View allAll Photos Tagged Hack
Meeting with the hacker&activist "g", France 2016
Documentary project with Jerry O'riordan
From series of "couleur de la nature, France 2016"
(color of nature, France 2016)
Hackness, a small village on the edge of the North Yorks Moors, captured in sunshine - a relief from the winter snow.
Textures by Pareeerica.
Angi Viper brings the Cassie Hack, the Slasher Slayer to life at Long Beach Comic-Con.
You can see more of Angi's wonderful cosplay on her facebook page at: www.facebook.com/AngiViper
And on Twitter at: twitter.com/AngiViper
I've had neither the time (lie) nor the inclination (truth) to sit down and do any more of these recently and so I'm giving you some old ones for a while. Accept me apology?
This one was taken around the time I discovered the White Balance setting on my camera and thought I was so smart when I changed it. The wrapping paper here was bright silver. The blue is courtesy of Tungsten.
Interestingness: May 19th, 2008 (26)
One of the easiest little hacks imaginable!
These started off as a 4-pack of fuzzy ponytail scrunchies from the DollarTree store.
Here's the sort of thing I mean:
www.pinterest.com/pin/301459768815570205/
All I had to do was to stitch one end closed.
They make a cute hat for a doll with hair, or a fun wig for a lock-less lady.
Oh yeah - a super cheap hack, too, at just 25¢ per! :-D
Nel nostro Paese quando si deve tagliare, si tagliano la cultura e la ricerca, ritenute evidentemente un inutile lusso.
Margherita Hack
After spotting it on the P&H, I intercepted it at CP HACK . The combo with 706/422 had left Philly earlier in the morning and had booked it up to North Jersey.
Bahamian man gets five years in US prison for hacking celebrities
A Bahamian man was sentenced to five years in US jail on Tuesday (Dec 6) for hacking into big names’ email records to take unreleased film and TV scripts, individual data and sexually unequivocal recordings so as to offer...
Westbound Main Line local Train #1215 passes over a beautifully storm-lit Upper Hack drawbridge. In the foreground the remnants of the causeway that once carries the Erie Railroad's New York & Greenwood Lake Division hides in the shadows.
Before NJ Transit service was terminated on the old NY&GL (then known as the Boonton Line) it was at one point possible to frame three trains at the same time on the Boonton, Main and Bergen lines along with two drawbridges.
NJT 1215 @ Upper Hack Drawbridge, Secaucus, NJ
NJTr ALP45-DP 4530
thomashawk.com/2007/01/top-10-hacks-on-flickr.html
1. The number one hack for Flickr would have to be Flickrleech. Flickrleech is a site developed by Andrew Houser (who is also a kick ass photographer), or simply Houser as he is often called, with the tagline, "because paging sucks."
When Houser released Flickrleech originally it would allow you to pull up any Flickr user's photos as a full page of thumbnails with no pagination. Although very cool, loading up 7,000 thumbnails wasn't exactly the nicest things to do to Flickr's servers and Houser actually changed his site to load 500 thumbnails at a time and today it sits at 200 thumbnails at a time.
Still, having the ability to browse a flickr user's photos at 200 thumbnails at a time is remarkable and allows you more photos on a single page than anything Flickr offers up themselves.
I'm constantly using Flickrleech to check out a new photographer's photos or to rapid fire go through someone's stream.
If you like these Flickr hacks feel free to digg them here.
I noticed these three birds occasionally hacking away at the sea ice and wondered why. What is hiding in sea ice that is attractive enough for birds to want to spend a considerable amount of time standing around in the freezing cold ? I was also attracted to the strange mix of bluish, greenish and yellowish colours in this otherwise barren winter landscape.
Great discarded collection of abandoned vehicles on a large farm near Romsey, Victoria, Australia
Amongst all of the mess appears to be a Ford XW or XY wagon (top left), a HD or HR Holden (underneath), possibly a Holden ute (alongside), a mid 1940's Nash or Vanguard (right) and a selection of Holden HQ - HZ doors (front right).
Many thanks to 'Couldn't Call It Unexpected' and '54 Ford Customline' for their help trying to identify these vehicles and associated parts.
For folks who don't feel like building a whole pinhole camera from scratch... it's easy to take apart one of these focus-free plastic cheapies and convert to pinhole use. That way you can get 35mm images with the standard framing & spacing so that any minilab can develop them.
I posted another version of this idea before... but this shows the more common kind of plastic camera, that has a little lens-guard operated by the tab below it. I see literally baskets of these for sale at most thrift stores--the one in back with the swooshy grips seems especially common. I've made quite a few pinhole cameras out of that kind. (Note the 80 cent price-- about all it's worth as a regular camera.)
I've hot-glued some plywood on the bottom here, with a 1/4-20 nut epoxied into a hole to make a tripod socket. The plywood also adds a stable base you can steady against doors, tables, etc. during exposures of a few seconds.
[EDIT: Sample shots from the Vivitar pinhole here, and from my earlier plastic-trashcam conversion here.]
[Another edit, May 2008: I've now blogged all the details on how to hack one of these cheapie trashcams and how to make & measure the pinhole itself.]
Unfortunately someone got into my files and decided they should do a few things for example "unlike" many "likes" to start with and put many of my pictures to "private" viewing. Hopefully there weren't any distasteful messages sent to anyone, please do disregard if you received one and do let me know that you did receive one. Also many "taken on" dates have been changed!
On a good note......this shot was taken on my return home from Vancouver Island last year.
Have a wonderful Sunday everyone.
Evoking the foggy atmosphere for a wintry evening and the yellow light created by the gas-fired lamps, Return from the Matinée, Piccadilly Circus belongs to a group of paintings, three of which were exhibited at the Royal Academy that year. In a re-run of the RA show, The Studio called them “three remarkable tone and colour studies of London at night.” Hacker (1858 - 1919) was well established by the time he produced these works. He had trained at the Royal Academy schools for four years, prior to a period of study at Bonnat’s atelier in Paris and further travels on the continent. He commenced exhibiting at the Royal Academy in 1878 Romantic and Symbolist-inspired compositions and he was also much sought after as a society portraitist. Hacker was invited to exhibit at the first NEAC show of 1886, was elected as an Associate of the Royal Academy in 1894 and became a full Academician in 1910.
[Oil on canvas, 50.8 x 61 cm]
gandalfsgallery.blogspot.com/2012/02/arthur-hacker-return...
hackers
Credit www.thoughtcatalog.com with an active link required.
Image is free for usage on websites (even websites with ads) if you credit www.thoughtcatalog.com with an active link.
The police were fairly helpful. They told me Sionis Industries was owned by a man named Roman Sionis, a very powerful business man from where they were from.
He also lead a double life, as a criminal named Black Mask.
They'd also given me a list of his contacts. One was called Queen. Oliver Queen.
I recognised the name, but I had no clue why.
And then it struck me.
Queen Industries.
They were just round the corner.
Time to do some investigating...
I'd hacked into Ollie's computer in his office to see what he knew about Black Mask.
He had a bit of info, his background, allies and all that stuff.
Then I found his location.
He was hiding out in some nearby slums, but if I was to attack him, I'd need to blend in.
How did Queen have so much info?
Anyway, it's time to do some shopping.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Bruce Banner/Hulk moves from #98 to take #99 Queen Industries from Winter Soldier/Black Adam
Wear a sweater around your waist, sew it to fit, cut it really short and re-attach the trim, turn the sleeves inside out: voila, pockets! I have been watching a lot of Project Runway recently.
Edit: This just made the Craft magazine blog! Thanks!
Also known as West Secaucus Movable Bridge, Upper Hack Lift Bridge was built by the Delaware Lackawanna & Western Railroad back in March of 1959. It is a single-track lift bridge that carries NJ Transit's Main Line over the Hackensack River between Lyndhurst and Secaucus, NJ. The bridge is the newest movable bridge on NJ Transit and is the only single-track lift bridge in the state of New Jersey. It is seen here carrying Main Line train 1116 with NJT 4204 east out.
NJT 1116 @ Upper Hack Drawbridge, Secaucus, NJ
NJTR GP40PH-2B 4204