Unfolding the Earth – Myriahedral projections
Visualization professor Jack van Wijk developed a new method of unfolding the earth: Myriahedral projections. The idea is take a map of a small part of the earth, which is almost perfect, glue neighboring maps to it, and repeat this until the whole earth is shown. Of course you get interrupts, but does this matter?

The video below shows ten variations, which tend to get stranger and stranger.
Read the entire paper by Prof. Dr. ir. Jack van Wijk: Unfolding the Earth – Myriahedral projections (pdf). Related posts: World View, Atlantis turns out to be interfacial artefact, Earth rise on Youtube, To boldly Google.., Sequoiaview.

Impressive studies! Great artwork! The question that immediately arises is: “Why would we need to ‘represent the Earth as flat’?”
Of course Google Earth is not free from distortion at all, but by putting a map (or layered maps) in spherical 3D representation, it manages to create an informative model that stays as close to the original shape as possible, no?
This is news?!?!?! Buckminster Fuller did much better projections and solved this problem back in the 1940’s what’s the news?