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The truth is out there: Rush to solve Google's new UFO puzzle

By: dustgeer send a private message
Lahore : Pakistan | 2 months ago  
Views: 4
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Google left users puzzled again today by displaying another picture of a UFO on its UK home page.This time the doodle above the search engine showed a flying saucer hovering over crop circles.The word ‘Google’ is spelt out in several crop circles, with what appears to be a tractor completing the letter ‘L’. Mystery: The UK Google homepage showed a flying saucer over crop circles
The internet giant has once again broken with the tradition of only marking historic events with a doodle.But after Google used Twitter last week to display its clues for the UFO it hosted, amateur net detectives had an easier job trying to solve today’s mystery.On their Twitter account Google posted on its account the map reference 51.327629, 0.5616088, which eagle-eyed sci-fi fans have identified as the centre of the small town of Horsell in Surrey. This was the spot where HG Wells set the first UFO landing in his novel The War of the Worlds.The most prominent explanation on the web is that Google is trailing an online ‘happening’ that will coincide with the 143rd anniversary of Wells’s birth next week.Last week it sent out a Twitter message in a numerical code which was: 1.12.12 25.15.21.18 15 1.18.5 2.5.12.15.14.7 20.15 21.19The Tech Crunch website deciphered the message by using the method 1 is A and 2 is B, etc. Once you have been through the entire message it reads: 'All you o are belong to us.'The message has become an internet meme - a phrase used to describe a catchphrase or concept that spreads quickly around the world via the internet, as users try to work out what it means.It is reminiscent of a famous internet phenomenon from the early 2000s which declared: ‘All your base are belong to us’.The phrase - poorly translated - was taken from the opening scene of a 1991 version of the Japanese video game Zero Wing. The spread of a Flash animation that depicted the slogan spread from person to person after appearing on message forums.

It is still unclear quite why Google chose to put up the spaceship and the meme today, with speculation it might be linked to new alien film District 9.

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  • News Source: Uinta County News | 2 months ago
    Just ten days ago, Google’s logo featured an alien craft beaming up an ‘O’ from the mega-search engine’s name. Today, however, Google’s logo is a series of crop circles missing an ‘L.’ To make the ‘O’ incident even more perplexing,...
  • News Source: Uinta County News | 2 months ago
    We’ll bite, but not too hard...Not hard enough to insult an “expert” for an opinion about what might be going on. But, for the record, we will note, along with a big chunk of the mainstream press and some folks in the Twitterverse (where is it...
  • News Source: The Christian Science Monitor | 2 months ago
    The illustrated flying saucer carved out “Goog e” in the corn field, and a little green tracker finishes off the “l.” Such logo swaps are common for the tech titan, but what are they celebrating? Most of these “doodles” are tied to a...
  • News Source: The Observer | 2 months ago
    Google UK’s homepage today shows a “doodle” of a flying saucer hovering over crop circles. Photograph: PIN Google UK's homepage is today given over to a "doodle" showing a flying saucer hovering over crop circles. The word "Google" is spelt...
  • News Source: The Guardian | 2 months ago
    The War of the Worlds links cryptic tweet to latest 'Google doodle', say users of micro-blog Google crop circle ... Martians at work? One hundred and eleven years ago, HG Wells immortalised Horsell Common in Woking, Surrey as the setting for the...
  • News Source: NewKerala | 2 months ago
    In the latest design, the word "Google" is spelt out by a series of crop circles, but minus the letter "L", reports the Telegraph. Clicking the new logo, depicting a flying saucer hovering over a field, lands users on a search page for "crop circles",...
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