The Geoglyphs of Nasca
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作成日時 : 2008/09/10 22:57
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このイスラエルでGPSを使って滑るスケータのビデオを観て、TV番組のタモリ倶楽部で同じようなシーンが放送されたのを思い出しました。それは自転車走行した軌跡で、タモリの顔を地図上にナスカの地上絵のように一筆書きすると云う遊びです。その時は面白いと思ったのに・・・すっかり忘れていました。ただ東京の街をインラインで滑るよりも、誰の書いた絵が一番かゲーム感覚で競う方が楽しめると思いませんか。
そのタモリクラブの番組内容はコチラを見てください。
The most creative/clever delivery of the new year!! Four friends on rollerblades follow a carefully planned route around Tel Aviv and record their tracks with a GPS device. The result is a stunning greeting across the entire city - Shana Tova!! Rosh Hashanah is observed as a day of rest (Leviticus 23:24) and the activities prohibited on Shabbat are also prohibited on all Jewish holidays, including Rosh Hashanah. Rosh Hashanah is characterized by the blowing of the shofar, a trumpet made from a ram's horn, intended to awaken the listener from his or her "slumber" and alert them to the coming judgment. There are a number of additions to the regular Jewish service, most notably an extended repetition of the Amidah prayer for both Shacharit and Mussaf. The traditional Hebrew greeting on Rosh Hashanah is "shana tova", (pronounced [Shana tova]) for "a good year," or "shana tova umetukah" for "a good and sweet year." Because Jews are being judged by God for the coming year, a longer greeting translates as "may you be written and sealed for a good year" (ketiva ve-chatima tovah). During the afternoon of the first day the practice of tashlikh is observed, in which prayers are recited near natural flowing water, and one's sins are symbolically cast into the water. Many also have the custom to throw bread or pebbles into the water, to symbolize the "casting off" of sins.
Ronen Azachi Master in Artificial Intelligence: Shana Tova 2008
GPS Drawing "Big Duck" in Tokyo bs@web: Big Duck GPS Drawing: http://www.gpsdrawing.com/
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