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I'm sorry - my account was hacked / crashed last weekend. I'm shocked! Dana

A visualization of a hacker seeing the targeted corporate networks.

Well, I did the Wii Twilight Princess saved-game hack. ITs very simple and does not require any hardware modding at all. I am very hopeful this grows and does not get stopped by Nintendo.

Adrienne Frantz on the set of Hack!

angelina jolie's FIRST movie!

NJTR 4201 leads train 1723 west across the former Erie Railroad HX Drawbridge as viewed from under the former Lackawanna Upper Hack bridge.

love how the poster in the back reminds us of Noisebridge's first and only rule!

Hacker Herald Radio RP10

 

inside view

Hack Tour 2017

Tuesday 05.09.2017

(C) Konsta Linkola

www.konstalinkola.com/

The Man invented yet another repair putty and called if formerol. Since all home shopping channels and DIY stores were already full with all kinds of repair putty, The Man decided to try something new: market it to people who think they're too cool to watch home shopping television. So The Man casted a hippie-cutie type arts student as a mascot, called her Jane, gave the stuff a hipster name and (in a stroke of marketing genius!!!!) came up with an ordering backlog to make the story even more credible!!!

Anyway, I finally got my hands on two packs of sugru and here is my first "hack" (as The Man wants us to call it). The handle of the window always smashes into the other pane and I used to worry about breaking it - but now I stuck formerol (sorry, sugru) onto the handle.

sugru comes in small packets and is a bit crumbly and has a strong chemical smell when you open it. It kneads fairly well, a bit more crumbly than Fimo, cures overnight and although The Man calls it silicone, it is rather hard - again, like Fimo, but a bit more rubbery. It does stick well to stuff, though - like metal in this picture.

 

;-)

 

www.sugru.com

  

Edit:

Thanks for including it in the gallery

sugru.com/gallery/show/door-handle-hack

the perfect awkward prom photo pose!

After a long night of semi easy hacking, lots of forum reading, and some image editing, I have finished most of teh modding for my iPhone. the one cool thing that i added that is not shown, is my 3d superman logo that fills up when on the charging screen.

 

Most of my research was done at ModMyiPhone.com - the wiki needs some better organization but they are dedicated people over there!

 

EDIT: Forgot to mention, the long night of re-hacking my iPhone was do to the fact I completely bricked my iPhone earlier in the day. And I've learned to respect the SSH Terminal... :)

 

Happy Hacking

 

Be sure to check out the iPhone Screenshots Group to see all the latest cool mods for the iPhone!

 

Just did a replace to update this photo, because i just changed the carrier logo, youtube, NES and Safari icons...

OMG, I did it, lol XDD

Here is my very very first hack for sims 2: rock and metal animation box!

I made some serious mistakes, but I just wanted to try myself in game content creation XD

Now my dreams came true: my sims now can shake with their heads on scene, play keys standing (loooool, so wrong and stupid animation) and make some other things : ))

 

Here is it (shame shame shame):

www.mediafire.com/?jyjwj1zoyue

  

Very big size of pic: s48.radikal.ru/i120/1003/2b/f9b0d0d86f46.png

  

Jackson's Mill, near Jane Lew, Lewis County, West Virginia

 

Special thanks to Jerry Jones for texture www.flickr.com/photos/skeletalmess/

 

Henry McWhorter is my great-great-great-great-great grandfather; as is John Hacker.

 

The Henry McWhorter Cabin served the Hacker's Creek community as home, church, school, and post office. Today it serves as a reminder of the courageous pioneers who settled the Central West Virginia area.

 

The McWhorter Cabin is thought to be among the oldest "family dwellings" in central West Virginia. Constructed in 1793 along the banks of Hacker's Creek of the West Fork River at what was then called West's Fort (now Jane Lew), it served as church, school, post office and community center as well as a dwelling place for Henry and Mary (Fields) McWhorter and their family.

 

In 1927 the cabin was moved to Jackson's Mill State 4-H Camp where it was placed on what was believed to be the original Jackson cabin site; and, though it is not an exact replica of Stonewall Jackson's boyhood home, it does typify a rural early 19th century (West) Virginia homestead. .

 

Today it is "preserved as a memorial of the stirring and tragic days of the West Virginia border," and as a shrine to which people of all ages may go to "gather strength and courage from the memories of the rugged virtues exemplified by their pioneer ancestors 'round cabin campfires. ."

 

Henry McWhorter was born in New Jersey in 1760. While living in Orange County, New York, he enlisted as a minuteman at age fifteen to fight in the Revolutionary War. After his term of service expired, he volunteered six more times in a 22-month span. Afterwards, he lived in Bucks County, Pennsylvania, where he married Miss Mary Fields. In 1786, the couple moved to Hampshire County, (West) Viriginia. Three years later, Henry sought a home on McKinney's Run in Harrison County.

 

In 1793, the McWhorters again moved, this time building this 18' x 24' log cabin near West's Fort where Henry, a millwright, had constructed the region's first large gristmill. The mill operated for more than a century and provided cornmeal and flour for a large portion of the population of the region. A sawmill was added later. The mill was destroyed by fire in the early twentieth century.

 

The McWhorter cabin was much better than the average pioneer cabin of that day, being built of hewn logs and having a substantial wooden floor. The windows, too, had small panes of glass instead of the customary greased paper. The immense chimney of stones and clay was constructed inside the cabin as a precautionary measure against the attacks of Indians. It took in the greater part of one end of the cabin. In the great fireplace were placed the large irons called dogirons upon which rested the huge back logs.

 

An iron crane was swung from the center of the fireplace upon which hung the immense iron pot where much of the family's cooking was done. The baking was done in a heavy iron pot set in the hot ashes, with more hot ashes placed upon the heavy lid.

 

On the right side of the huge chimney was the built-in cupboard, and here were kept the few dishes and cooking utensils carried across the mountains from the old home. On the left side of the chimney was a stairway leading to the upper room where the family had their sleeping quarters.

 

On one side of this upper room were two small windows, not more than a foot square, through which the inmates could fire at the Indians should they come too near.

 

Three generations of the McWhorter family were born in this cabin during the forty years they lived there. The family was forced to leave the homestead in 1833 and return to McKinney's Run after a series of security debts left Henry financially embarassed. It was there that Henry died in 1848.

 

The log homestead and the mill were sold to Edward Jackson, a cousin of "Stonewall" Jackson. The cabin remained in the Jackson family for many years. In time it became the property of Mrs. Walter Neely, a Jackson descendant, who in 1927 decided to remodel or tear down the old cabin to build a home for her son who had recently married. She finally decided to turn the cabin back into the hands of the descendants of the original owner and builder, on condition that the cabin be removed and preserved.

 

With leadership provided by Miss Minnie McWhorter, a great-great granddaughter of the pioneers, the cabin was moved to Jackson's Mill and dedicated there on August 14, 1927.

 

The cabin was re-dedicated by the McWhorter Family Association to the state of West Virginia on July 24, 1993, in observance of it's 200th anniversary with more than two hundred persons present for the weekend event. A McWhorter Family Endowment was established for the cabin's maintenance and upkeep. A time capsule was buried under the front step of the cabin on August 14, 1993, during the Eleventh Annual Hacker's Creek Pioneer Descendants Gathering. It contains momentos of the anniversary celebration and other items reminiscent of the year 1993. It is to be opened in 2043 by a committee appointed from the family's younger generation in 1993.

my screen name

Lecker mit frischem Lauch

Norm Hicks showing off his #4 Hacker proof press. These are fairly rare and were made in the 1930s. Norm lost the toss of a coin and treated me to dinner--I owe him one.

Taller de Hacking Metasploit Kung Fu

Mope.io hack the game, This series of new games can be used again on our site game IO is also attractive to follow. This time the ball is up and you have to eat red fruit to grow. Rookies can kill as strong as a small level as they take. To make your riffs so easy to escape. If you need to work...

 

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kinda elegant assemblage made of folder names in machine infected with root kit

This is a "grey" bag made specifically for photography/compositing for timbuk2.com.

  

Lego midway arcade with pirates of the video games !

Original picture by me

ZoneTag: Photosphere / About. Owner only: Add Location / Add Tags / Settings

 

View your ZoneTag photos in one place, browse by location and find photos from your friends - http://zonetag.research.yahoo.com/photos

receiver radio transistor Hacker Helmsman L/M/S

Haseo cosplay by CyberBird

 

Photo is 6 images stitched together (I don't own a wide angle lens so thank you 50mm xD)

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