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First DevCamp to bring hacks & hackers together to build iPad apps. May 22 at KQED. Photos by @Deifell
From 8-10 May, 2015, Waag Society and The Netherlands Institute for Sound and Vision hosted the first of six Europeana Space hackathons. This was the main objective: come up with appealing ideas and applications to bring the rich archive of digitized European cultural heritage to the public.
The Europeana Space Project seeks prove that digitized cultural heritage material can be used in creative ways, and new business and sustainability models can be developed around these innovations.
the light kept sliding off so I found a fix. But I will have to get a proper bike light.
I used DXO to color correct each part of the green stuff and the wall, with multiple exports, and used Gimp with layers and combine all of them into this picture.
originally the shot was way too yelllow, the greens were all wrong, and there was way too much blue in the picture.
Rather than tear things apart during this month's 'Hack Session', the plan was to have participants work on some projects for the Innovation Lab. We ended up with a pretty young group of participants but went forward with the plans anyhow. These youngsters set out solving problems, designing parts and assembling items with only sporadic instructions. It was a little more chaotic than planned, but most everything came together in this gratifying evening.
Hacked the bace of my Izon web cam to fit on a standerd 1/4 x 20 camera mount using Sugru.
steminnovation.com/section/iZON/24/
This photo is licensed under a Creative Commons license. If you use this photo, please list the photo credit as "Kent K. Barnes / kentkb" and link the credit to
Thank You...
Leftover parts from previous hack sessions were taped, soldered and glued together to make this "Space Monkey from Bananatron".
"Hack Sessions" in the Jocelyn H. Lee Innovation Lab are a chance for participants to take apart toys and electronics, see what makes them work and maybe find new uses for the parts. Our "kid" sessions are particularly good for giving youngsters a chance to use a variety of hand tools and test equipment in the Innovation Lab. Photo credit: James Mahon.
Taking stuff apart, repurposing the parts and having fun? Must be one of the monthly hack sessions in the Jocelyn H. Lee Innovation Lab
Robert Lewis "Hack" Wilson was born on April 26, 1900 in Ellwood City, Pennsylvania. He moved to Martinsburg, West Virginia in 1921 to play baseball for the Class D Martinsburg Mountaineer. His first Major League game was in 1923 and during his 11 year his Major League Career he played for the New York Giants, Chicago Cubs, Brooklyn Dodgers and Philadelphia Phillies. He retired in 1934 and was involved in a number of unsuccessful ventures that left him broke. When he died of an internal hemorrhage on November 23, 1948 he was penniless. Relatives refused to claim his body and funeral service were arranged and paid for by Ford Flick. He was inducted into the National Baseball Hall of Fame in 1979. The Granite Tombstone that Marks his grave in the Roasedale Cemetery in Martinsburg, West Virginia has a replica of his Hall of Fame Plaque affixed too it.
A major exhibition and events programme that invites you to adopt a hacker mindset to bend, tweak and mash-up dublin’s existing urban systems.
First DevCamp to bring hacks & hackers together to build iPad apps. May 22 at KQED. Photos by @Deifell