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This interesting bridge abuts Hackness Hall (over the wall on the left) and is unusual in that pedestrians get their own little bridge to pass through, there is one on the left, not too clearly seen here and out of use I guess as the modern road has no paved pathway on that side. Hackness Hall is the private country house of the Barons' Derwent ,a title taken from the local river and less of a mouthful than their workaday names, the current Baron being: Robin Evelyn Leo Vanden-Bempde-Johnstone, 5th Baron Derwent.
First hack: Put a DC Smily Roger sticker over the DefCon Badge's "O" - This is a long exposure, so the sweeping LED looks like a fully illuminated arc.
On Saturday 4 September 36 first direct volunteers took part in the NSPCC’s Ingleborough HACK (Hike Against Cruelty to Kids) and raised over £7200 in sponsorship.
We're not allowed food or beverage inside the music studios, so people leave beverages in the hallway. BiLE rehersal lead to this collection of sugar and caffeine.
A sampling of custom trucks we've built at Hack Shack. Some dropped to the ground, and some lifted to the sky.
Left to right: John Keefe of WNYC, Albert Sun of The Wall Street Journal and Jeff Larsen of ProPublica
Juan MejÃa Calle. Ingeniero de Sistemas Universidad de Cuenca. Ecuador. Persentando Técnicas de Análisis de Malware Ransomware en Charla ISSA Chile
Haha did that tag back in 2007 , this punkass toy crossing me out in 2012 and still has the same fuckboy bitch scribbles to date quit while your ahead kid #chump
In September 2015, Het Entrepot placed several young volunteers in a Bruges cellar where they spend four days hacking into their home town’s DNA and thrashing out their dreams for Bruges. And all this under the watchful eyes of the outside world as cameras record the entire 4-day project.
They brainstormed with each other but also have the help of various experts on the subject.
© Het Entrepot
During Innovation Lab 'hack sessions', patrons learn how toys and consumer electronics are built and how to repurpose the parts. This month's program saw printers disassembled, motors investigated, drawing machines built and the beginnings of a motor-driven vehicle. It was chaotic, but the acceptable, fun kind of chaos. Not the aliens destroying our planet kind.