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Posts by Tim Yates

Hackoustic Presents: 27th May 2017

An evening of performances, talks, demonstrations, installations and mingling with some of London’s top sound artists, builders, hackers and educators.This time we’ve got acoustic circuit bending, Memory Boxes to help people with dementia, levitation and manipulation of objects with sound, didgeridoos made out of toilet rolls and a completely new experimental system for mixing audio. You’ll also have the chance to make your very own instrument for yourself! This is the third in the series, and the last two have been absolutely fantastic. Don’t miss this one – you won’t be disappointed!

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Hackoustic Presents: January 2017

What a fantastic night! We had an amazing evening of performances, talks, demonstrations, installations and mingling with some of London’s top Sound artists, builders, hackers and educators. A sell-out event with a wonderful, positive and enthusiastic crowd. Thanks to everyone who came down and made it so much fun!

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12th June: Hacking Session

Hacking Session

This is our regular monthly hacking session on the second Sunday of every month.

These sessions are an opportunity for you guys to bring your own projects along to the Hackspace and get some work done on them. There’ll be other hackers working on their own projects and everyone’s always keen to help each other out, trouble-shoot problems and give a bit of feedback.

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Jack Jelfs: April 2016

We had a great workshop session this month with Jack Jelfs demonstrating and talking about his sound-art installation Stop / Start which was recently shown at The Conservatoire in Blackheath. The installation is “an ensemble of sculptural units which generate sound […] to collectively perform a musical composition on an endless, never exactly repeating, loop.”

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10th April: Hacking Session

Hacking Session

This is our regular monthly hacking session on the second Sunday of every month.

These sessions are an opportunity for you guys to bring your own projects along to the Hackspace and get some work done on them. There’ll be other hackers working on their own projects and everyone’s always keen to help each other out, trouble-shoot problems and give a bit of feedback.

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