Dinarius = digital interest
19 September 2006

Let Your Smarts Hack Away!

9.19 – We were messing with the idea of something called ‘755’ where viewers, users and members could participate in deconstructing and reconstructing the world around them. It’s part art, it’s part expression and it’s a complete disobedience to function. Take, for example, your digital camera and rewire it to be a cheap .mp3 player providing better speakers and more memory; take a big fat writing pen, melt the case to fit lights that activate with pressure and you get a night-writer.


We even had a highly skilled, unpaid model!


It turns out that there is an anxious audience for things like this that is already hard at work. Join us as we take a quick look at some of what we consider to be the best examples of Functional Disobedience. Please take into consideration that you can get your butt locked up with serious jail time for some of the hacks you’ll find here that give you the power to break the law. As always, when ‘hacks’ are used to hurt or steal from others, the operator is not a hacker, but a cracker.

MakeZine is possibly one of the most innovative sites for people who like to tinker and have some knowledge of circuits and electricity. There’s plenty of those folks out there too; the site is visited by an average of 336 and-a-half MILLION people a DAY! This is the kind of hacking that benefits odds and ends in a home or small office. The archive linked to is enormous and only a small fraction of what MakeZine (now an actual ‘zine) offers visitors. The editors have done well to ‘keep it clean,’ and not publish too many hacks that tempt weaker wills to commit crimes.

GraffitiResearchLab has things that are more like the heart-warming hacks you’d see in movies when lovers do something crazy to express their passions. “Throwies” are little LED lights with watch batteries and magnets that can decorate city buses and signs and most anything metal. They’re pretty, they’re probably a lot of fun to chuck around and they’re not permanent. There’s also the idea of turning public spaces into better places to socialize and meet and exchange ideas which, we think, suits the reason that cities exist in the first place. GRL is friendly in that it promotes redefining and getting back in touch with the function of society in an urban zone.

Here at HackedGadgets, you can get yourself in to legal trouble. The defense of publishing secret codes to ATM’s and Coke machines is that it makes vendors and manufacturers more cautious and points out certain problems that can be exploited. Exploiting the problems listed by the site can get you arrested. Remember, “that with great power comes great responsibility.” If you desire to run a security business like the old movie, “Sneakers” (awesome movie in its day), this is the site you’d like to bookmark and do well to remember that the FBI can see that you’ve been there. Mind your morals.

PopGadget.net: I’m a little embarrassed as a man to say that I liked this hacking site. The tag line is, “personal tech + innovative lifestyle for women.” Ahem. There are some playful links and hacks like soft staircases for your beloved and ancient house pet. There’s also a ‘spirograph’ fashioned like the pendulum operated ones at the turn of the 19th to 20th century. Thankfully for my gender protection there’s a CAR section. But after seeing the Hello Kitty tail pipe hack I think I should just dash off to a strip club.

‘Hacking’ is for hardcore IT security folks which few people are though many have an interest in it. HackWire delivers news of misdemeanor hacks and events like PhreakNIC X to an audience of few authors (they’re hiring). BinaryRevolution is computer related with a sense of humor offering .mp3’s like HackRadio’s, “Episode 163: Phishing – are you retarded? Those nutty 2600 magazine covers are a bit translated at BinaryRevolution.com as well, which we found most interesting. Hack twice (once to translate and again to hack) at ButcheredFromInside which is written by Italians who focus on Linux, kernels and Windows.

So while we figure out how to put all the controls of an iPod into the steering column of a Scion xB, you have a lot to learn. Feel your curiosity out and let loose. Have some fun and have it safely and respectfully. That’s all the mind opening we’re willing to subject you to for now. H4V3 4 N1(3 D8.


18 September 2006

Reciprocal Art Online

9.18 – After a few days off, we present you with some delicious art online. Art is one of our most favoritest things next to computers. Combining the two loves makes us euphoric. The Favorite Website Awards is a great, long-time site highlighting sites that illustrate creativity and cutting-edge design techniques.


The FWA site.


Often times, you can stumble on to excellent artists who are known in industry circles, but haven’t yet broken out into the mainstream light. E-creative.net launches a newly recognized site about once every four days. By slipping down to logos of Supporters, we found illustrator, Jean Sebastien Rossbach image. If he links back, these back and forth links are said to be ‘reciprocal.’

DesignIsKinky pushes Rossbach to the top leading to his profile which in turn leads to his blog based in France in which he leads us to an image he worked on for Jason Felix’s work. Jason’s gallery is a little sparse considering he make a book, but the Links option takes us to a select few sites friendly to J.

ConceptArt.org highlights artists who actually have a large sway within Hollywood. At the time of this article, every single thumbnail we clicked resulted in, “home/concept/public_html/showimage.php on line 22,” which means they’re having some temporary trouble. So back to square one we go…



E-creative.net offers up a random site and our good luck swung us to DinoDream.com where very attractive shapes and colors and sites are presented in some strange language. Total eye candy is found here thankfully. Another Supporter is res72.com where a blog-style layout boasts yet another grand collection of links like Elephante.com where ink illustration lives on in bold strength. And now a word on hacking…

Get the address through polite hacking.



The image above is from one of the sites you can hop to in the network of links. They set it as a background making it nearly impossible to view in its entirety. It’s set as a background to a blank HTML page. When right-clicking, the ‘copy’ option isn’t there because it’s not formally listed as an ‘image’ in HTML with ‘img’ tags. But what is available is the [Hacking Butterflies] Source (View Source). This gives a very short HTML code showing you where on the server the background image is coming from. The ‘../extra’ is an extension of the address you’re already at. So copy/paste the image name and stick it in the web browser address bar AFTER the address that you can read at the moment. Viola! Impossible-to-copy image appears before your very eyes. Excellent (though not perfectly hack-proof) security of images rests with using Flash.

Digging out background images in a pic.

RayFormDesign.com’s WEB gallery submission leads us to what is perhaps the most irritating site we’ve seen in ages. Pixel 101.com Great logo. Use RayFormDesign to get there and click the logo. Pixel 101 opens in a sliver of a window measuring one hundred and one pixels wide. Ha ha. Maximize it; no navigation of any kind. WORK AROUND: press [F11] in cases like this to activate ‘full screen mode.’ You’ll now knock out the top navigation of the site, but it might not even matter. Your BACK button can be replaced with the [backspace] key.

Anyway, get back to work and happy hunting!