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Cantex hack. F-mount body cap and a lens off an old compact camera epoxied together. The crude putty is there in hope of stabilizing the thing and offering better light (and dust) seal. The aperture ring still turns, to my surprise. Haven't tried taking it apart from the top now that the bottom is glued down.
You can follow my cantex tags to find images taken through this.
Hack.Art.Lab collaborators Ann Resnick, Kristin Beal-DeGrandmont, John Harrison, Ivy Lanning, Lauren Hirsh, and Tom McGuire
Please don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission. If you wish to use this image, please, contact me through flickrmail or at vicenc.feliu@gmail.com. © All rights reserved...
John Davis as Sir Nigel Hack, "the richest most handsome knight in the realm, gentleman adventurer and god among men" and two-thirds of the comic sword-fighting duo Hack and Slash.
At the Maryland Renaissance Festival, Crownsville, Maryland.
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!
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/
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best bag for me looks great, feels durable, doesn't look that big and gives the option of carrying it by messenger or via backpack :)
Shot on location of the music video production of 'LA Lights' by Hourglass Sea in Bradford, England, in June 2011. Director Jack King. To see the music video: vimeo.com/26086005 For Hourglass Sea on MySpace: bitly.com/qpZtQv on Facebook: bitly.com/qrN7Jk Check out more great photos by Janine Gaunt here: bit.ly/oWois0
Hey, as long as he's not "hacking" up a furball or phishing for credit card numbers, Otis is more then welcome to ply his computer skills.
Hacking the 440 (and others land cameras) to use a uptodate 3v battery.
view the original size to read ;)
www.flickr.com/photos/sinvertigo/5245616185/sizes/o/in/ph...
you can visit my website at www.sinvertigo.com
Burrata pizza inside the Pizza Hacker pizza forge. Almond wood on one side means you have to rotate the pizza three times and tip it towards the flame to melt the top.
Hackness Hall, near Scarborough. Grade 1 listed country house built between 1791-96. Gutted by a fire in 1910 and restored by Walter Brierley.
Scarborough, Hackness Hall.
October 2012
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!
My latest hack to the free Vivitar T100 was to open the front of the camera and ream out the aperture to a larger diameter, in order to get more pronounced lens aberrations. While I was working in there, I also disconnected the hot shoe and semipermanently connected a remote flash cord....
The wider aperture give a soft-focus effect like this.
Strangely, I notice I'm the only one on Flickr so far to use the tag "reamed to f/4" ;-)
Mario Rubio (www.mariorubio.com). Todos los derechos reservados. Galería en www.adf-photo.org desde septiembre de 2009
We held the first ROROsyd Hack Night for the year in the Ninefold office. It's also the first time the invite went out to the SydJS list too. Great turn out, great night!
Modern warfare isn’t always about battlefields. U.S. Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta made this clear recently as he referred to a growing cyber-threat from Iran. He went so far as to declare that the Pentagon is prepared to take action if America is threatened by a computer-based assault. Apparently major banks such as JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America and Capital One have experienced massively distributed denial-of-service attacks.
In a recent Joint Chiefs of Staff intelligence directorate, there was this warning issued:
“Iran’s cyber aggression should be viewed as a component, alongside efforts like support for terrorism, to be the larger covert war Tehran is waging against the West.”
While Panetta carefully worded his remarks, one expert said his message to Iran was quite evident. “It’s not something where the people are throwing down the gauntlet, but I think Panetta comes pretty close to sending a clear warning (to Iran): We know who it was. Maybe you want to think twice before you do it again.”
In his speech Panetta declared that the Shamoon virus replaced crucial system files with the image of a burning U.S. flag, and also overwrote all data, rendering more than 30,000 computers useless, forcing them to be replaced.
The weapons of modern warfare truly are divergent in nature. The totality and eternity of the Word of God, however, never wavers, for we are told in Isaiah 54:17, “No weapon formed against you shall prosper…” This is comforting to say the very least. It does not, though, relieve us from duty as prayer warriors, for we must continue to follow the directive we are given in Psalm 122:6 and continually pray for the peace of Jerusalem!
For more on this story, visit: Jerusalem Prayer Team Articles Page.
LIKE and SHARE this story to encourage others to pray for peace in Jerusalem, and leave your own PRAYERS and COMMENTS below.
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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 Ahmad El-Nemr
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