The inevitable Upload
We surround ourselves with objects that we like. We fill them with memories and emotions, but whilst the digitalization progresses, our identity shifts more and more into the the virtual world, leaving our beloved clutter, and everything that is connected with it, behind. So if you don't want to loose yourself, prepare for the inevitable upload, the metaverse is coming for you. It's time to convert your life into binary information.
The .glb-archive is a collection of some of my most important belongings saved in the ″GL Transmission Format". It contains 3D information such as node hierarchies, materials and meshes, preparing my grandmothers pillbox or the wonderful duck figurine that I bought during a vacation to come with me, as I transcend into the digital unknown.
**click me, grab me, spin me 'round!
The inevitable Upload
We surround ourselves with objects that we like. We fill them with memories and emotions, but whilst the digitalization progresses, our identity shifts more and more into the the virtual world, leaving our beloved clutter, and everything that is connected with it, behind. So if you don't want to loose yourself, prepare for the inevitable upload, the metaverse is coming for you. It's time to convert your life into binary information.
The .glb-archive is a collection of some of my most important belongings saved in the ″GL Transmission Format". It contains 3D information such as node hierarchies, materials and meshes, preparing my grandmothers pillbox or the wonderful duck figurine that I bought during a vacation to come with me, as I transcend into the digital unknown.
The give in to brainrot videos distill books into no more than 37 seconds of snackable, bite-sized brainrot content.
As attention spans dwindle among younger generations, complex ideas and nuanced concepts are increasingly simplified. This shift towards consuming fragmented, repetitive information fails to cultivate genuine understanding. Yet, in a world where time is money and knowledge is treated as a commodity, the rot feels inevitable.
The give in to brainrot videos distill books into no more than 37 seconds of snackable, bite-sized brainrot content.
As attention spans dwindle among younger generations, complex ideas and nuanced concepts are increasingly simplified. This shift towards consuming fragmented, repetitive information fails to cultivate genuine understanding. Yet, in a world where time is money and knowledge is treated as a commodity, the rot feels inevitable.