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See the blog post for more info: Yahoo! Hack Day
This photo is licensed under a Creative Commons license. If you use this photo, please list the photo credit as "Scott Beale / Laughing Squid" and link the credit to laughingsquid.com.
Hacking Arts (October 3-5), an annual student-run festival and hackathon hosted at the MIT Media Lab, marked the launch of MIT STARTUP. Hacking Arts features talks by entrepreneurs in the creative industries, tech-enabled live performances and art pieces, and demos by emergent start-ups. This year’s kick-off party at Microsoft’s Nerd Center featured a performance by Grammy-nominated artist Ryan Leslie and an ideation session by Kiran Gandhi, the drummer of MIA.
The following day, participants attended panels on Film, Music, Design, Virtual Reality, Fashion, Gaming, Performing Arts and Visual Arts, hearing from speakers such as Benji Rogers (CEO, Pledgemusic), Kevin Cunningham (Executive Artistic Director, 3-Legged Dog Productions) and Laird Malamed (COO, Oculus VR). Afterward, participants put their ideas into action during the high-voltage hackathon.
The 2014 Hackathon winners were LuxLoop (VHX Prize in Film, TV & VR), Harlequin (Most Creative), CUE (Most Disruptive) and Tomorrow Is Another Day (Best Overall Hack). A common thread among the winning hacks was how technology was used to promote human interaction or create analogue output. LuxLoop and Harlequin both used human motion to affect digital output. CUE, one of the finalists in the Pitch phase of the competition, designed a modular theatrical system consisting of wearable audiovisual hardware and a smartphone app to sequence, control and play user-programmed sound and light effects to enhance public theater. Tomorrow Is Another Day touted the idea “Turn your nothing into something,” as their project used a person’s daily “swipes” on touch-screen devices to transform daily online activities into abstract ink drawings.
Photo by Andrew Kubica
www.stayfocusedphotography.net/
Please ask before use
4 days toy hacking and circuit bending workshop with a group of 20 students from Willem de Kooning academy, Rotterdam.
My old PC case, featuring some practical hacks. Pictured here is the relay unit inside the case, powering the monitor and external speakers when the computer is on. The relay is a bulky 12V DPDT switch. The two switches are ganged to handle greater current, but I think they could each have handled the load. A fuse makes doubly sure.
Not seen is the 12V input to the relay. It's connected to a Molex from the power supply like a fan. A little zener diode connects the positive and negative to ground off any back current when the relay switches off.
The first test shot - bits of my bike and the view out my window. Not a great photo but definitely two images on one Instax. Remember to set the exposure switch on the back to "Darken". I think it might still be a bit over-exposed so may experiment with ND filters in the future.
Full tutorial at www.quickphotographytips.com/index.php/2009/07/08/instax-...
The bookmark pen is held onto the moleskine by folded scotch tape.
The tape is held down by two large stickers.
This hack has changed my life.
(slidescan) D-HACK is an 1963 Agusta-Bell 47J-2A Super Ranger, seen at Hamburg on 13 september 2003. This aircraft has been registered in Germany since 1972. It was sold in 2019 and reregistered as G-USAI. © Bert Visser
Hackers Creek, near Jane Lew, Lewis County, West Virginia
John Hacker is my 5th great grandfather.
Beginning in the 1760s when the earliest settlers crossed the divides of the Allegheny Mountains and made their tomahawk claims along the waters of the upper Monongahela River in what became the Hacker's Creek settlements of western Virginia, the names and exploits of the frontiersmen of the region were indelibly inscribed in the pages of American history. These settlements were the western frontier of the fledgling nation far longer than any place in its western expansion; and, there were more conflicts between its people and the red man during the last half of the eighteenth century than anywhere else on the long frontier.
Hacker's Creek was named for John Hacker, a Stafford County,Virginia, native who came with the first party of men to settle at present-day Buckhannon, Upshur County, West Virginia. Finding that land he desired at Buckhannon had already been claimed by Samuel Pringle, an earlier sojourner in the region, he crossed the Buckhannon Mountain and selected four hundred acres on a tributary of the Muddy River, as the West Fork of the Monongahela River was then called. John Hacker thus became the first permanent European settler in what is today's Lewis County, West Virginia.
So here I am poster boy for the Tog hackerspace. Why? No clue. That photo is from 2002 at h2k2. I guess I am now a stock photo for hacking.
Hacking Arts (October 3-5), an annual student-run festival and hackathon hosted at the MIT Media Lab, marked the launch of MIT STARTUP. Hacking Arts features talks by entrepreneurs in the creative industries, tech-enabled live performances and art pieces, and demos by emergent start-ups. This year’s kick-off party at Microsoft’s Nerd Center featured a performance by Grammy-nominated artist Ryan Leslie and an ideation session by Kiran Gandhi, the drummer of MIA.
The following day, participants attended panels on Film, Music, Design, Virtual Reality, Fashion, Gaming, Performing Arts and Visual Arts, hearing from speakers such as Benji Rogers (CEO, Pledgemusic), Kevin Cunningham (Executive Artistic Director, 3-Legged Dog Productions) and Laird Malamed (COO, Oculus VR). Afterward, participants put their ideas into action during the high-voltage hackathon.
The 2014 Hackathon winners were LuxLoop (VHX Prize in Film, TV & VR), Harlequin (Most Creative), CUE (Most Disruptive) and Tomorrow Is Another Day (Best Overall Hack). A common thread among the winning hacks was how technology was used to promote human interaction or create analogue output. LuxLoop and Harlequin both used human motion to affect digital output. CUE, one of the finalists in the Pitch phase of the competition, designed a modular theatrical system consisting of wearable audiovisual hardware and a smartphone app to sequence, control and play user-programmed sound and light effects to enhance public theater. Tomorrow Is Another Day touted the idea “Turn your nothing into something,” as their project used a person’s daily “swipes” on touch-screen devices to transform daily online activities into abstract ink drawings.
Photo by Andrew Kubica
www.stayfocusedphotography.net/
Please ask before use
This is some of the most surreal shit ever. Absolutely crammed full with esoteric people and hardware.
Hacker: Mit maßgeschneiderten Trojanern brachten die Kriminellen Automaten dazu, mehr Scheine auszugeben
Zwar gab es auch 2014 eine Reihe von Bank- oder Juwelier-Raubüberfällen, die Zeiten großer Coups a la “Oceans Eleven” sind aber vorbei: Für Kriminelle lohnt es sich mittlerweile mehr, große ...
magpc.de/anunak-hacker-manipulieren-bankomaten-mit-trojan...
After gently adjusting the angle of the 1/16" tab and feeling how easily it gave way, I decided the only sensible thing to do was to cut it out and replace it with a thicker tab. Frustrating to have to do all the work over but it was the right decision.