The server racks and computer shelves of CERN might not be the first place you'd expect to find LEGO lurking, but the CERN Computing Centre team was ready with some Easter Eggs when the Google Street ...
As scientists at the CERN Large Hadron Collider in Geneva, Switzerland continue their search for the elusive Higgs boson "God particle," one physicist has built a tribute to their work entirely out of ...
Block toy LEGO (Lego), CERN ATLAS and CMS etc. elaborately reproduced "LHC micro models"Has appeared. We ordered parts from Lego,Large-scale hadron collision type accelerator(LHC) can be reproduced.
CERN is home to the largest particle accelerator on the planet and home to an army of nerds, geeks and intellectuals (in other words, a happy place). Recently CERN allowed Google to bring its Street ...
If simply getting a peek inside the guts of CERN isn’t cool enough, the lab’s computer security officer, Stefan Lüders, has a secret treat for the nerds among us. Just before Google Street View came ...
If you're not in the mood for board games this Christmas, why not gather around a computer screen instead and take up CERN's challenge to find the Lego minifigures that were hidden around the facility ...
Somewhere inside the CERN Computing Centre lurk a werewolf, a gorilla, a leprechaun and other tiny exotic creatures. How many can you find? Stefan Lüders—CERN’s computer security officer—loves Legos.
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