Showing posts with label Tokyo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tokyo. Show all posts

Gundam legs

Gundam legs --

Piece by piece, an 18-meter tall, 35-ton full-scale Gundam statue is being assembled in Odaiba, Tokyo to commemorate 30 years of Mobile Suit Gundam. When finished in mid-July, the enormous figure will entertain onlookers by moving its head and shooting light and mist from 50 points on its body. Until then, we have these photos of its magnificent legs and assorted parts.

Gundam legs -- Gundam legs --

Gundam legs --

Gundam legs --

Tokyo stereographic projections

Photographer heiwa4126’s “Stereographics” photoset on Flickr is an eye-bending collection of “little planet” panoramas and ultra-wide fisheye images shot mostly in Tokyo.

Ultra-wide fisheye image of Tokyo station --
Tokyo Station

Wee planet stereographic projection of Tokyo --
Ueno Station

Microplanet stereographic projection of Tokyo --
Shin-Arakawa Bridge

Little planet stereographic projection of Tokyo --
Higashi-Ayase Park

Mini-planet stereographic projection of Tokyo --
Shibaura

Panoramic stereographic projection of Tokyo --
Adachi Ward

Stereographic panorama of Tokyo --
Katsushika Ward

Stereographically projected panorama of Tokyo --
Ueno Station

3D panorama of Tokyo --
Tokyo Dome City

Spherical panorama of Tokyo --
Shiodome Sio-site

Most Visited Places in The World

Here’s the list of Most Visited Places in The World according to Forbes Travel as of the year based on annual visitors.

10. Disneyland Paris in Marne La Vallee, France - 10.6 million visitors per year.

Disneyland Paris

9. Notre Dame de Paris in Paris, France - 12 million visitors per year

Notre Dame de Paris

8. Tokyo Disneyland/DisneySea in Tokyo, Japan - 12.9 million visitor per year

Tokyo Disneyland

7. Fisherman’s Wharf/Golden Gate National Recreation Area in San Francisco, USA - 13 million visitors per year

Fisherman’s Wharf

6. Niagara Falls in Ontario, Canada and New York USA - 14 million visitors per year

Niagara Falls

5. Disneyland Park in Anaheim California, USA - 14.7 million visitors per year

Disneyland Park

4. Trafalgar Square in London, England - 15 million visitors per year

Trafalgar Square

3. Disney World’s Magic Kingdom in Florida California, USA - 16.6 million visitors per year

Disney World’s Magic Kingdom

2. National Mall & Memorial Parks in Washington Monument, Lincoln and Jefferson Memorials - Washington DC,USA with 25 million visitors per year

National Mall & Memorial Parks

1. Time Square in New York, USA - 35 million visitor per year

Time Square in New York, USA

Terminator robots in Tokyo

In conjunction with the upcoming release of Terminator Salvation (T4), an exhibit featuring the cyborgs from the Terminator series is now on display at Miraikan (National Museum of Emerging Science and Innovation) in Tokyo.

T-600 endoskeleton from Terminator 4, exhibited at Miraikan --
T-600 endoskeleton from Terminator Salvation

Entitled “Terminator Exhibition - Battle or Coexistence? Robots and Our Future,” the exhibit purportedly aims to inspire visitors to think about the relationship between humans and machines. Mostly, though, it offers a unique glimpse at the models and costumes used in the filming of the movies, along with details about the makeup and special effects.

T-800 exhibited at Miraikan, Tokyo --
T-800 endoskeleton

In the first Terminator movie, which takes place in Los Angeles in 1984, a T-800 cyborg assassin is sent back in time from the year 2029 by Skynet, an artificially intelligent military computer system that rules the world under an army of cyborgs. Its mission is to erase the existence of John Connor, who in the future becomes the leader of the human resistance forces against the machines. To alter the course of history in Skynet’s favor, the T-800 must terminate Sarah Connor before she gives birth to her son John.

Terminator exhibited at Miraikan, Tokyo --
T-800 endoskeleton

The T-800 cyborg — played by Arnold Schwarzenegger in the first three Terminator movies — consists of a metal endoskeleton under a layer of living human tissue. The robot has excellent learning capabilities, enabling it to understand and adopt human behavior and phrases. It can also mimic voices once it hears them. A slightly improved version of the T-800 — the T-850 — appears in Terminator 2 and Terminator 3.

T-800 on display at Miraikan, Tokyo --
T-800: Hasta la vista, baby

In Terminator 2, Skynet sends the latest Terminator model — the T-1000 — to Los Angeles in 1994 to eliminate the 10-year-old John Connor. At the same time, the resistance forces send a hacked T-800 from the future to protect John. The T-1000, which is much more advanced than the T-800, has no endoskeleton and consists of a shape-shifting liquid metal. The T-1000 is not displayed in this exhibit.

T-800 exhibited at Miraikan, Tokyo -- T-X Terminator at Miraikan, Tokyo --

T-800 // T-X

In Terminator 3, the T-800 (T-850) is again sent from the future to protect John Connor. This time it does battle with the T-X, a super-powerful Terminator that combines the exoskeleton of the T-800 with the shape-shifting liquid metal of the T-1000.

Terminatrix at Miraikan, Tokyo --
T-X (a.k.a. Terminatrix)

The T-X, also called “Terminatrix,” takes the shape of a beautiful woman and incorporates a variety of weapons into its endoskeleton. In addition to conducting DNA analysis by tasting blood, the shape-shifting assassin can remotely control other machines and Terminators.

Cameron Phillips (TOK715) at Miraikan, Tokyo --
Cameron Phillips (TOK715)

Other items on display include a reproduction of Cameron Philips (TOK715), a reprogrammed Terminator from the “Sarah Conner Chronicles” TV series.

The exhibit also includes a few props and movie trailers from the forthcoming film.

Terminator exhibited at Miraikan, Tokyo --
T-600 endoskeleton

Set in the year 2018, Terminator Salvation will prominently feature the T-600, an early Terminator prototype. Unlike the T-800 portrayed by Schwarzenegger in the previous films, the more primitive T-600 features an endoskeleton covered in synthetic skin instead of living human tissue. At 8 feet tall, it is also much bulkier.

Terminator exhibited at Miraikan, Tokyo --
Moto-Terminator

Also on display is the Moto-Terminator, a motorcycle-based death machine, as well as the Hydrobot (not pictured here), a menacing eel-like underwater robot.

The final section of the exhibit introduces a variety of Japanese robot technology, mostly in the form of text-heavy exhibits (Japanese only). However, an Actroid — smartly dressed in a skin-tight black jumpsuit — is on hand to liven things up.

Actroid exhibited at Miraikan, Tokyo --
Actroid

Actroid exhibited at Miraikan, Tokyo --
Actroid

The exhibit runs until June 28, 2009.

 
Add to Technorati Favorites