100,000 stars.
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- Akagiyama
http://workshop.chromeexperiment…
I have Firefox and it works, so don't know about the whole 'Chrome' thing.
p.s. I nerdgasmed.
- mekk0
Very cool, but makes me think why we hate flash - it could have been built ten years ago with much less brainfuck!
- you sure about that?detritus
- huh?HAYZ1LLLA
- nobody here hates Flashmonospaced
- we're lovers heredoesnotexist
- "could have" but wasn't this si based off of a data chart > WebGL >CSS3D. this will still work as intended in 10 years,plash
- 'we' as 'the internet'mekk
- benfal990
awesome!
- georgesIII0
How can something be both ridiculous and awesome?
- That's what she saidpumpaction
- its all about working the sidesteh
- OSFA0
- Maaku0
Thanks for sharing
- omg0
why is our sun the center of the universe?
- because it rotates around earth m8georgesIII
- its not. look closelybenfal99
- it's a by product of measuring. the fact of the matter is there is no center. when we image the universe we're always at the beginning of the data point.plash
- beginning of the data point.plash
- ..because there's nowhere else to measure from..mikotondria3
- doesnotexist0
needs to do a better job at focusing those optics
- plash0
"the whole 'Chrome' thing"
this was created *for* chrome and it's an approximation of 119,617 stars. programmed by some space enthusiasts over at Google. There are more "chrome experiments" at the link provided here and in op: chromeexperiments.com
- vivid0
nice :]
- moldero0
that was dope, thanks aka
- cruddlebub0
quite awesome
- CygnusZero40
I love that I can click on every random star and rotate them, but not our own planets? WTH
- _niko0
there was a link on here once that showed the same thing but on a molecular level, atoms, electrons quarks etc, anyone remember the link?
- dMullins0
If you think that's awesome, you need to see the Chrome experiment for World Wide Maze: http://chrome.com/maze/
- _niko0
this is the one mind=blown.
- utopian0
Focusing optics...