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Give your video calls a makeover, with this selection of over 100 empty sets from the BBC Archive.
Who hasn't wanted to host a pub quiz from the Queen Vic, conduct a job interview from the confines of Fletch's cell, or catch up with friends and family from the bridge of the Liberator in Blake's 7?
wget -r -l inf -H -nH --cut-dirs=2 --include-directories '/archive/sets/','/archive/sets/' -A jpg,jpeg https://www.bbc.co.uk/archive/empty_sets_collection/zfvy382
Well, IKEA knows just the thing to make it all easier — backgrounds to fake your way to a stylish setting.
Studio Ghibli “made available a series of stills from their films that can be used as video conferencing backgrounds.”
Video conferencing services are becoming hugely popular, as they allow you to virtually meet with others when in-person conversations aren't possible. For Zoom, this has led to the discovery of its virtual background feature.
We actually walk you through how to set up and use a virtual background in Zoom here (no green screen required). Essentially, it lets you choose any image as your background. It's handy if you have a messy room or cluttered environment you want to hide during a video call. Even Disney and DC are fans of Zoom's virtual background feature, as they've now shared free images for people to use.
Looking to spice up your Zoom meetings? Try these backgrounds.
The ISS cupola
Don't be boring! If you still have to go to work meetings via Zoom's video calls, switch up the background to something interesting. Using the "virtual background" feature (once you're logged into the meeting), you can insert ANY image you want behind you. Share your flair with the people you work with!
The central region of our galaxy, the Milky Way, contains an exotic collection of objects, including a supermassive black hole weighing about 4 million times the mass of the Sun (called Sagittarius A*), clouds of gas at temperatures of millions of degrees, neutron stars and white dwarf stars tearing material from companion stars and beautiful tendrils of radio emission.
The region around Sagittarius A* is shown in this new composite image with Chandra data (green and blue) combined with radio data (red) from the MeerKAT telescope in South Africa, which will eventually become part of the Square Kilometer Array (SKA).
Zoom up to new altitudes by downloading these #TopGun
: Maverick Virtual Backgrounds for your @zoom_us
meetings, hangouts and happy hours here: https://bit.ly/topgunzoom.
To your favorite Pixar locations…and beyond! Let the fun begin with these rootin’, tootin’ video call backgrounds!