- November 16, 2010 • 5:00 am PST
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Jon Rafman's 9 Eyes Tumblr blog collects the strangest found images on Google Street View.
Some other notable entries:


Via Laughing Squid

Jon Rafman's 9 Eyes Tumblr blog collects the strangest found images on Google Street View.
Some other notable entries:


Via Laughing Squid


Have an armchair Ice Road Trucker adventure, and then plan your own.
According to MAKE, Google just filed a patent to transform billboards that appear in Street View into new advertisements. This sort of...
It's day 10 of the protests on Wall Street. Here are some images from the streets.

This colorful crocheted sweater adorning a Wall Street bull statue was installed by the street artist Olek last week in New York City.

Ochoresotto captures images of Sandra Janser and Elisabeth Koller's installation that places brilliant red turf paint on an Austrian street.
A team at Columbia University is making cameras that can take billion-pixel photos, and the results look amazing.
Today is World Toilet Day, which aims to call attention to the crisis of water sanitation around the wold.
So, this image has been making its way around the old internet today. What looks to be a cash transaction was captured by those accidentally...
Data visualization guru Ben Fry has created a unique map of the United States by displaying all of the nation's 26 million roads-and nothing else....

The Nigerian-born R&B artist Riz takes 5 minutes every day to add a new component to this mosaic about significant moments from the year.
Google's amazing new Street View feature caused some hubbub, because people were upset that things you could see from the street were available on...

Jenny Odell uses the technology of Google Satellite View and Google Street View to make art.

Throughout Italian cities, a homegrown youth movement is afoot. Here are some scenes from their urban utopia.

New images shot from inside the crowd of protesters on the Brooklyn Bridge over the weekend

"Arrrgmented Reality" is David Schwen's submission to a recent Threadless contest, and it's incredible.

House of Contamination turns all varieties of trash into a walkable indoor city.
Roman Ondák's "Measuring the Universe" is constantly changing installation that invites visitors to plot their heights directly onto museum walls.

Capture, by artist Christian Kerrigan: a frozen ecology of 1,000 seeds and flowers from Kingley Vale, England's last remaining ancient yew forest.

The artist Michael Neff uses chalk to trace the shadows cast by the artificially illuminated city, and photographs the fleeting results.

Wilson A. Bentley was the first person to photograph a single snowflake and the image is stunning—though it may be atypical.