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The Hack Green Secret Nuclear Bunker is a former government-owned nuclear bunker in Nantwich, Cheshire.

 

Hack Green's involvement in modern warfare defence began in 1941, when the area was a decoy for World War II raids on the large railway junction about ten miles away at Crewe.

 

From 1941 to 1949 it was a World War II radar station. In the 1950s it became part of a secret radar network codenamed Rotor, closing in 1958. It then became an Air Traffic Radar Unit.

 

RAF Hack Green closed in 1966 but the site was retained by the government. After a decade in mothballs, it was turned into a blast-proof nuclear bunker capable of housing a 135-man post-nuclear attack regional government team for 12 weeks. The site became fully operational in 1984, before being decommissioned and declassified in 1993.

 

Inspiration for some of the framing of the shots came from the 1975 New Topographics exhibition.

Inspired by an excerpt from "The Hacker Manifesto" by The Mentor, mostly the last line in the second paragraph.

 

This is our world now... the world of the electron and the switch, the beauty of the baud. We make use of a service already existing without paying for what could be dirt-cheap if it wasn't run by profiteering gluttons, and you call us criminals. We explore... and you call us criminals. We seek after knowledge... and you call us criminals. We exist without skin color, without nationality, without religious bias... and you call us criminals. You build atomic bombs, you wage wars, you murder, cheat, and lie to us and try to make us believe it's for our own good, yet we're the criminals.

 

Yes, I am a criminal. My crime is that of curiosity. My crime is that of judging people by what they say and think, not what they look like. My crime is that of outsmarting you, something that you will never forgive me for.

 

I am a hacker, and this is my manifesto. You may stop this individual, but you can't stop us all... after all, we're all alike.

______________________________

This actually reminds me of one of my characters, Addie.

 

Composed of stock photos from StockVault.net

Photo by CafeCredit under CC 2.0

 

You can use this photo for FREE under Creative Commons license. Make sure to give proper author attribution to www.cafecredit.com.

 

Thank you for respecting Creative Commons license.

 

P.S. Need more photos like this? Check out my flickr profile page.

Today I woke up and decided to try hacking my iPod Touch. Rob at work had done it, so I thought I'd give it a shot.

 

Long story short: mission accomplished! I even figured out how to rearrange the icons on my screen, even though i left the original ones just where they were. You can even switch out the bottom dock icons.

 

My iPod Touch is now an iPhone minus the phone part. So I've got all of the standard iPhone apps: google maps, weather and stock widgets, notes, Mail, and i've enabled the ability to add calendar events (two lines of code is all it took – adding events to the calendar was disabled for the Touch).

 

Thanks to the awesome world of hackers and 3rd party developers (you guys rock), i've got the NES emulator, Apollo instant messenger (serves msn, aim, a whole bunch of others), navizon GPS, sketches (like an etch-a-sketch, you even shake it to erase the image), and a whole bunch of other stuff. I am a huge apple fanboy, but i'll be damned if they don't understand that opening the iphone/touch is the way to go.

 

The only handicap this has is that all the web-enabled services are only useful if i'm on a wi-fi network. With the iphone you can access them through Edge anywhere as long as you've got cellular coverage.

 

Until the iphone comes to canada, this will do :)

 

and wow, photographing something that's backlit is quite a bitch, isn't it?

Stopping a hacker from stealing sensitive data in the cloud, in computers, online.

 

When using this image please provide photo credit (link) to: www.bluecoat.com/

Hacked Coronet Rapide camera with 25mm plastic lens at f22 and shot onto Rollei Ortho 25

 

An Easy camera to take apart for a pinhole hack.

35mm f150

After shooting with it I discovered the camera body has a light leak. Better to stick to hacking Agfa Isola and leave these alone.

Mozilla Paris Hack-a-Thon, June 9th 2013

Art on Hack Street, Digbeth, Birmingham. 13th May 2017.

During PBS’ NOVA “Memory Hackers” session at the Television Critics Association Winter Press Tour in Pasadena, CA on Tuesday, January 19, 2016, pediatric neurologist and neuroscientist Nico Dosenbach, 12-year-old with HSAM (Highly Superior Autobiographical Memory) Jake Hausler, professor and psychologist Dr. Julia Shaw, professor Dr. André Fenton, producer, director and writer Michael Bicks and series senior executive producer Paula Apsell explore how researchers on the cutting edge of mind-control can implant, change and even erase memories. On this thought-provoking journey into the mind, NOVA investigates the mysterious nature of how we remember.

 

(Premieres February 10, 2016)

 

All photos in this set should be credited to Rahoul Ghose/PBS

Photo by Frederick FN Noronha. Creative Commons 3.0. Attribution. Non-commercial. May be copied for non-commercial purposes. For other purposes, contact fn at goa-india.org

Photo by Frederick FN Noronha. Creative Commons 3.0. Attribution. Non-commercial. May be copied for non-commercial purposes. For other purposes, contact fn at goa-india.org

Alex hacking on Clapham Common

The Agfa Isola is one of the simplest cameras to hack into a pinhole camera. It ends up as 6x6 focal length 30 mm. With a little bit of brass shim and epoxy glue an internal shutter can be made to operate via the shutter button which has a cable release screw.

 

someone hacked the sigproc printer :]

Photo by Frederick FN Noronha. Creative Commons 3.0. Attribution. Non-commercial. May be copied for non-commercial purposes. For other purposes, contact fn at goa-india.org

shufe lib is hacked by K Z~~

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