Incredible photos.
seen from China
seen from United States

seen from Canada
seen from Brazil
seen from Germany

seen from Spain
seen from Vietnam
seen from United States

seen from Germany
seen from China
seen from Germany
seen from Germany
seen from China
seen from Tunisia
seen from Iraq
seen from Russia
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from India
seen from South Korea
Incredible photos.
Amazing.
Michael McWhertor for Polygon:
Prior to Rohrer's talk, a few hundred envelopes were placed on the seats in the room. Printed on the envelope: "Please do not open yet." After Rohrer described his game, he asked attendees to open their envelopes. Inside each one is a piece of paper with 900 sets of GPS coordinates. In total, Rohrer gave the audience more than 1 million unique GPS coordinates. He estimates that if one person visits a GPS location each day with a metal detector, the game will be unearthed sometime within the next million days — a little over 2,700 years.
A really creative take on the time capsule concept.
Something to start your day with.
Continuing my trend of posting random things I've discovered over the last few months, The Infinite Jukebox made the rounds a while ago, and it's probably one of the coolest projects I've seen recently.
Don't click unless you're prepared to spend an hour or two of your life in an avalanche of awesome.
A company that makes only well-designed awesome temporary tattoos? Okay, I may have to order some of these.
It looks impossible, and I was there when Zelda Universe recreated Ocarina of Time in Minecraft.
A Dropplr of sorts for frontend web design and development. Hooks up to your GitHub account, too, so you can immediately fork and play with peoples' snippets.