The Mother of All Video Game Museums

Space Invaders video game. Photo: Wikipedia
Berlin is now host to the world’s largest game museum.
From Fast Company:
The Computerspielemuseum (Computer Game Museum), located on Karl-Marx-Allee, just unveiled a new permanent exhibition, Computer Games: Evolution of a Medium. For video game fans, the exhibition will be a pixelated dream come true: Over 300 video and computer systems and stand-alone games dating from 1951 until the present obtained from around the world, many of which are playable.Alongside epochal games like Pong, Super Mario Brothers and World of Warcraft, the Computerspielemuseum’s exhibition includes some extremely interesting rarities. Among the products on display are the Nimrod—an incredibly rare game-playing computer from 1951, the first ever arcade game, 1971’s ComputerSpace which guests can play), Cold War-era strategy game Balance of Power and numerous rare video games from the former Eastern Bloc.
From Urlesque:
Brazilian ad agency Moma designed some fake posters advertising Facebook, YouTube and Skype as part of an ad campaign for Maximidia Seminars called “Everything Ages Fast.”
Polaroid Memories
Photo: RRRDIAZ
Polaroid is dead, long live Polanoid. This site aims to build nothing less than the largest collection of Polaroid photos in the world.
Letterpress Cards
Nothing can boost an employee’s morale more than a card that says “Great job on that thing you did. Really super.” Sycamore Strees Press offers a range of gently provocative cards, alongside more classical ones, all individually crafted on a vintage letterpress.