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An event celebrating the 20th anniversary of the classic technology movie, "Hackers." The film was played, followed by 90s-era music and a costume contest.
An event celebrating the 20th anniversary of the classic technology movie, "Hackers." The film was played, followed by 90s-era music and a costume contest.
My extruder motor and the extruder cotroller's H-bridge are having a bit of a disagreement. While they work things out, I've introduced a 12V relay to mediate.
Hacking a digital bathroom scale to use as a general-purpose weight sensor or input device.
Explained in more detail at:
Posted via email to ☛ HoloChromaCinePhotoRamaScope‽: http://cdevers.posterous.com/i-mit-hacks. Yes, that is furniture hanging upside-down from the archway at the MIT Media Lab. More photos from the real camera later. ...
As tipped off by a commenter on Universal Hub, the label on the "Jack Daniels" whisky bottle actually seems to be identical to this image from the MIT Museum site, which reads:
Old
No. 5
East
Quality
Massachusetts
ROOF & TUNNEL
HACKERS
LAZARUS LIVES Prop. Inc.
Cambridge MASS.
For the rest of the background, I refer you to MIT's Hacks FAQ, and paste from Wikipedia: Hacks at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
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Hacks at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology are practical jokes and pranks meant to prominently demonstrate technical aptitude and cleverness or commemorate popular culture and historical topics.[1][2][3][4][5][6] The pranks are anonymously constructed at night by undergraduate students (hackers) and are governed by an extensive and informal body of precedent, tradition, and ethics. Although hacks can occur across campus, many make use of the prominent Great Dome. Hacker alumni include Nobel Laureate George F. Smoot.[7] Although the practice is unsanctioned by the university and students have been arraigned on trespassing charges for hacking,[8][9][10] hacks have substantial significance to MIT's history and student culture and several hacks are prominently featured as exhibits in recent buildings such as the Stata Center and MIT Museum.[11]
Famous hacks include a weather balloon labeled "MIT" appearing at the 50-yard line at the Harvard/Yale football game in 1982, placing a campus police cruiser on the roof of the Great Dome,[12] converting the Great Dome into R2-D2 or a large yellow ring to acknowledge the release of Star Wars Episode I and Lord of the Rings respectively,[13] or placing replicas of the Wright Flyer and a firetruck to acknowledge the anniversaries of first flight and the September 11th attacks respectively.[14]
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Welcome, @UniversalHub readers :-)
An event celebrating the 20th anniversary of the classic technology movie, "Hackers." The film was played, followed by 90s-era music and a costume contest.
As an ongoing fascination with making fake map-looking things in Excel via formatted pivot tables, here's one showing wildfires in the US.
All about the process at: uxblog.idvsolutions.com/2012/12/excel-hack-map.html
Official link for downloading the complete archive is mgpf.it/2013/08/07/shots-and-portraits-from-ohm.html
All pictures are released under an Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported license. Do something awesome with them.
I'd really appreciate if you can refer the link if you use them and I'd like to hear your impressions, so please email me your greetings and your feelings. You can add me to twitter too, my nick is @lastknight.
I noticed with my new Peek, it would turn off when being set down. After some rigorous troubleshooting (which mostly consisted of dropping my Peek from various heights onto my bed), it seemed that the battery has some "rattle room" between it and the battery cover.
My simple hack was to tape a piece of index card over the battery pack to make sure that it was held down securely by the battery cover. The tape makes a nice hinge so the battery can be removed as normal, and holds the index card in place while putting on the cover. Simple and non-destructive, something I'm not normally known for.
Sony MDR-V150 hack for broken headband: new headband from one wire coat hanger, insulation tape and some fleece material from a hat. the coat hanger band is bent towards the back, crown, of the head - nice and comfy there.