DateAtlas – Maps every date and time to a unique spot on Earth
1•forge_craft•2mo ago
I divided the timeline into blocks, then subdivided them by hours, minutes, and seconds. Each 256-second interval (~4 min) maps to specific coordinates. The result? Approximately every 2.5 square meters on Earth represents a unique timestamp.
Check it out: https://dateatlas.onrender.com/
Comments
forge_craft•2mo ago
Quick clarification on how DateAtlas works:
Earth is divided into ~3 million grid blocks (16.43km × 16.43km each). Each block is assigned one unique date from 1971-9999.
The system conceptually subdivides these by hours/minutes/seconds - so at full precision, approximately every 2.5m² would represent a unique timestamp.
Currently implemented: date-to-location mapping. You can search any date to see where it's located on the map.
Happy to answer any questions and open to comments!
forge_craft•2mo ago
Earth is divided into ~3 million grid blocks (16.43km × 16.43km each). Each block is assigned one unique date from 1971-9999.
The system conceptually subdivides these by hours/minutes/seconds - so at full precision, approximately every 2.5m² would represent a unique timestamp.
Currently implemented: date-to-location mapping. You can search any date to see where it's located on the map.
Happy to answer any questions and open to comments!