Mini Goes Retro with 3D Turbovision

mini_turbovision.jpg

Everybody who’s anybody needs to have an online presence if they have any hope of being recalled offline. The only question is how to make that online presence engaging without doing something everyone else did already.

To solve this riddle, Mini Cooper looks two decades backward and brings 3D back with Turbovision. We’re still waiting for our 3D glasses to arrive in the mail, which is annoying, but it makes us feel like kids again. When was the last time you received something as awesome as 3D glasses in the mail? Plus, after receiving free stuff from somebody you’re always more inclined to check them out on the internet, so maybe this one’s a winner. It’s too soon to tell.

In any event a pair of red and blue specs will serve us in more ways than just one. We have every intention of wearing them as we walk down the street. Collars up, of course. We just need to find our ghetto blaster.

Picture of Steve Hall

Steve Hall

RECENT ARTICLES

TRENDING AROUND THE WEB

9 things deeply curious people do that make ordinary days feel interesting

9 things deeply curious people do that make ordinary days feel interesting

Hack Spirit

The difference between editing and proofreading (and why it matters for your work)

The difference between editing and proofreading (and why it matters for your work)

Global English Editing

8 small habits of people born in the 60s and 70s that make them wonderful neighbors

8 small habits of people born in the 60s and 70s that make them wonderful neighbors

Hack Spirit

7 quiet signs someone has made real peace with getting older

7 quiet signs someone has made real peace with getting older

Hack Spirit

8 things emotionally mature people do when an old friend disappoints them

8 things emotionally mature people do when an old friend disappoints them

Hack Spirit

Why we say one thing and mean another — the linguistics and cognition of the intent–expression gap

Why we say one thing and mean another — the linguistics and cognition of the intent–expression gap

Global English Editing