Bakers Dozen

Things (other than keys) on your keychain

  1. Pictures
  2. Keyfob
  3. Flashlight

Things (other than keys) on your keychain

  1. Pictures
  2. Keyfob
  3. Flashlight
  4. Jump drive

Things (other than keys) on your keychain

  1. Pictures
  2. Keyfob
  3. Flashlight
  4. Jump drive
  5. fingernail clippers

Things (other than keys) on your keychain

  1. Pictures
  2. Keyfob
  3. Flashlight
  4. Jump drive
  5. fingernail clippers
  6. Exxon Speedy Pass

Things (other than keys) on your keychain

  1. Pictures
  2. Keyfob
  3. Flashlight
  4. Jump drive
  5. fingernail clippers
  6. Exxon Speedy Pass
  7. Lock/alarm remote

Things (other than keys) on your keychain

  1. Pictures
  2. Keyfob
  3. Flashlight
  4. Jump drive
  5. fingernail clippers
  6. Exxon Speedy Pass
  7. Lock/alarm remote
  8. Bottle opener

Things (other than keys) on your keychain

  1. Pictures
  2. Keyfob
  3. Flashlight
  4. Jump drive
  5. fingernail clippers
  6. Exxon Speedy Pass
  7. Lock/alarm remote
  8. Bottle opener
  9. Climber’s D Hook

Things (other than keys) on your keychain

  1. Pictures
  2. Keyfob
  3. Flashlight
  4. Jump drive
  5. fingernail clippers
  6. Exxon Speedy Pass
  7. Lock/alarm remote
  8. Bottle opener
  9. Climber’s D Hook
  10. New York subway token

Actually on my dad’s keychain – a souvenir from a 1965 trip from Ohio to Manhattan.

Things (other than keys) on your keychain

  1. Pictures
  2. Keyfob
  3. Flashlight
  4. Jump drive
  5. fingernail clippers
  6. Exxon Speedy Pass
  7. Bottle opener
  8. Climber’s D Hook
  9. New York subway token
  10. Digital tire pressure sensor

removed Lock/alarm remote because that’s what a keyfob is.

Things (other than keys) on your keychain

  1. Pictures
  2. Keyfob
  3. Flashlight
  4. Jump drive
  5. fingernail clippers
  6. Exxon Speedy Pass
  7. Bottle opener
  8. Climber’s D Hook
  9. New York subway token
  10. Digital tire pressure sensor
  11. Rabbit’s foot

Though not as common today as when I was a kid due to the powerful Anti-Cruelty to Rabbits lobby.

As good a time as any to mention that it’s a bad idea to carry too much stuff on your key ring as it can damage the car’s ignition switch. (Snopes)

  1. Pictures
  2. Keyfob
  3. Flashlight
  4. Jump drive
  5. fingernail clippers
  6. Exxon Speedy Pass
  7. Lock/alarm remote
  8. Bottle opener
  9. Climber’s D Hook
  10. New York subway token
  11. Digital tire pressure sensor
  12. Rabbit’s foot
  13. Pocket knife

Put Lock/alarm remote back in since it’s different from a key fob.

ETA: Include Rabbit’s foot from above, which puts us at 13. Someone else can start a new one.

Sorry but they are one in the same. Funny from your own cite’s definition of a remote keyless system…

which defintion are you reading?

Anyways, someone else can substitute an answer and start a new topic.

ETA I see the differentiation now but a car’s keyless entry/ignition system is still a FOB even though a FOB can serve other purposes.

OK, I’ll go.

Movie roles of Steve Martin

  1. Dr. Michael Hfuhruhurr, “The Man with Two Brains”

OK, I’ll go.

Movie roles of Steve Martin

  1. Dr. Michael Hfuhruhurr, “The Man with Two Brains”
  2. Navin R. Johnson, The Jerk

Movie roles of Steve Martin

  1. Dr. Michael Hfuhruhurr, “The Man with Two Brains”
  2. Navin R. Johnson, The Jerk
  3. Harry Telemacher, L.A. Story

Movie roles of Steve Martin

  1. Dr. Michael Hfuhruhurr, “The Man with Two Brains”
  2. Navin R. Johnson, The Jerk
  3. Harry Telemacher, L.A. Story
  4. Insolent Waiter , The Muppet Movie

Did you read it at all?

By their definition EVERYTHING on the list is a key fob, but I was thinking of something as shown in the 2nd photo, i.e.,

Movie roles of Steve Martin

  1. Dr. Michael Hfuhruhurr, “The Man with Two Brains”
  2. Navin R. Johnson, The Jerk
  3. Harry Telemacher, L.A. Story
  4. Insolent Waiter , The Muppet Movie
  5. Neal Page - Plains, Trains and Automobiles

Yes, I read it and found that under that definition, the use of keyfob in the list was redundant. Since I started the list and set the parameters, I found that definition too broad and ascribed it to the most common usage of the term “keyfob” today, as a keyless entry remote. I assumed that this is what Infovore intended. Your much broader definition, would include everything on the list and would defeat the purpose of this game. In hindsight, maybe the keyfob entry was the one that should be replaced or specified.