According to the security guard, the panel produces different amounts of light depending on the light levels in Tonga at this point in time. There is a sensor there that emails its current reading to the computer under the screen that then controls the screens output. I think we were supposed to go "Wow! Tomorrows light today!"

     

The mountain was there to remind us that three dimensional computer images are all optical illusions.

This buck is in a digital forest that seems endless. You guide him around by clicking with the mouse sitting on a pillar below and in front of the display that isn't shown here. I can't remember another time I shot a buck with a human face in a museum. I'm sure somebody had to invest hundreds of hours slaving over a hot computer to get the software to the point where I could just play with it.





  

It somehow makes sense they would force you to use a typewriter to enter your comments.  I haven't used one in such a long time I've forgotten the previous occasion. There were speakers above the typewriters that churned out weird sounds to go with the clacking of the keystrokes. It did seem they were keystroke activated on some level. It comes out a lot better for me when I can edit before I publish.