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Hacking Arts (October 3-5), an annual student-run festival and hackathon hosted at the MIT Media Lab, marked the launch of MIT STARTUP. Hacking Arts features talks by entrepreneurs in the creative industries, tech-enabled live performances and art pieces, and demos by emergent start-ups. This year’s kick-off party at Microsoft’s Nerd Center featured a performance by Grammy-nominated artist Ryan Leslie and an ideation session by Kiran Gandhi, the drummer of MIA.

 

The following day, participants attended panels on Film, Music, Design, Virtual Reality, Fashion, Gaming, Performing Arts and Visual Arts, hearing from speakers such as Benji Rogers (CEO, Pledgemusic), Kevin Cunningham (Executive Artistic Director, 3-Legged Dog Productions) and Laird Malamed (COO, Oculus VR). Afterward, participants put their ideas into action during the high-voltage hackathon.

 

The 2014 Hackathon winners were LuxLoop (VHX Prize in Film, TV & VR), Harlequin (Most Creative), CUE (Most Disruptive) and Tomorrow Is Another Day (Best Overall Hack). A common thread among the winning hacks was how technology was used to promote human interaction or create analogue output. LuxLoop and Harlequin both used human motion to affect digital output. CUE, one of the finalists in the Pitch phase of the competition, designed a modular theatrical system consisting of wearable audiovisual hardware and a smartphone app to sequence, control and play user-programmed sound and light effects to enhance public theater. Tomorrow Is Another Day touted the idea “Turn your nothing into something,” as their project used a person’s daily “swipes” on touch-screen devices to transform daily online activities into abstract ink drawings.

 

Photo by Ahmad El-Nemr

www.elnemr.com

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Found whilst having a look around the developer fusion forums - pretty worrying!

MIT hack to celebrate the 80th anniversary of the discovery of Pluto (the former planet)

A major exhibition and events programme that invites you to adopt a hacker mindset to bend, tweak and mash-up dublin’s existing urban systems.

www.sciencegallery.com/hackthecity

Hacking Arts (October 3-5), an annual student-run festival and hackathon hosted at the MIT Media Lab, marked the launch of MIT STARTUP. Hacking Arts features talks by entrepreneurs in the creative industries, tech-enabled live performances and art pieces, and demos by emergent start-ups. This year’s kick-off party at Microsoft’s Nerd Center featured a performance by Grammy-nominated artist Ryan Leslie and an ideation session by Kiran Gandhi, the drummer of MIA.

 

The following day, participants attended panels on Film, Music, Design, Virtual Reality, Fashion, Gaming, Performing Arts and Visual Arts, hearing from speakers such as Benji Rogers (CEO, Pledgemusic), Kevin Cunningham (Executive Artistic Director, 3-Legged Dog Productions) and Laird Malamed (COO, Oculus VR). Afterward, participants put their ideas into action during the high-voltage hackathon.

 

The 2014 Hackathon winners were LuxLoop (VHX Prize in Film, TV & VR), Harlequin (Most Creative), CUE (Most Disruptive) and Tomorrow Is Another Day (Best Overall Hack). A common thread among the winning hacks was how technology was used to promote human interaction or create analogue output. LuxLoop and Harlequin both used human motion to affect digital output. CUE, one of the finalists in the Pitch phase of the competition, designed a modular theatrical system consisting of wearable audiovisual hardware and a smartphone app to sequence, control and play user-programmed sound and light effects to enhance public theater. Tomorrow Is Another Day touted the idea “Turn your nothing into something,” as their project used a person’s daily “swipes” on touch-screen devices to transform daily online activities into abstract ink drawings.

 

Photo by Ahmad El-Nemr

www.elnemr.com

Please ask before use

'Hack Girls' at Yahoo! Taiwan Open Hack Day 2009

Official link for downloading the complete archive is mgpf.it/2013/08/07/shots-and-portraits-from-ohm.html

 

All pictures are released under an Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported license. Do something awesome with them.

I'd really appreciate if you can refer the link if you use them and I'd like to hear your impressions, so please email me your greetings and your feelings. You can add me to twitter too, my nick is @lastknight.

Official link for downloading the complete archive is mgpf.it/2013/08/07/shots-and-portraits-from-ohm.html

 

All pictures are released under an Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported license. Do something awesome with them.

I'd really appreciate if you can refer the link if you use them and I'd like to hear your impressions, so please email me your greetings and your feelings. You can add me to twitter too, my nick is @lastknight.

the scale is off and I need to add labels, but its roughed in.

 

the project

@ Hacker School 4sq.com/N8FLME (posted via FlickSquare)

Hack Factory in Pictures

Hacking out on a quiet misty lane

Did you think it would only work for pizza?

This is one of the best institution for learn hacking courses and here you can done your certification here also.

For more visit www.net-hub.in/ceh.html

50mm │ ƒ 11.0

 

works best on black and with some ♫♪♫

 

© 2010 herr bastian. all rights reserved.

Hacking Arts (October 3-5), an annual student-run festival and hackathon hosted at the MIT Media Lab, marked the launch of MIT STARTUP. Hacking Arts features talks by entrepreneurs in the creative industries, tech-enabled live performances and art pieces, and demos by emergent start-ups. This year’s kick-off party at Microsoft’s Nerd Center featured a performance by Grammy-nominated artist Ryan Leslie and an ideation session by Kiran Gandhi, the drummer of MIA.

 

The following day, participants attended panels on Film, Music, Design, Virtual Reality, Fashion, Gaming, Performing Arts and Visual Arts, hearing from speakers such as Benji Rogers (CEO, Pledgemusic), Kevin Cunningham (Executive Artistic Director, 3-Legged Dog Productions) and Laird Malamed (COO, Oculus VR). Afterward, participants put their ideas into action during the high-voltage hackathon.

 

The 2014 Hackathon winners were LuxLoop (VHX Prize in Film, TV & VR), Harlequin (Most Creative), CUE (Most Disruptive) and Tomorrow Is Another Day (Best Overall Hack). A common thread among the winning hacks was how technology was used to promote human interaction or create analogue output. LuxLoop and Harlequin both used human motion to affect digital output. CUE, one of the finalists in the Pitch phase of the competition, designed a modular theatrical system consisting of wearable audiovisual hardware and a smartphone app to sequence, control and play user-programmed sound and light effects to enhance public theater. Tomorrow Is Another Day touted the idea “Turn your nothing into something,” as their project used a person’s daily “swipes” on touch-screen devices to transform daily online activities into abstract ink drawings.

 

Photo by Andrew Kubica

www.stayfocusedphotography.net/

Please ask before use

One of the phases of the sleeveless jacket. Best photo i have of it sadly, as i loved it a lot. Hacker girl with a mohawk and wire coming from her head into a box, web of stars coming out of her head, below the line she is on is actual code from a virus, i forget which. Not sure why i changed it from this, but i did change it a lot.

Hackers Creek, Lewis County, West Virginia

 

John Hacker is my 5th great grandfather.

 

Beginning in the 1760s when the earliest settlers crossed the divides of the Allegheny Mountains and made their tomahawk claims along the waters of the upper Monongahela River in what became the Hacker's Creek settlements of western Virginia, the names and exploits of the frontiersmen of the region were indelibly inscribed in the pages of American history. These settlements were the western frontier of the fledgling nation far longer than any place in its western expansion; and, there were more conflicts between its people and the red man during the last half of the eighteenth century than anywhere else on the long frontier.

 

Hacker's Creek was named for John Hacker, a Stafford County,Virginia, native who came with the first party of men to settle at present-day Buckhannon, Upshur County, West Virginia. Finding that land he desired at Buckhannon had already been claimed by Samuel Pringle, an earlier sojourner in the region, he crossed the Buckhannon Mountain and selected four hundred acres on a tributary of the Muddy River, as the West Fork of the Monongahela River was then called. John Hacker thus became the first permanent European settler in what is today's Lewis County, West Virginia.

Gamecube reassembled with probes sticking out. Also visible: Logic analyzer probes.

Here is how to hack one of the new Opto Isolator boards onto a pre-existing DC motor driver or Stepper motor driver board

Well I had a scary incident today. Someone tried to hack my account. So I had just gotten done with my Sunday studies and was checking my email. I got an email from Yahoo! asking me if I had changed my password. I clicked the like that said no and quickly changed my password to a new one. It had happened at 3pm MST just moments ago when I checked my email.. Thank God I finished my studies right on time.

Science Hack Day Eindhoven 2019

Timelapse movie of the Classe Numérique in the Cité des Sciences in Paris. Sunday, December 9, 2012, on the third day of the Quack and Hack 2012 in Paris. Made with a Nikon D800, set to take a picture every 4 seconds, approx. 100 pictures taken.

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