View allAll Photos Tagged hackers
First Hacks/Hackers Meetup held at Atherton Studio at HPR. Great presentations by Ben Trevino, Jared Kuroiwa and Misa Maruyama.
Hack Shack has been featured in a number of high profile car/truck magazines. Here are a few shots from the photo sessions.
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
This is Hack Bartholomew. He caught my attention as I was waiting in line for a healthy breakfast at Cafe du Monde. He was very entertaining as he was playing the Alabama fight song the morning after our big win in the Sugar Bowl.
I bought his CD and asked if I could take his photo.
The screen on my Canon 400D taken today after hacking it using a hack I found today. It expands the ISO range to 16-3200 in 1/3rd stops, gives access to Spot metering and allows you to have focus point patterns.
Oh little fuckers
They got my paypal info too and tried to send $900USD payment.
Deleted everything and will start fresh
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]
Kaden Hacker stepped right into the varsity spotlight in his freshman year. He came up big for us, and even broke into the 18’s before the year was done. Kaden helped us take home a trophy at the championship this year and has the coach liking the way our future teams are shaping up.
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.
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
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
Hack Manhattan is a community hackerspace in New York City where people come together to work on projects and share knowledge. The space has tools and materials for working on electronics, software, wood, metal, textiles and 3D printing. Hack Manhattan's founders view their space as a public resource, designed to meet the goal of promoting and encouraging technical, scientific, and artistic skills through individual projects, social collaboration, and education. This non-profit organization is supported primarily by members. Membership is open to the public, and members span a wide array of backgrounds and interests.
james, cutting into a tank on the sidewalk. i can only imagine what the people driving by thought. so rad.
todos los juegos de hack para ps2, estan impecables, pues solo me he pasado el primero, el segundo lo empeze y el 3 y el 4 ni siquiera los he probado XDDD
Made with Photoshop.
One of my earliest vector traces.
.hack//SIGN is copyright Project .hack. No infringement was intended.
We knew we were going to want to extend the battery life of the N95 but we weren't sure how. First thing to do was pull out and extend the battery so we could start measuring its power usage and trying to replace it with other options.
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.