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Man Scrawls World’s Biggest Message with a GPS ‘Pen’ [GPS]

Man Scrawls Worlds Biggest Message with a GPS ‘Pen [GPS]One man drove 12,238 miles and across 30 states within the U.S. to scrawl a message which may only be viewed using Google Earth. His big shoutout: ” Read Ayn Rand.”

Nick Newcomen did a road trip over 30 days that covered stretches from the Pacific to the Atlantic Ocean. First, he identified on a map the route he would want to drive to spell out the message. He put a GPS device in his car to trace the route he would follow. Then, he hit the road.

” The most important reason I did it’s because I am an Ayn Rand fan,” he says. ” In my view if more people would read her books and take her ideas seriously, the country and world can be an easier place – freer, more prosperous and we’d have a more optimistic view of the longer term.”

Newcomen, unlike previous GPS artists, actually traveled the lines he traced on the map. He used a GPS logger (Qstarz BT-Q1000X) to ” ink” the message. Starting his trip in Marshall, Texas, he turned on the device when he wanted to jot down a letter and turned off the device between letters. The recorded GPS data was loaded into Google Earth to supply the image above.

” The first word I wrote actually was the word ‘Rand’, then I went up North to do the word ‘Read’ and finished it with ‘Ayn,’” says Newcomen.

And for people who don’t know, Ayn Rand is a Russian-American writer whose books Atlas Shrugged and The Fountainhead are a number of the world’s best-selling novels.

Newcomen’s venture sounds pretty crazy, though he gets points for ambition.

What message would you write using a GPS?

Photo: Nick Newcomen


Man Scrawls Worlds Biggest Message with a GPS ‘Pen [GPS]Wired.com has been expanding the hive mind with technology, science and geek culture news since 1995.

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