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QINGDAO TODAY
在线翻译:
szdaily -> Lifestyle -> 
Website lets you explore the world
    2020-07-24  08:53    Shenzhen Daily

A NEW website called WindowSwap is quenching wanderlust during the coronavirus pandemic by providing free virtual trips to anywhere in the world.

The site, launched by Singapore married team Vyshnav Supersubramaniam and Sonali Ranjit along with Maryam Touimi Benjelloun, is a simple one. People “open a new window to somewhere in the world” by clicking through a random platter of 10-minute home videos shot through windows. You’ll view a peaceful hilltop in Switzerland, a cityscape in Lithuania, a pretty patio in Germany, a quiet driveway in Argentina and a family’s backyard in Austria.

Ranjit and Supersubramaniam, both of whom work in advertising, felt creative during the tedium of quarantine. “We’ve been in full or partial lockdown for quite a while now,” Ranjit said. “Seeing views from our friends’ windows on Instagram made us wish we could just swap places.” Initially, a dozen of the couple’s friends helped out by contributing videos and soon the site “exploded” with more than 100 stranger submissions.

But don’t expect a slideshow of hotspot landmarks — instead, you’ll peer into local lives. Watch children at a playground in Turkey or a house cat in Qatar. Hear the roaring sound of a motorcycle in Japan or chirping birds in Germany. You can also pop into a quiet street in Michigan or catch the Manhattan skyline from Long Island, New York State.

“It’s definitely going to be a while before we can travel again, and looking through someone else’s window, complete with background noise, the murmur of conversation and birdsong really transports you,” explained Ranjit, adding that the project is a “mixture of voyeurism, escapism, tranquility and to see the world through someone else’s perspective.”

Novelty is fascinating, agreed Elaine Paravati-Harrigan, a professor of psychology at Hamilton College in Clinton, New York State. “People are feeling stuck in a rut and craving connection and authenticity because we’re interacting less. And visiting a stranger’s bedroom from the safety of home can be exciting.”(SD-Agencies)

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