Hong Kong Waters, a photo/video/sound project by German media artist Andreas Müller-Pohle, brings two dimensions of Hong Kong together: its vertical urbanity and its horizontal alignment to the water. It is the first comprehensive portrait of Hong Kong seen from the perspective of the water, with never-before captured views of the many water sites this Asian mega-metropolis has to offer.



















Links: riverproject.net // muellerpohle.net
Check out Billabong’s new surf flick Blow Up. Also available for digital
download at billabong.com/blowup/
Directed by – Victor Pakpour
Produced by – Blake Pettit
Imagine a city of the future where skateboards are used as the primary form of transportation and recreation — in and out of your home. A utopia city for skateboarders would mean that a skateable path, like a ribbon connecting everything together, links each building in an unending ability to keep in motion on your board. The PAS House takes this concept and brings it to life through an architectural project mixing a modern single family home with a skateboard ramp structure – all from an environmentally-driven perspective.
Epic Exquisite Corpse is a project by Xavier Barrade developed with Wake Up web solutions and supported by Icone Paris. It Features 2693 drawings on 1000000 spaces available.



Searching for waves up the coast from their home in Santa Cruz, Darshan Gooch and his friend Marty stumbled upon a few waves and whales. In this episode of Sea Movies, watch as Darshan gets a few waves and a good look at two baby gray whales rolling and diving while a larger adult makes it’s presence known.
Growing up in La Jolla, Jeff Divine began taking pictures of fellow surfers in his hometown during the 1960s and got to know the original alternative sport before the mainstream media blew it into the commercial kingdom it has now come to be.
Today, Divine is the photo editor at the Surfer’s Journal and continues to contributes to surfer.























Link: http://www.jeffdivinesurf.com
Via: http://www.nowness.com/
Designed by Chris Alloy, an Australian man, the bike is capable of traveling at speeds of up to 173mph at 10,000 feet.
It could potentially travel even higher, but then users would have to carry oxygen
Since it’s classified as an ultralight, you won’t technically need a pilot’s license, although a parachute will likely be a good idea. And for better or worse, the hoverbike is shaping up to be affordable to the point where people who really shouldn’t be riding around on one of these will probably be able to: a production run of 100 a year will peg them at $40,000 each, and if 1,000 are ordered, that cost could drop to something comparable to a performance motorcycle.




Link: http://www.hover-bike.com
Via: dvice.com
Ever thought how odd your online life is?
One word for these, Outstanding!








Link: http://www.aryz.es
Via: http://twitter.com/#!/mathiole & http://twitter.com/#!/marcos333