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This is an indoor, forensic image of an exhibition display wall located within the ArtScience Museum at Marina Bay Sands, Singapore, Singapore. The upper section of the wall features a light-colored horizontal beam with raised dark grey lettering that partially spells "BECOMING". Below this, a large, light grey wall serves as the backdrop for a series of multi-panel, comic-style graphic illustrations.

The display is organized into thematic sections, each attributed to a historical figure:
1.  **"as brought alive by Tim Berners-Lee"**: This section illustrates the conceptualization of the World Wide Web. One panel depicts a man looking stressed amidst speech bubbles indicating a cumbersome process of sharing information via email. The subsequent panel shows the same man, now enthusiastic, pointing a device towards a "WWW" globe connected to multiple computers, with text indicating the use of a URL and HTTP, representing the solution.
2.  **"as brought alive by Arthur Fry and Spencer Silver"**: This section details the invention of the Post-it Note. One panel features two male figures, labeled "S" and "A", conversing; one states "NOBODY NEEDS NON-STICKY GLUE" while the other poses "WHAT IF...". The next panel displays a blue background with musical notes on a staff, overlaid with a yellow sticky note marked "LOUDER". Below are bullet points checked with ticks: "NO EXTRA CLIPS", "NO TEARS", "NO RESIDUE", and "RESTICKABLE", alongside illustrations of paper clips, a tape dispenser, and a thumbtack, highlighting the product's attributes.
3.  **"as brought alive by Ada Lovelace"**: This section focuses on early computing concepts. One panel shows two female figures observing a complex machine with numbers, accompanied by a text block describing the potential of combining symbols into sequences for machines, leading to new realms of language, knowledge, and innovation. The adjacent panel depicts the two women engaged in discussion, surrounded by musical notes, with speech bubbles stating "OK, AND...?" and "WE CAN USE THE MATH MACHINE FOR SO MUCH MORE!".

The illustrations are primarily in dark blue/grey lines on a light grey background, with occasional yellow/orange accents. The scene is illuminated by an overhead light source, causing a prominent diagonal glare across the upper right portion of the image.
FM-uHS2K2

Jul 13, 2025

Singapore, Singapore

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This is an indoor, forensic image of an exhibition display wall located within the ArtScience Museum at Marina Bay Sands, Singapore, Singapore. The upper section of the wall features a light-colored horizontal beam with raised dark grey lettering that partially spells "BECOMING". Below this, a large, light grey wall serves as the backdrop for a series of multi-panel, comic-style graphic illustrations. The display is organized into thematic sections, each attributed to a historical figure: 1. **"as brought alive by Tim Berners-Lee"**: This section illustrates the conceptualization of the World Wide Web. One panel depicts a man looking stressed amidst speech bubbles indicating a cumbersome process of sharing information via email. The subsequent panel shows the same man, now enthusiastic, pointing a device towards a "WWW" globe connected to multiple computers, with text indicating the use of a URL and HTTP, representing the solution. 2. **"as brought alive by Arthur Fry and Spencer Silver"**: This section details the invention of the Post-it Note. One panel features two male figures, labeled "S" and "A", conversing; one states "NOBODY NEEDS NON-STICKY GLUE" while the other poses "WHAT IF...". The next panel displays a blue background with musical notes on a staff, overlaid with a yellow sticky note marked "LOUDER". Below are bullet points checked with ticks: "NO EXTRA CLIPS", "NO TEARS", "NO RESIDUE", and "RESTICKABLE", alongside illustrations of paper clips, a tape dispenser, and a thumbtack, highlighting the product's attributes. 3. **"as brought alive by Ada Lovelace"**: This section focuses on early computing concepts. One panel shows two female figures observing a complex machine with numbers, accompanied by a text block describing the potential of combining symbols into sequences for machines, leading to new realms of language, knowledge, and innovation. The adjacent panel depicts the two women engaged in discussion, surrounded by musical notes, with speech bubbles stating "OK, AND...?" and "WE CAN USE THE MATH MACHINE FOR SO MUCH MORE!". The illustrations are primarily in dark blue/grey lines on a light grey background, with occasional yellow/orange accents. The scene is illuminated by an overhead light source, causing a prominent diagonal glare across the upper right portion of the image.

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FM-uHS2K2

Jul 13, 2025

Singapore, Singapore

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