Introduction: Remove the Delete Button on a Digital Picture Viewer to Make It Safe for Grandma
Inspired by the homemade digital picture frame here, I went searching for the parts to build my own. Embarrassingly, I found a cheap enough finished product that I just bought rather than building my own. However, I still managed to figure out a reason to open it up and modify it: the delete button on the front was too easy to hit by mistake. Since I plan to give this to my Grandmother, I didn't want her accidentally deleting the images and having to wait for someone with a laptop to copy the images back.
Step 1: Delete Key Is Just Too Easy
The key with an "x" that is the same size and relative position as the "i," power button key is the delete key. Pressing it twice deletes whatever image is currently displayed. When I was playing with the viewer, I accidentally deleted an image, so I was certain Grandma would as well.
Really, what were they thinking?
Step 2: Crack It Open
It's held together with barbs, so I had to pry it open.
Step 3: Remove the Switch
I could have fired up the soldering iron and desoldered the switch. Instead, I just pried it up with a screwdriver. A trace on the board broke, but I figured it wouldn't matter.
Step 4: Test, Reassemble, Load With Images, Ship to Grandma
The broken trace didn't affect anything. Now, the delete button is just decoration.
Step 5: Fix Problems With Images
Probably because this thing is so cheap it has some problems with certain images. I never really identified what those problem were but my guesses include images that aren't a "normal" aspect ratio, images that are smaller than 640 pixels wide, and images that have their resolution set to 72 pixels/inch (screen resolution) rather than 300 or so pixels/inch (printing resolution). Problem images would not be displayed by the picture frame.
To fix all my images, I first renamed them to an imgsxxxx.jpg, where xxxx is a number, type format. Then I used Preview on MacOSX to crop both the width and height to 95%. The act of opening the image, cropping it, and saving it seemed to fix them. Cropping to 100% fixed some of the images but not all; losing 5% of the image on the edges seemed like a small price to pay considering this problem was driving me nuts. Automator made it a snap to do this to all 200 images I want to send to Grandma.
14 Comments
14 years ago on Introduction
foo dats coo foo do u really no a grandma that knows how 2 use a camera fooo but nice ible fooo
Reply 13 years ago on Introduction
You are not Mr. T.
17 years ago
You can extend this idea to remove useless buttons on keyboards. Who puts the Sleep button on the upper left corner of a WIRELESS keyboard!? That's where I grab it to move it around. Oops! Computer going to sleep now! Stupid Logitech.
Reply 14 years ago on Introduction
I think you can change those settings
in
When i press the sleep button on my computer do:Nothing Insead of go to sleep
Reply 14 years ago on Introduction
Unfortunately my wireless Microsoft keyboard is harder, for some reason they decided in all their wisdom to move the delete & home to the position for printscreen insert and delete, delete covers two buttons in size.
Reply 15 years ago on Introduction
I hate that! Honestly... Whoever designs these things obviously doesn't think they will be moved around. If I wanted a stationary keyboard I would have bought a wired one. At least going to sleep isn't as bad as having that key set to hibernate and not knowing why your computer is hibernating.
Reply 15 years ago on Introduction
Well, I don't have a wireless keyboard, but nonetheless I removed all the sleep, shutdown etc. buttons after I accindentally pressed the "sleep" button (as you know, my crappy motherboard has NEVER woken up from standby mode)....
Reply 15 years ago on Introduction
I have the same keyboard... I'm just happy that its not a Shutdown button
15 years ago on Introduction
You could take the button right out, or you could do what I did to my tape measure when I got angry at the tape lock sliding down when it wasn't needed. Crazy glue the sucker into place!. Guarantee Grandma won't be able to press the delete button. ~adamvan2000
17 years ago
Hooray, I inspired someone! Clever of you to remove that button - really, what were they thinking?
Reply 17 years ago
It looks nice and symetrical, function over form.
17 years ago
That's great. I know someone who accidently deletes pics regularly. Thanks for this.
17 years ago
:-P Hmm... I wouldn't be surprised if the card reader and USB cabled also dissappeared :P! Well, I think the reason why the DEL button is so easy to confuse with the PWR, is, like you said, it was cheap.
17 years ago
Thats a grat idea! I will probaply try that on my digital camera preventing my girlfriend to delete pictures of her.