thenewbigpicture

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  • FRED TANNEAU via Getty Images

    The best of Engadget's Big Picture in 2019

    by 
    Steve Dent
    Steve Dent
    12.25.2019

    I love doing The Big Picture series for Engadget, even though it can take a lot of hunting to find a striking photo with a tech angle. I believe in the idea that, by creating some emotion, dramatic images help us grasp heavy concepts in a way that words alone can't. Another is that I learn a lot of interesting stuff while researching them. That includes things about art, astronomy, science and even weaving. That information seems to stick in my head as it's indelibly associated with a powerful image. Many of this year's Big Picture images make interesting statements about the impact of technology on humanity. And although some of the images were created by accident or without artistic intention, they're often full of symbolism and irony like any other works of art. I think a great example of that is the first item on my list.

  • Steve Dent/Engadget (3D file courtesy of Cosmo Wenman)

    Nefertiti's bust joins the digital age

    by 
    Steve Dent
    Steve Dent
    11.29.2019

    Can museums can really "own" the digitization of cultural heritage artifacts? The bust of Nefertiti shown above is a 3D rendering I created myself on 3DS Max from a digital file, obtained by artist Cosmo Wenman after three years of persistence. Now, anyone can download it and marvel at this masterpiece, to get a closer look than you ever could at Berlin's Neues Museum, where the bust itself resides.

  • X-ray: NASA/CXC/RIKEN & GSFC/T. Sato et al; Optical: DSS

    A star died violently and left behind this 'fluffy' ball

    by 
    Steve Dent
    Steve Dent
    10.21.2019

    Stars die all the time, but the untimely passing of SN 1572, also known as Tycho's Supernova, is possibly the most famous. That's because it's relatively close to us in the Milky Way's Cassiopeia constellation, so when it exploded in the year 1572, it became the second-brightest object in the night sky for a time. It caught the eye of many astronomers of the day, but was named for Danish astronomer Tycho Brahe, who made the most accurate observations.

  • Christina H. Koch/NASA

    Soyuz 61 leaves a ghostly trail as it tracks toward the ISS

    by 
    Steve Dent
    Steve Dent
    09.27.2019

    Yesterday, NASA's Expedition 61 mission launched from the Baikonur Cosmodrome on a Soyuz MS-15 rocket and docked to the International Space Station (ISS) some six hours later. From the ground, it was a spectacular liftoff as usual, but this time, the best view might have been from the space station itself. With her best friend Jessica Meir onboard, astronaut Christina Koch captured an eerie, magnificent photo of the Soyuz craft as its second stage rockets propelled it toward the ISS.

  • SLAC National Accerlator Lab

    Moving the largest high-performance lens ever built

    by 
    Steve Dent
    Steve Dent
    09.23.2019

    Not all the most interesting telescopes need to live in space. The Large Synoptic Survey Telescope (LSST) will sit on top of a mountain in Chile some 8,800 feet up and snap 3.2-gigapixel (3,200-megapixel) images of the sky every 20 seconds. All told, it will be able to snap digital images of the entire southern sky every few nights. By taking relatively long 15-second exposures, scientists will be able to study the early universe, track dimly-lit asteroids and better understand dark energy.

  • Courtesy of Ani Abakumova

    Algorithms help an artist tease portraits out of thread

    by 
    Steve Dent
    Steve Dent
    09.12.2019

    Our brains are great at forming images out of mishmashes and blotches of color, as a pointillist will tell you. Artist Ani Abakumova has taken that idea and applied it to simple colored threads to create incredible woven art. Creating thread art isn't as simple as painting dots, however, so her husband Andrey Abakumova developed an algorithm that lets her weave the threads to form lifelike representations of artworks like the Mona Lisa and Girl with the Pearl Earring.

  • ©The National Gallery, London

    A hidden da Vinci lurks beneath 'The Virgin of the Rocks'

    by 
    Steve Dent
    Steve Dent
    09.03.2019

    Researchers at the National Gallery of London have used cutting-edge techniques to reveal a hidden drawing beneath Leonardo da Vinci's The Virgin of the Rocks. It shows that the great artist and his assistants, after laying out the original design, elected to take the biblical-themed painting in a completely different direction, to say the least.

  • Alex Hamstra

    Creating electricity from a bog in a bomb crater

    by 
    Steve Dent
    Steve Dent
    08.12.2019

    They might not deliver as much electricity as solar panels and windmills, but Geobacter have an extra talent. The microorganisms can purify water by consuming waste, then excrete electrons we can harvest as energy. To show that in action, Artist Teresa van Dongen has created an installation called Mud Well that illuminates, as it were, their inner workings.

  • Copyright Leon Keer

    Land art reminds you to maybe go offline sometimes

    by 
    Steve Dent
    Steve Dent
    08.07.2019

    Leon Keer, a Dutch pop-surrealist and land artist, has created a simple but monumental piece with a very clear message. Conceived for the Vision Art Festival in the Swiss alps of Crans-Montana, 'offline' anamorphic land art, will make visitors do a double take when they see a WiFi symbol seemingly floating in mid-air at the pristine resort.

  • ©Cristina Vatielli for Ultravioletto

    Facing your AI self at the 'Neural Mirror' art installation

    by 
    Steve Dent
    Steve Dent
    07.29.2019

    Italian design studio Ultravioletto has created a mirror that lets you see yourself the way corporations see you: as a collection of data points. At first, the Neural Mirror installation (located at a former church in the Italian city of Spoleto), seems like an ordinary mirror. But after you've been duly scanned and processed (with the system estimating your age, sex and emotional state) you'll quickly see something else; a ghostly vision of a machine's idea of who you are.

  • NASA/Neil Armstrong

    Neil Armstrong's Buzz Aldrin photo is unparalleled in art

    by 
    Steve Dent
    Steve Dent
    07.20.2019

    Few would deny that Neil Armstrong's shot of fellow astronaut Buzz Aldrin is one of the most famous and compelling photos ever taken. What makes it so iconic? Of course, he had access to a place that only 11 other human beings have been, but there's more to it than that. The photo itself is well composed, full of incredible details and charged with the energy of the occasion. How Armstrong got it is a story of not just luck, but preparation and a great eye.

  • Images courtesy of i-D japan

    One of these models doesn't exist

    by 
    Steve Dent
    Steve Dent
    05.22.2019

    Virtual humans are gradually scaling the uncanny valley, and like artificial intelligence, they're coming for our jobs. A case in point is Imma, a digital Instagram model who has garnered over 50,000 followers thanks to her (its?) trendy, street-style selfies and photos. Imma just entered uncharted territory for 3D rendered humans, appearing in a makeup spread with two real models for Kate cosmetics in Vice's i-D site in Japan.

  • Team Ciel Austral (Jean Claude Canonne, Philippe Bernhard, Didier Chaplain, Nicolas Outters and Laurent Bourgon

    The Large Magellanic Cloud comes alive in a 204 megapixel image

    by 
    Steve Dent
    Steve Dent
    05.14.2019

    The Large Magellanic Cloud is what Austin Powers might call a quasi galaxy, just one percent the Milky Way's size and orbiting it like a hanger-on. At a distance of 163,000 light-years from Earth, you might think it would take a space telescope like Hubble or a huge observatory to do it justice. But the 204-megapixel image above, showing the Magellanic Cloud in incredible, colorful detail, was shot by a small group called Ciel Austral using a telescope in Chile just 160mm (6.3 inches) across.

  • University of Pennsylvania

    1960s aerial spy photos reveal hidden archaeological sites

    by 
    Steve Dent
    Steve Dent
    05.06.2019

    Archaeologists use satellite photos to spot potential archaeological sites, but urban sprawl and other human development has erased many traces of ancient civilizations. To get around that, Harvard's Jason Urs and Emily Hammer from the University of Pennsylvania figured out how to effectively go back in time to when the land was less despoiled. They dug up and archived a trove of U-2 spy photos from the '50s and '60s, eventually finding ancient canals and "desert kite" stone structures built in northern Iraq by the Assyrians up to 8,000 years ago.

  • Image © Andrew Tallon

    The billion point laser cloud that will help rebuild Notre Dame

    by 
    Steve Dent
    Steve Dent
    04.29.2019

    On April 15th, 2019 around 6:40 pm, I was walking around the Jardin du Luxembourg park in Paris with some friends when we saw some yellow colored smoke in the sky. We thought nothing of it, but soon discovered, shocked, that one of the most famous landmarks in the world, the Notre Dame cathedral just north of the park, was engulfed in a terrible blaze.

  • Images from SpaceIL/Beresheet Spacecraft

    Israel's Moon probe snaps a final photo before crashing

    by 
    Steve Dent
    Steve Dent
    04.14.2019

    The Beresheet spacecraft from Israel's SpaceIL was facing long odds to land on the Moon, being the first ever privately launched probe to attempt it. Alas, its engine cut out during the landing attempt, communication was lost, and Beresheet crashed into the surface. Fortunately, just before that happened, the spacecraft turned its camera toward the Moon's horizon and managed to snap a final, sublime photo of its cratered surface.

  • FRED TANNEAU via Getty Images

    Why Garfield phones have littered French beaches for 35 years

    by 
    Steve Dent
    Steve Dent
    03.31.2019

    There's no better symbol of plastic ocean pollution and '80s consumerism gone wild than the Garfield phones of Brittany. The handsets, in the form of the aggressively unfunny cat, have been washing up on French beaches for decades. However, the novelty has long since worn off for residents who have been picking them up since the '80s. Now, a local anti-litter group called Ar Vilantsou has finally found the source: a lost shipping container.

  • NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center

    'Cannonball' pulsar points to the supernova that formed it

    by 
    Steve Dent
    Steve Dent
    03.24.2019

    Astronomers have clocked a spinning star at 2.5 million MPH and grabbed an image that leaves no doubt where it came from. Using NASA's Fermi Telescope and the Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array (VLA), a team of scientists imaged pulsar J0002, originally discovered by citizen science project Einstein@Home. What makes it look so cool is the clear evidence it came from a recent supernova. "Thanks to its narrow dart-like tail and a fortuitous viewing angle, we can trace this pulsar straight back to its birthplace," said NRAO scientist Frank Schinzel.

  • Irene Posch, Ebru Kurbak

    Textiles become circuits in 'The Embroidered Computer'

    by 
    Steve Dent
    Steve Dent
    03.17.2019

    Google and others have developed smart clothing with built-in integrated circuits, but what if the textile itself formed the circuit? That's the idea behind The Embroidered Computer, an interactive installation from artist and researcher Irene Posch and designer/artist Ebru Kurbak , shown at this year's Instanbul Design Biennial. It's a working 8-bit electromechanical computer made from gold, linen, hematite, wood, silver and copper that functions equally as a decorative textile. As Posch notes on her website, the piece explores "the appearance of current digital and electronic technologies surrounding us, as well as our interaction with them." At the same exhibition, the artists also showed off The Yarn Recorder, a device that can record and playback sounds using steel-cored yarn.

  • NASA

    NASA unveils stunning images of merging supersonic shockwaves

    by 
    Steve Dent
    Steve Dent
    03.10.2019

    NASA has developed a new imaging technique that let them capture, for the first time, the interaction of shockwaves from two supersonic jets. They were taken by a new, high-speed camera system developed to help NASA design a supersonic airplane that produces much quieter sonic booms. "We never dreamed that it would be this clear, this beautiful," said NASA physical scientist J.T. Heineck.