Strangers on the internet giving you a hug through your screen. Sounds weird, kind of is weird, but after a rough day it hits different. The internet can be nice sometimes.
An interactive music visualizer built as a Chrome experiment for Ellie Goulding. Move your cursor to paint with light while the song plays. One of those rare band promo sites that transcends its purpose.
Google made a bunch of tiny music experiments and put them on the internet for free. Song Maker, Rhythm, Spectrogram, Kandinsky, Harmonics. Each one teaches you something about sound by letting you play with it.
Drop grains of colored sand to create layered landscapes. Pick colors, pour them out, watch them pile up. Oddly therapeutic. Oddly beautiful. You will lose 30 minutes here.
The internet in its purest form: rain sounds. No signup, no features, no agenda. Just rain on a window. Open it in a background tab and let the world dissolve.
A virtual Zen garden for your second monitor. Rake sand, place rocks, watch ripples. No goals, no score, no notifications. Just sand and silence and the occasional bird sound.
A new clock design every single day. Each one is a small work of art, ticking away in a unique visual style. Bookmark it and check back tomorrow. And the next day. And the next.
The single most important question on the internet, answered definitively. A one-page website that tells you whether or not there is currently a pope. Essential information.
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Create beautiful interactive subway maps, then ride them. Draw routes, place stations, pick colors, and watch a tiny train cruise your creation. The most satisfying transit experience you will ever have.
An interactive N-body gravity simulator inspired by the Three-Body Problem. Launch planets, watch them orbit, collide, and fling each other into the void. Mesmerizing chaos physics in 3D.
A million bubble countdown to the Popcalypse. Pop virtual bubble wrap with the entire internet. Watch the global pop counter tick down. The most important collaborative effort of our time.
A muscular-armed TV that predicts the future using Simpsons clips. Ask it a question, get an eerily accurate answer from The Simpsons. It has arms. Nobody knows why.