A dystopian short by Robert Findlay featuring a hungry man in a world where people live underground and are serviced by smiley-faced, urinal-shaped, floating robots.
Sure it’s ahead of us all.
A dystopian short by Robert Findlay featuring a hungry man in a world where people live underground and are serviced by smiley-faced, urinal-shaped, floating robots.
Sure it’s ahead of us all.
Technology at work at Abu Dhabi Airport #Covid_19 pic.twitter.com/ikncsXHdPm
— Abu Dhabi City Guide from Cyber Gear (@AbuDhabiGuide) July 13, 2020
Technology that helps identify passengers with the ‘rona.
At Abu Dhabi International Airport in the human rights-friendly capital of the United Arab Emirates,
What could go wrong?
Thanks Jack Jones
This afternoon
Via The UK Sun:
Broadcasters have now received private assurances from Government that pubs will be allowed to show the matches, but it must be kept quiet.
A Government insider said: “Pubs and bars can show live sport but shouting and/or chanting is not permitted for the same reason that live music isn’t.
Um.
Sssh.
Sorry.
Sssh.
Name that match (above), anyone?
Quietly please.
Earlier: A Limerick A Day
A stylish take on the dystopia genre by French-Japanese illustrator and artist Kajika Aki Ferrazzini with a nod to a Japanese cultural tradition called mono no aware wherein a beautiful sadness is tempered with the impermanence of all things.
The dreamlike sci-fi vistas of Russian illustrator Alex Andreev.