The internet is in the ocean
The internet is in the cloud? No! It's in the ocean. The internet is known to pulse through fiber optic cables and cell phone towers, but 99% of high-speed international information is transferred under the sea.
The internet is in the cloud? No! It's in the ocean. The internet is known to pulse through fiber optic cables and cell phone towers, but 99% of high-speed international information is transferred under the sea.
How does particulate matter is tasting? The Center for genomic gastronomy is an artist-led think tank that examines the biotechnologies and biodiversity of human food systems. The Smog Tasting project makes the complex problem of air pollution more seizable and sensory by uses egg foams to harvest air pollution.
Craig Ward, a New York based typographer and designer, rode the trains of each of New York City's twenty-two subway lines, collecting bacterial samples from hand rails, seats and other high traffic surfaces to create an unorthodox portrait of the city's residents at the smallest of scales.
View Subvisual Subway: The Art of New York City’s Bacterial World →
Chaotic Flow is a data visualization installation for the 4S / EASST joint conferences in Copenhagen October 2012 by Illutron.
I’m Google is an ongoing tumblr blog by Dina Kelberman in which batches of images and videos that she finds on internet are compiled into a long 'stream-of-consciousness'.
20Hz is a work by Ruth Jarman and Joe Gerhardt. 20Hz observes a geo-magnetic storm occurring in the Earth's upper atmosphere.
Mimeisthei is an absolutely stunning interactive installation created by James Theophane. The installation takes snippets of conversations spoken live from the theater and generates an interactive visualization.
'Life needs internet' by Jeroen van Loon is an amazing project about documenting the digital culture through handwritten letters. In eight steps this video-installation shows the complete evolution of our global digitalization and it's impact on different cultures.
By highlighting the geometric and mechanical structure of flowers, computer graphics illustrator Macoto Murayama produced these beautiful renderings.
Luke Jerram's sculpture was made to contemplate the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami in Japan.