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The position of the SIM card holder depends on your phone model. It might be placed under the battery or on the side of the phone. Before inserting/removing your SIM card, turn off your phone and make sure no charger is connected to the phone. Insert your SIM card according to the illustration that you find close to the SIM card holder. Note: Without a SIM card, you can't make or receive calls. In some countries you can make emergency calls without a SIM card.
Because Honda thought, by making the Ev plus car, they would make more money, but they didn't. Because the car was so pricey. It costed around $53,000. come on, whose' going to pay 50k for a car. And to matters worse, you couldn't really buy the car full, not even if your where a rich person, the car was available to buy through lease.And one reason why they stop making them because the oil company's felt threat, so they killed the car before it growed . That's why they stop making them, Because the oil company's know, they where going to succeed. So that's what happen. Go see the movie called Who Killed the Electric Car? They talk about the car in the movie.
I don't have a C1, but in all probability it's the EV (exposure value) compensation adjustment, and should be variable between about +2 and -2. Usually the middle/zero/auto/normal (whatever they call it) setting is fine, but sometimes you want to overrule your automatic exposure settings, which are intended for an average-brightness scene. For example, a photo of a dazzling white snow-covered field will probably come out a soft, easy-on-the-eyes light gray unless you kick up the exposure a notch or two. Try taking your camera to an unusually bright/dim location (a beach, inside an old church) and take the same shot five times, with EVs from -2 through 0 to +2. Then look at the resulting photos and decide whether the effects are pleasing/useful or not (warning--sometimes automatic photo processors will try to reset the picture to average when they print the photo, so you may still end up with minimal differences in the shots). A good beginner-level explanation of EV compensation is at <http://www.imaging-resource.com/ARTS/EVCOMP/EVCOMP.HTM>.
Well this camera has no manual controls so it's merely compensating for the lack of available light by lowering the shutter speed. I don't think there's very much you can do about it -- maybe you can try to lower the EV -/+ setting (I forget what it's called, it makes your image darker or brighter).
If the camera didn't lower the shutter speed you would simply get dark pictures where you can't see anything
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