View allAll Photos Tagged Hacking
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
Turning a standard USB keyboard into a restricted access interface for an interactive automaton.
Fitting circuit board after trimming
Project: Hive Mind Fortune Reader
Reads the collective mind of connected Twitter users and reads their fortune.
April 2013
For more on this and other such making things and techniques see the "Making weird stuff" blog
Investigating a hacking incident requires a holistic approach and with the hacker’s group leaving no trace, Appin’s authorities will need to employ all its forensic tools to analyse transmitted files and reconstruct and replay the captured traffic, even if it doesn’t exist in the compromised system.
First DevCamp to bring hacks & hackers together to build iPad apps. May 22 at KQED. Photos by @Deifell
First DevCamp to bring hacks & hackers together to build iPad apps. May 22 at KQED. Photos by @Deifell
Καλλιτέχνης: ΣΤΑΜΑΤΗΣ ΓΟΝΙΔΗΣ
Τίτλος: ΣΕ ΘΕΛΩ
Έτος κυκλοφορίας: 2010
Είδος έκδοσης: CD
Αριθμός κομματιών: 11
Είδος αρχείων: mp3
Ποιότητα αρχείων: 320Kbps
Μεγεθος: 115.44Mb
Συνοδευτικά: Full Covers
Κατηγορία: ΛΑΪΚΑ
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]