View allAll Photos Tagged hacker
Hacking a digital bathroom scale to use as a general-purpose weight sensor or input device.
Explained in more detail at:
Photo of a model playing "the hacker". X-processed and additional processing for effect.
Coming to istock soon.
Most of you guys don't know this but I love working on my iPhone. The reason I took these pictures is because I will be posting instructions on how to jailbreak your iphone and will give you a list of applications you must download from Cydia (an appstore for jailbreakers) on to this site.
My post should be up in a few hours.
Also follow me on twitter, tumblr, and my website.
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.
During PBS’ NOVA “Memory Hackers” session at the Television Critics Association Winter Press Tour in Pasadena, CA on Tuesday, January 19, 2016, pediatric neurologist and neuroscientist Nico Dosenbach, 12-year-old with HSAM (Highly Superior Autobiographical Memory) Jake Hausler, professor and psychologist Dr. Julia Shaw, professor Dr. André Fenton, producer, director and writer Michael Bicks and series senior executive producer Paula Apsell explore how researchers on the cutting edge of mind-control can implant, change and even erase memories. On this thought-provoking journey into the mind, NOVA investigates the mysterious nature of how we remember.
(Premieres February 10, 2016)
All photos in this set should be credited to Rahoul Ghose/PBS
here we've taken an RJ-45 cable and hacked the one end into a serial cable. For some reason our terminal system isn't asserting the DSR line, so we've tied it to DTR, which is always high. This is for the back of a new hemotology machine I'm working on the interface for. Turns out the interface specs are quite vague, and so we're just kind of winging it as we go.
I thought I was a software engineer, and this was a programming position, but I'm finding out it's a bit more hardware than anticipated... :)
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.
Time warp to 1995. Head-to-head "Wipeout XL" video games being played on a Playstation, alongside dancers grooving to DJs playing electronic 90's-era tunes.
View of Port Hacking River, Royal National Park
Dated: No date
Digital ID: 12932-a012-a012X2443000085
Rights: www.records.nsw.gov.au/about-us/rights-and-permissions
We'd love to hear from you if you use our photos.
Many other photos in our collection are available to view and browse on our website using Photo Investigator.
Seriously, what.
(Based, incidentally, on a t-shirt I Spreadshirted up on a whim for a Twitter friend)
This was the first one I stretched and it is wonky and driving me crazy. Nor is it centred, which is the result of never plotting out an embroidering plan of attack, but just diving in madly.
Embroidered on the commute and while watching The Wire with DMC on some Aida (I think) given to me. Stretched on a balsa wood frame. Long live my new staple gun.
Op 9 juni 2017 vond in de Tweede Kamer in Den Haag de tweede editie van Accountability Hack plaats, een hackathon waar met open data de prestaties van de overheid in kaart worden gebracht. Accountability Hack is een initiatief van de Algemene Rekenkamer en de Tweede Kamer samen met het CBS en de ministeries van Binnenlandse Zaken, Buitenlandse Zaken, Financiën en Infrastructuur en Milieu. De hackathon werd georganiseerd in samenwerking met Open State Foundation. Kijk voor meer informatie op accountabilityhack.nl/
The conference „Digital Backyards Japan“ has been initiated by smal.jp and berlinergazette.de. It took place during three days of January 2013 (10th-12th) in northern Japan at the Sapporo Media Arts Lab. The aim was to explore future forms of networking in the field of knowledge production.
The awareness towards the digital monopolism of companies based in Silicon valley is growing all over the world. Also in Japan. But what are alternatives to Google and Facebook? The conference „Digital Backyards Japan“ claims: The answer can not be yet another internet giant of Japanese origin to rival Google and Facebook. A real alternative would be to empower diversity.
The resources for alternatives to an increasingly centralized internet landscape lie dormant in Japan's diversity itself: tinker garages, corporate hotbeds, grassroots hubs, institutional labs, hacker bedrooms, editorial outposts etc. In those digital backyards various stakeholders in the field of knowledge production have been pursuing their innovative work over the last decades. However its potential has not been exhausted yet.
What can be done about this? The conference invited open minded bloggers, entrepreneurs, researchers, cultural workers, journalists and programmers to explore synergies between their work. Here they discussed: Why do we network in the first place? What do we see as emerging trends? What are up and coming web services? What is the potential of decentralized strategies?
The motivation of the conference is to think and network beyond the given (e.g. infrastructures) and the dominant (e.g. cultures). Above all it is about exploring dormant potentials: How can Japan's digital backyards catalyse networking cultures in a sustainable way? How can they revitalize a country in deep crisis? And how can they help to connect Japan anew with world society?
„Digital Backyards Japan“ was a kick off event for more meetings in Japan/Asia and a follow up of a Berlin summit in October 2012. The spontaneous proliferation of the conference enables a fruitful process of cross-regional learning from: Insights from the debates in Europe are shared in Japan/Asia and vice versa.
documentation of the Berlin conference:
berlinergazette.de/digi-yards-documentation
program of the Berlin conference:
berlinergazette.de/digital-backyards
Photo Credit: Yasuhiro Yamaguchi (Mayer Planning Office/ City of Sapporo, SMAL), Chris Piallat (Alliance '90/The Greens), Krystian Woznicki (berlinergazette.de)