special treats for the Wizard of Oz. I wouldn't have

  • New Learning Strategies for Generation X

    1614 Words  | 4 Pages

    youth, many Generation Xers were "latchkey kids"--children who saw both of their parents working and/or furthering their education. Many of them were raised in single parent homes, the children of divorced parents. They grew up with "fast" food; "remote control" entertainment; and "quick response" devices such as automatic teller machines and microwave ovens, all of which provided instant gratification. As young adults, Generation Xers find themselves facing limited economic prospects and a society

  • Customer Needs

    1418 Words  | 3 Pages

    was to purchase a TV, they would need information which notifies the customer on how to use the appliance and what this appliance does as well as stating how to connect the TV in the right way and informing what the different buttons on the remote control does. If there is no product information, customers could be distracted because they may become wary to spend their money. Customers demand a bargain and would like to comprehend what they are buying. Product information is vital for a

  • Comparing The Murder of Duncan in Macbeth and The Assassination of Kennedy

    1778 Words  | 4 Pages

    amount of protection provides absolute safety.  In today's world, it is easier than ever to kill someone.  Any person can buy a cheap pistol and kill someone.  It is also easier to kill without being caught.  There are long range rifles and remote control explosives that can be used as the murder weapon while the actual perpetrator is far away.  Also, it is easier than ever to find a professional assassin who will kill anyone for the right amount of money.  These latter methods could allow a