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On Monday, September 14, 2015, Ahmed Mohamed (a 14-year old Muslim high school freshman in Irving, Texas) constructed a digital clock at home and brought it to school to show his teacher, only to then be arrested on suspicion that he had built a bomb. A media firestorm erupted, decrying the arrest as a two-fronted attack on Muslims and on engineering mindsets. The internet lit up with support for
Hackers turned MIT's Green Building into a giant, playable, and multi-color Tetris game. A console allowed players to move, rotate, and drop blocks. The Green Building (Building 54) is home to the MIT Earth and Planetary Sciences department. MIT hackers have long considered "Tetris on the Green Building" to be the Holy Grail of hacks, as the side of the building is a wonderful grid for the game. T
In early January 2011, hackers placed mockups of Wikipedia's cleanup tags around the institute for Wikipedia's 10th anniversary. In addition to these cleaup tags, there was a large 3D wikipedia logo hanging in the center of lobby 7. The cleanup tags addressed everything from the infinite corridor being too long, to excessive jargon around the institute, to duplicated buildings. One sign on the Dea
Hackers adorned the Great Dome with a Triforce from The Legend of Zelda video game series. The hack coincided with the launch of the Nintendo Wii gaming console that was released at the same time as The Legend of Zelda: Twilight Princess game. The Triforce consisted of three yellow triangles and was removed sometime during the day on Saturday.
This is the comprehensive listing of all of the hacks in the IHTFP Hack Gallery, presented in reverse chronological order. 2023 MIT is Duke Now 2022 Cramming for 19.101 Finals Harvard Duck Heist Wakanda Forever! Eye of Sauron on top of Small Dome Openness Hack KEEP MIT OPEN, KEEP MIT WEIRD Wordle is IHTFP Twosday Hack 2021 Barber 70 Scavenger Hunt MIT Orkards 2019 Captain America Shield on the Gre
Interesting Hacks To Fascinate People: The MIT Gallery of Hacks The IHTFP Gallery is dedicated to documenting the history of hacking at MIT. The word hack at MIT usually refers to a clever, benign, and "ethical" prank or practical joke, which is both challenging for the perpetrators and amusing to the MIT community (and sometimes even the rest of the world!). Note that this has nothing to do with
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