SOURCE: http://blog.livedoor.jp/gunbird/archives/8763916.html
Google is always coming up with quirky ways of sprucing up their services, and their latest project is PAC-Maps. This turns any Google Maps view into a playable game of Pac-Man, and to launch it, just find the desired location and activate the game by pressing a button in the bottom left-hand corner of the screen next to the Google Earth button. Or, just select the Pac-Man pin on the map where available. Try it out here. For those who don't have access to Google Maps for whatever reason, continue reading to see what it looks like when played on a smartphone using the app.
Build the Cities by Raven Kwok
McLaren wanted to make a supercar that could be daily driven, and what they came up with is the McLaren 570S. Expected to be priced from $180,000 USD, this sleek rear-wheel drive supercar is powered by a twin-turbocharged 3.8L V8 engine that pumps out 562hp and 443 lb-ft of torque, boosting it from 0-60mph in just 3.2-seconds, with a top speed of 204mph. Despite how it looks, the company claims that there's more luggage space available in the 570S than any of its predecessors. Continue reading for a video and more pictures.
SOURCE: http://blog.livedoor.jp/gunbird/archives/8768287.html
About 5-years-ago, artist photographer Ra di Martino wandered into the Tunisian desert to find the abandoned movie sets from Star Wars. This desert location was used to film Lars Homestead on Luke Skywalker's home planet of Tatooine, in 1976. She says: "This is a series of photographs taken in the abandoned movie sets of the film saga Star Wars, filmed through the years in different locations in the south of Tunisia. Unexpectedly those sets have been left on location, probably because in the middle of nowhere and because no-one from the local authorities complained and therefore after years some of it have now become ruins, almost as some sort strange archaeological sites. The particular hot and dry climate has helped maintain intact many parts of the sets, or buried under the sand just sections of it. The sets visited are in four different locations." Continue reading for more.
Russia-born illustrator and street goth fashionista Mago Dovjenko flew with the film production team BWGTBLD over to New York and have a bespoke piece of his work thrown up on a Williamsburg wall. Watch as the creative waxes lyrical on his venture, before his larger-than-life mural is thrown up with the assistance of a local crew of street artists.
reflexió by Ramon Carreté