

A video of what interface possibilities could come with a multi-touch computer display/input device
Will Wright talking at the Game Developer's Conference about 'Spore', which looks like it could possibly be the best video game ever.
do not attempt. behold, and be held by, this amazingly hypnotic 1980s japanese television ad (or, perhaps more accurately, ad-megamix) for the isuzu gemini. this is real-deal stunt-driving, synchronised live and in person, years before cgi and advertising agencies staffed by our contemporaries would give us real-life transformers. i just cannot stop watching it. thanks jeff for the link.
Resistor writes - "Developed by the Graffiti Research Lab, LED Throwies are an inexpensive way to add color to any ferromagnetic surface in your neighborhood. A Throwie consists of a lithium battery, a 10mm diffused LED and a rare-earth magnet taped together. Throw it up high and in quantity to impress your friends and city officials."
Two students at the University of Michigan dress up as Pac-Man and the Ghost respectively, then run through the library and a huge computer lab.
A fully authorized parody of the Dresden Dolls' "Coin Operated Boy" featuring every man's "dream girl."
The short film, directed by Andy Morahan, shows a family enjoying a day on a beach, filmed for posterity by the father. An ever-louder roar breaks the tranquillity, and the hand-held camera pans to the sky to track a jumbo jet heading directly towards a nuclear facility just a few hundred metres away.
A very fun parody of Kubrick's 2001: A Space Odyssey done in stop-motion (partially, at least) using Legos (partially, at least).
A japanese robot turns from a car into a arms-and-leg robot. More than meets the eye.
An amazing advert for the Sony Bravia TV. The advert features the song "Heartbeats", originally by the band "The Knife", performed on this advert by José González.