You love to see it.
"As someone who worked in software during the crypto boom, and was on the receiving end of developers telling others it was foolish not to jump on the crypto bandwagon and work for a blockchain company, I just hope these folks didn’t burn too many bridges on their way out."
-Molly White
Mel Lindstrom, from American Photography Showcase 12 (1989)
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*wakes you up because it needs to go outside and pee*
Sega Dreamcast (Divers 2000)
1994
Source: Youtube/Rad Retro
BANDAI: Limited Edition ‘Final Fantasy’ WonderSwan Color (2000) Box Art: Yoshitaka Amano
David Honor, from Chicago Talent Sourcebook (1985)
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Framed Disassembled Nintendo Handhelds made by FUNBOXDesign
Computer Store, Tuscaloosa (1991)
Source: Youtube/Theleeoverstreet
Let's get back to Black Mesa!!!
L E T S A L L L O V E L A I N
1830’s Virtual Reality
This is a tunnel book from the eighteenth century. It’s called “Les Tuileries” and it shows a magnificent spectacle of people in the most emblematic places of Paris.
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Source: youtube/C28 Music
Pirate streaming apps are leading the entertainment category in Brazil's Google Play Store. These unauthorized streaming apps draw a massive audience and beat official streaming platforms such as Netflix, Disney, and HBO in download rankings. While piracy is a worldwide phenomenon, Brazil certainly stands out.
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This is how the James Web telescope works
hidden messages in electronic boards
Art Staff Inc, from Adweek Portfolio (1988)
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Student June Bronfenbrenner at an early Xerox machine photocopying a book, Milton S. Eisenhower Library, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland, 1976.
Intruder
Benedetto Garacci, from Adweek Portfolio (1988)
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The year was 1927 so television antennae were not in existance yet. I wouldn't have any idea how many people had antennae on their houses, and relied exclusively on whatever aerial came built into the radio or stuck out 1-3 feet from it. Apparently some enterprising folks started marketing an underground antenna... but do AM radio waves penetrate the earth? Wikipedia says yes:
Mediumwave radio transmissions (frequencies between 300 kHz and 3000 kHz), including AM broadcast band, travel both as groundwaves and, for longer distances at night, as skywaves. Ground losses become lower at lower frequencies, greatly increasing the coverage of AM stations using the lower end of the band. ... AM radio stations rely on ground wave propagation to cover their listening areas, which are typically several hundred miles radius.
You'd think this would have caught on more?
Loba//Arms Dealer
BloodHound//Plague Doctor
Crypto//The Hired Gun