View allAll Photos Tagged Hack
Poster design for the forthcoming Multipack Hack day.
Background texture and graphic by yours truly, typeset by Paul Robert Lloyd
More details on the a.green:focus blog
Hp pouch and Strap Pouch NOT included. Hacker strap allows you to add accessories onto it with ease.
Current & Twitter Hack The Debate
photo by Scott Beale / Laughing Squid
This photo is licensed under a Creative Commons license. If you use this photo within the terms of the license or make special arrangements to use the photo, please list the photo credit as "Scott Beale / Laughing Squid" and link the credit to laughingsquid.com.
Added a lanyard to my fitbit so I won't lose it when it slides out of my pocket, using Sugru, a piece of an old keychain, and the lanyard from an old pedometer.
Added a lanyard to my fitbit so I won't lose it when it slides out of my pocket, using Sugru, a piece of an old keychain, and the lanyard from an old pedometer.
Markus was trying to set up something for me and saw my source code is filled with viagra links...
This scroll down a LOT longer... Will take it down soon, but amusing for now.
I have no idea how that could happen??!!
No, I don't have a second business...
Hacked up my pants to add keyboard functionality. Only one half of the keyboard works, but its enough to play Tetris!
This hack is for people who is difficult to obtain grid ruled index cards.
0. What you need is only a highlighter with 5mm width. We don't need ruler, you can measure using pen's head.
1. Slide index cards's top so that easy to line.
2. Leave one pen head width as margin.
3. Then put four lines with approximately 1 mm spacing.
That's all. You may finish in 20 seconds.
Now you can use tag with blank or ruled index cards! :)
This was an exciting discovery. The cottage we were staying in had a big old classic radio, which was labeled "Hacker".
Made by Christian Hacker of Nuremberg. A very similar stable appears in a Hacker catalogue from ca. 1900. This has been over-painted, but it was done extremely well and a very long time ago. A child wrote the names of its horses over the stalls and on the floor in from of them sometime in the 1920s or 1930s: Sepp, Fritz, Franz, Josef and Max. The double doors at the side open into a coach house.
The sailor skittles are also old; Spear & Sons, also of Nuremberg, made very similar sets.