If you like the idea of Tetris but get stressed about the blocks (called "tetrominoes") falling faster and faster, this variant might be for you. It has no timer, no score, and no gravity. Just move the next tetromino when you're ready.
You are what you browse, I suppose. Belgian artist Drees Depoorter built a service that matches users based on their browser history. It's one of the "I cannot believe nobody has done this" ideas. Genius.
I really have no idea why a beverage company decided to do this, but Tractor Beam is an intriguing quarterly sci-fi online magazine dedicated to farming, food, and earth science.
The title explain pretty much everything. You'll get to visit random parks around the world (217 and counting), one-minute at a time. A pure, wholesome case of crowdsourcing. Just what it should be.
This reminds me of the good old days of the Internet. A brilliant collage of film clips to recreate Eminem's best song of his career from 2002 (I felt very old writing that).
The use of AI on dating platforms is not a new phenomenon, but the fact that people are increasingly outsourcing the intimate and emotional communication to AI is pretty scary.
The Coolest People Online Are Barely Posting at All
A bit of a self-own since this is a weekly post. That said, I quite like how more and more people are talking about boundary-setting and making conscious decisions about their online life.
Ok Go has consistently created truly unique and technologically complex music videos, and the latest one is no exception. This time, it features 29 robotic arms and 60 mirrors moving in precise synchronization, all shot in a single take.
Marta Saraiva (@annehail) • Instagram photos and videos
The Lisbon-based illustrator/designer sharply critiques our social norms and habits by combining everyday subjects and sarcastic one-liners. My kind of art.