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Minolta X-300 - Rokkor 50mm F/1.4 - Ilford HP5+ @400 iso - Kodak Xtol (1+1) 12min 20°C - Epson perfection 2400 scan (old one)
A recent 'hack session' in the Jocelyn H. Lee Innovation Lab featured several dancing and singing animatronic dolls. Some teens inspected the mechanical insides, while others transformed the fabric covering into 'zombie' dogs. It's all good in the Innovation Lab.
The Pizza Hacker is a new street food vendor in SF. His "Frankenweber" is a Weber grill with a cast concrete lining that turns it into a wood-burning pizza oven.
The Hack Green Secret Nuclear Bunker is a former government-owned nuclear bunker located at Hack Green, Cheshire.
The first military use of the area was in World War II, when a Starfish site was established at Hack Green. Its purpose was to confuse Luftwaffe bombers looking for the vital railway junction at Crewe.
A ground-controlled interception (GCI) radar station was added.
In the 1950s, the site was modernised as part of the ROTOR project. This included the provision of a substantial semi-sunk reinforced concrete bunker or blockhouse (type R6).
The station, officially designated RAF Hack Green, was also known as Mersey Radar. It provided an air traffic control service to military aircraft crossing civil airspace.
The site was abandoned and remained derelict for many years until taken over by the Home Office. The R6 bunker was then rebuilt as a Regional Government Headquarters (RGHQs) - one of a network of 17 such sites throughout the UK - designed to enable the government to continue in the aftermath of a major nuclear attack on the UK.
Around 1992, following the end of the Cold War, the Home Office abandoned its network of RGHQs and sold many of the sites. The Hack Green Bunker was purchased by a private company and subsequently opened to the public in 1998 as a museum with a Cold War theme.
It has a substantial collection of military and Cold War memorabilia, including one of the largest collections of decommissioned nuclear weapons in the world. It also houses Ballistic Missile Early Warning Sysyem equipment originally from RAF High Wycombe.
The museum includes information about the function of the bunker during the Cold War. There is a simulator designed to simulate conditions in the bunker during a nuclear attack. Visitors can watch the BBC film 'The War Game', produced to inform the public of what would be likely to happen in a nuclear attack on Britain.
(Taken from the Wikipedia entry)
This is a scarf I (patrick) just made for Holly's mom Mary for her birthday. I used a very, very nice soft dark purple merino wool that was a real pleasure to knit with. The scarf is a simple basket weave pattern with a seed stitch edge and ends. I must be getting better at this because this one was hard to let go of. It's pretty and soft and warm and long enough to make a hacking knot.
a blurry image of hackers dancing at a party one evening -- which after 30-40 min was busted up by the hotel security -- fun while it lasted!!
In September 2015, Het Entrepot will place several young volunteers in a Bruges cellar where they will 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 will brainstorm with each other but also have the help of various experts on the subject. Each day will close with an evening programme for the public. You are welcome to join in the debate on their ideas.
© Het Entrepot
In September 2015, Het Entrepot will place several young volunteers in a Bruges cellar where they will 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 will brainstorm with each other but also have the help of various experts on the subject. Each day will close with an evening programme for the public. You are welcome to join in the debate on their ideas.
© Het Entrepot
The Hacker-Pschorr tent was where we spent our second night of Oktoberfest. We were invited to join Miles' host family at a large table there which was amazingly good fun. We met all his host brother and sister's friends who all spoke amazing English and patiently allowed me to ramble on in high school level German. Easily one of the highlights of the trip. The roast chicken dinner was excellent as well.
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In September 2015, Het Entrepot will place several young volunteers in a Bruges cellar where they will 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 will brainstorm with each other but also have the help of various experts on the subject. Each day will close with an evening programme for the public. You are welcome to join in the debate on their ideas.
© Het Entrepot
Starting life as a WW2 decoy station and later a Ground Controlled Intercept (GCI) radar site, the site at Hack Green was upgraded as part of the ROTOR programme in the late 1950's. Building a R6 type, two level concrete bunker for military command and control (C2) and serving as a joint military and civil air traffic control centre. This function ceased in around 1966 when the complex was mothballed but remained under Government ownership.
In 1976 the site was given a new lease of life when it was taken over by the Home Office, modernised once again and operated as a Regional Government Headquarters; coordinating the civil response in the event of nuclear attack. The cold war was coming to an end, and eventually in 1993 the site was decommissioned.
Now in private hands, the bunker has been a cold war museum since 1998 and boasts some very unique exhibits including what is reputedly the largest collection of decommissioned nuclear weapons in the world, and a rare Ballistic Missile Early Warning System (BMEWS) console from RAF High Wycombe.
Op 26 februari 2016 opende HACKING HABITAT, een grootschalige internationale tentoonstelling op de grenzen van kunst, technologie en sociale verandering. Meer dan 80 internationaal bekende kunstenaars en ontwerpers toonden tot 6 juni 2016
nieuw en bekend werk in de voormalige gevangenis aan het Utrechtse Wolvenplein.