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DIY Hacks
Engineering at Home
Sara Hendren and Caitrin Lynch
2016
71-year-old Cindy lost the full use of her limbs following complications from a severe heart attack. While waiting for her new robotic prosthetic, Cindy improvised 'object hacks' to help her with everyday tasks that she now found impossible. These adaptations to the most commonly used objects in her home allowed her to hold cutlery, play cards, brush her teeth, read the newspaper and much more.
Design educators Sara Hendren and Caitrin Lynch documented Cindy's hacks 'to illustrate new ways of understanding who can engineer, what counts as engineering, and this matters'. The project reminds us that the best innovations are not necessarily high-tech, and that technologies are valuable for their social function or ability to empower us, not just for their precision or sleek appearance.
[V&A]
Taken in The Future Starts Here (May to November 2018)
From smart appliances to satellites, artificial intelligence to internet culture, this exhibition brought together more than 100 objects as a landscape of possibilities for the near future.
[V&A]
Jean-François Leboeuf & Benjamin Tremblay
"Hack Sabbath"
installation & performance
16 décembre 2011
Sporobole Centre en Art Actuel, Sherbrooke (Québec)
photo: Jocelyn Riendeau
Robert Lewis "Hack" Wilson was born on April 26, 1900 in Ellwood City, Pennsylvania. He moved to Martinsburg, West Virginia in 1921 to play baseball for the Class D Martinsburg Mountaineer. His first Major League game was in 1923 and during his 11 year his Major League Career he played for the New York Giants, Chicago Cubs, Brooklyn Dodgers and Philadelphia Phillies. He retired in 1934 and was involved in a number of unsuccessful ventures that left him broke. When he died of an internal hemorrhage on November 23, 1948 he was penniless. Relatives refused to claim his body and funeral service were arranged and paid for by Ford Flick. He was inducted into the National Baseball Hall of Fame in 1979. The Granite Tombstone that Marks his grave in the Roasedale Cemetery in Martinsburg, West Virginia has a replica of his Hall of Fame Plaque affixed too it.
O que um hacker faz trabalhando na Central de Homicídios da Polícia?
Em exibição Netflix e PrimeBOX
Uma série Medialand
#FSA #Ancine #BRDE
I've dremel'd the case to let the YBox2 stick out (you didn't think it was gonna fit inside, did you??). I'll be fabricating a cover for this later. Something to think about when you do the same: the LED needs to stick out and you should build a surface that will reflect onto the IR sensor if you plan to use it.
DISCLAIMER: This WILL void your warranty, you CAN screw this up and I WON'T be responsible if you do. You've been warned. Proceed at your own risk.
First DevCamp to bring hacks & hackers together to build iPad apps. May 22 at KQED. Photos by @Deifell
Este nuevo grupo de ‘hacktivistas’ logró atacar las páginas web de la NASA y el Pentágono de los Estados Unidos. Asimismo, vulneró las web de organizaciones gubernamentales y militares de países como Francia, Jordania, Tailandia y Bahréin.
The layout used to generate the "hack-ro" photograph. $10 digital camera, $3 3x magnifying glass, all lined up on a desk with the subject (a dead HDD). The images, with and without the magnifying glass used, can be seen at www.flickr.com/photos/fluzwup/2692965405/
Hacking Arts ignites entrepreneurship and innovation within the creative arts. We bring together creative technologists, artists, innovators and hackers at MIT to explore the future of the arts at our annual Conference, Tech Expo and Hackathon.
Hacking Arts 2016 marked the fourth annual festival held at the MIT Media Lab, fostering community and celebrating innovation in the creative industries: Design, Fashion, Film/Video, Gaming, Music, Performing Arts, Virtual/Augmented Reality and Visual Arts.
Hacking Arts is organized by the MIT Sloan School of Management Entertainment, Media & Sports Club in partnership with MIT's Center for Art, Science, and Technology and the Martin Trust Center for MIT Entrepreneurship.
Learn more at hackingarts.com/#ha2016
All photos ©Lenny Martinez
www.facebook.com/lennymartinezd/
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Jalapeños look harmless, but for anyone who’s suffered the firey burn from its capsaisin-rich innards . . . you know to think otherwise. The first time I diced up a little green jalapeño, I went at it with full bravado, no gloves, bare skin. I had just booked my first job as a food...
Hackness Grange, reflected in its lake.
Hackness Grange is a Georgian country house, converted into a hotel. The building was originally built in 1822, and expanded in 1890. The hall was designed by Peter Atkinson Snr for Sir John Vanden-Bempde-Johnstone (1799–1869), 2nd Baronet of Hackness Hall.