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LevelHead by Julian Oliver,
got hacked by smart french students! pen-n-paper brute force attack! super cool
well, as you see, i'm in warnet (in malang to be exactly ). mum you gotta blame for this hacked, this is what happened when i waiting you quite long for chat
"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.
When you have no physical access to the telephone you want to hack, kindly click smooth manner to hack a phone with out bodily get admission to do you need to learn how to hack someone's phone with out touching it? Is it even remotely viable to try this? Properly, i will inform you that this is very a lot viable. Multiple years in the past, this will have sounded bizarre but no longer in this present era any extra. It's far now remotely feasible to monitor and tune some other's cellular device without having to deal with the tool for as soon as.
Catalog #: BIOH00001
Last Name: Hack
First Name: C.P.
Notes:
Repository: San Diego Air and Space Museum Archive
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
I created a series of brooches and necklaces made by vacuum forming plastic over old cables and technology, influenced by Denise Julia Reytan. She casts a mix of found objects, family heirlooms and childhood mementos in silicone to create one piece. I really like the idea of combining miscellaneous objects that are a range of different textures and colours and turning them into a singular colour and texture. Out dated technology becomes useless and the components aren’t usually recycled, as it’s so cheap to make new ones. Using them to create something new gives them renewed purpose. I took influence from the film TRON: Legacy, which is a science fiction film about. People represent computer components and this is reflected visually in the costumes. I took the idea of representing a pattern on a 3D surface and printed my pattern design onto the plastic, which would then be formed into 3D pieces. Instead of using more literal imagery associated with hacking and computers, such as the components in TRON, coding or computer keys, I decided to use wires, iPods and earphones influenced by Michael Craig Martin’s paintings. He uses simple, bold lines and bold colours, which are playful and are easily reproduced as a pattern. At the current exhibition of his work at the Serpentine Gallery, there is black and white wallpaper made up of images from his paintings. Although hacking is a serious issue, I want my jewellery to still be fun and quirky. I designed the pattern by drawing out illustrations and then editing them into a pattern on Photoshop. I then screen-printed it onto the plastic. For the ink colour I chose metallic silver, as it’s a colour closely related to technology because most components and a lot of computers are silver. I wanted to use bright colours for the plastic, but I found that the darker blue and purple contrasted better with the silver.
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.
Images from the second Kingswood Hack Jam which saw pupils in Years 7-10 use a microbit to create a solution to a problem.
Innovating Inner City Events
Ein Pen&Paper Hackathon
Karneval, Großveranstaltungen und ihre Herausforderungen
05.06.2019 x Köln
www.hack.institute/events/karneval-hack
#karnevalhack
(Fotos: Nadja Eminoglu-Leuci/ hack.institute)
Op 26 februari 2016 opende HACKING HABITAT, een grootschalige internationale tentoonstelling op de grenzen van kunst, technologie en sociale verandering. Meer dan 80 internationaal bekende kunstenaars en ontwerpers toonden tot 6 juni 2016
nieuw en bekend werk in de voormalige gevangenis aan het Utrechtse Wolvenplein.
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