View allAll Photos Tagged hacks
This was an experiment using a $10 mini fixed focus digital camera for macro photography. The top picture is of a hard disk controller board, and it is obviously out of focus because the camera is too close. Add a $3 magnifying glass between the camera and the subject, and everything is in focus (as well as can be expected for a $10 camera, at least).
The first real photo stop of the 5 day visit to Aus. The sun had not long risen and I was greeted with this scene not far into Royal National Park, where the road crosses the Hacking River.
Teenage Hacker Sentenced to 20 Months in Prison for Selling Personal Data & Offer Freelance Hacking Services
Readmore: gbhackers.com/teenage-hacker-sentenced-to-20-months-in-pr...
Ethical Hacking class will immerse the students into an interactive environment where they will be shown how to scan, test, hack and secure their own systems.
Using a collimating lens from an old DVD player as a DIY macro lens I examine some pixels from the Make.com article describing the hack: blog.makezine.com/archive/2009/08/cameraphone_dvd_macro_l...
La Amiga Flequillo descubrio por accidente el hack del Explorer, tomarse una foto con la niña del bigote.
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 scottbeale.org and laughingsquid.com.
Hacker Brushless Motors produced this interesting electric generator that fits on the front of a piston engine.
our first earth day hack
This hack was busted on New York Hall of Science Home using Hackasaurus tools.
Nikon D90
Nikon VR 55-200mm f/4-5.6G @ 200mm f/5.6
Adobe Lightroom
SonikDesign © All rights Reserved.
A two-page information graphic that describes how computer hackers exploit networks with weak security to launch anonymous attacks on websites and other computers connected to the Internet. Created while an employee of XPLANE Corp.
Client: Silicon Alley Reporter magazine
Jean-François Leboeuf & Benjamin Tremblay
"Hack Sabbath"
installation & performance
16 décembre 2011
Sporobole Centre en Art Actuel, Sherbrooke (Québec)
photo: Jocelyn Riendeau
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.