His personal website ( mrdoob.com ) is a treasure trove of "experiments"—quirky, artistic, and often useless (in the best way) uses of HTML5, Canvas, and JavaScript.

If you have ever been bored in a computer lab, procrastinating on homework, you might have typed a strange phrase into Google: or "Google Gravity Mr Doob."

The result is immediate: the logo, search bar, and buttons lose their structural integrity and tumble to the bottom of the browser window. Because it is built on a , you can grab any element with your mouse and toss it across the screen, watching it bounce off the "walls" of your browser window with realistic momentum. The Technology Behind the Chaos

Beyond its technical prowess, "Google Gravity" is significant because it challenges our conventional expectations of how websites should look and function. By playfully subverting the norms of web design, Mr. Doob's project encourages users to think creatively about the possibilities of digital interaction. The site's use of gravity as a design element also serves as a metaphor for the way technology can be both liberating and constraining, as users are free to explore and interact with the site in new and innovative ways.

"Google Gravity" is a web-based project created by Mr. Doob, a pseudonymous artist and developer. Launched in 2009, the project takes the familiar Google homepage and applies a gravitational pull to its elements, simulating a sense of weight and physicality. The result is a visually stunning and interactive experience that reimagines the way we interact with a search engine.