View allAll Photos Tagged hacking
Germany 2011
هام جدًا : حقوق الصورة محفوظه لصاحبها - عبدالله القديري - أي استخدام للصورة بدون سابق إذن لن يعرضك للمسؤولية ولا للمقاضاة .. حيث ان القانون لن ينصف حقوقي الفكرية والملكيه للصورة.. لذلك فتوقع اغتيالك من مجهول.. هذه ليست مزحه فقط بالانجليزي مزحه لأنهم ما يبوقون
Attention please : Unfortunately There are no Copy Rights Law for my photography work in this country.. So any use of this picture without permission.. I will NOT Sue you! But expect an Assassination with a closed CASE. It is a JOKE!
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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 know, this is like tricking out a Ford Taurus Station Wagon. But hey, sometimes you just gotta work with what ya got. And I got a pair of 3700s. Besides, this flash is 20+ years old. I figured if I killed it doing this that would give me a good excuse to buy a new flash, maybe something built in this century : )
(When I first got into photography I chose these over a 283 because they had the same power, but they also had the 'Interchangeable Dedicated Module. At the time that sounded very impressive. Oh well, live and learn).
After reading all the posts about modding the Vivitar 283's for Variable Power I thought I'd try something similar with a Vivitar 3700 Flash. From what I've read Vivitar does make a Vari-Power Module for these flashes. But I have NEVER seen one on either ebay OR Google.
It was quite simple. I mounted a Closed-Circuit 1/8 Jack (Radio Shack Part # 274-0248) in the 'module'. I spliced it into the two wires going to the sensor on the front. The closed-circuit jack interrupts and re-directs the circuit. (Think about the stereos and boomboxes where the speakers cut out when you plugged the headphones in.) I connected the red wire (which I presumed was the 'hot' wire) to the switched side of the plug.
Then I mounted a 100k pot (Radio Shack Part # 271-0092) in a small Radio Shack Project Box, attacked a length of speaker wire to the pot, attached a 1/8 plug to the other end of the wire. And I now have a removable Vari-Power Control.
With the control unplugged all the settings on the flash work normally. When I plug the control in I get variable power from full power to about 1/64 power (or so it seems with a quick test).
As the jack is wired into the sensor unit on the front of the flash I have to set the flash to one of the 'auto dedicated f-stop' settings on the back. (This module has three of them). Then I can use the control unit and adjust the power from the auto f-stop selected up to full power.
Here are some of the Flash Meter readings I took with a Sekonic L-508 Zoom Master Meter:
(Set Up- Flash and Meter set to 100 ISO. Meter about 5 feet from flash. Flash powered by a Quantum 1+ battery. 10 seconds between flashes. Fired via Cactus V4).
(Try this with your own flash. See exactly how accurate those 'Auto' settings are)
With the Control Unplugged
Flash - - - Meter
Setting - Reading
F/2 - - - - - F/2
F/4 - - - - - F/2.8
F/8 - - - - - F/4
Full
Power - - F/16
1/16
Power - - F/4
With the control plugged in and the flash set to the auto F/2 setting:
Dial all the way left - - F/2
Dial all the way right - - F/16
At various settings in between I got the expected range of power somewhat consistent with where the dial was set. Just over half way I got F/11. So all the lower stops (F/2.8 - 8) were in the first 1/2 turn of the dial. I haven't taken the time to pinpoint where on the dial each stop was yet..
I repeated the tests with a piece of black tape over the sensor just to make sure it was not active with the control plugged in. With the control unplugged and the flash set for F/2 I would get a full power flash if I covered the sensor. With the control plugged in it made no difference if the sensor was covered or not.
I would presume this would work with just about any flash. If you decide to try it I offer no guarantees on your flash if it dies when you do this.
This is the cart for the "Hacker Pschorr" beer (which AFAIK is part of the Paulaner brewery nowadays).
"All the gypsy hacks and the insomniacs,
now the paper's been read, now the waitress said
'Eggs and sausage and a side of toast
Coffee and a roll, hash browns over easy
Chile in a bowl with burgers and fries
What kind of pie? .' " Tom Waits
Large temporary tent erected just for Oktoberfest. This Hacker-Pschorr tent had capacity for 9,300. A "Maß" (liter, pronounced "Mas") of beer was about 9 EUR.
I use my iPhone to SSH into my computers at an Internet Cafe. All the computers run a form of Linux or Mac OS X.
I have AJAX enabled webcams to view in Mobile Safari. If there are unruly customers, I can easily run "init 6" and reboot.
Pretty incredible. The Iphone is a great remote admin tool.
For more info:
LIFE HACK PHONE HACK
No but seriously, sticking your favorite speaker-havin’ media player inside a glass with the speaker facing down is a good way to get louder audio (and in terms of “better” the iPod/iPhone “Loudness” EQ setting does wonders).
So much better now! The cap is postable and the pen is way easier to fit in a pocket. Thanks to Dr. Sketch's Flickr upload, check out his hack explanation in his photos!
This is my MacGyver hack on my desk chair that's falling apart. I tried welding the plastic together to no avail. So, I went with this wood screw and coat hanger hack. Surprisingly, the chair has never been in better shape since I inherited it.
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/
Hack for Health, a new USC hackathon focused on creating innovations in cancer treatments and to improve cancer patients' quality of life.
Hack for Health took place April 7-9, 2017. For more details visit: www.hackforhealth.co.
The winning hack was a camera-phone-integrated-Flickr-moblogging purse. Read more here: yodel.yahoo.com/2006/10/02/moblogging-purse-takes-hack-da...
Groups of hackers sit around waiting for the staff to mop up the rain, get the roof to close and let us back in to continue to hack. Anyone got some spare internet connectivity?
The Paulaner & Hacker-Pschorr brewery in Munich at the Nockherberg.
Those copper brewing kettles are still in use. There were about ten of them in this room, one next to another. It was so warm.
And it smelled awesome!