Dayton Daily News

Jigsaw features Air Force museum

Afresearch­lab.com wpafbstem.com. www. www.

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Air Force Recruiting Service joined the trend of virtual jigsaw puzzles with the launch of an online challenge of piecing together a 1.03 gigapixel image from the National Museum of the U.S. Air Force.

“We are always looking for innovative ways to inspire and engage with the American public,” said Maj. Ross McKnight, chief of the National Events Branch at AFRS, Joint Base San Antonio-Randolph, Texas. “The ‘Million Piece Mission’ is a challengin­g and interactiv­e way to experience the National Museum of the U.S. Air Force while learning about careers and opportunit­ies in the Air Force.”

As users enter the mission on AirForcepu­zzle.com, they see the full image that shows a collection of aircraft on display at the museum’s fourth building. This image was captured after the building’s opening in 2016 by photograph­er John Opie. As a puzzle, the image contains 3,000 tiles and a total of 1.2 million pieces.

According to National Museum of the U.S. Air Force Director David Tillotson, the museum was thrilled to be approached by Air Force Recruiting Service about using an image of the museum’s fourth building for a virtual puzzle.

“The National Museum of the U.S. Air Force and Air Force Recruiting Services have similar missions to inspire youth toward careers in the U.S. Air Force,” said Tillotson. “So it’s a perfect fit for the world’s largest military aviation museum to be featured on the world’s largest virtual puzzle.”

When users enter the website there will be a short introducti­on video. Then users can see the cursors of other players working on the puzzle in real time. They can choose to work alone or with other players to complete a section of the puzzle and can even invite friends into a tile room to help complete the section. It was divided into thousands of separate tile rooms to make the puzzle more manageable. These rooms vary in level of difficulty.

“The mission will require highly motivated, independen­t and mentally tough individual­s with attention to detail in order to complete,” said McKnight. “Those are the exact same traits we need in the next-generation Airmen and, just like the puzzle, we want the best qualified applicant with the right job at the right time.”

As users complete a tile room, they earn points based on the number of pieces they assemble, the amount of time spent on the section and the complexity of the image. Points are updated in real time to a universal leaderboar­d, creating friendly global competitio­n. Users have the option to play as a guest or create a username and password to save their progress and enjoy other benefits, including unlocking content, and interestin­g facts that, until now, could only be seen by visiting the museum in person.

For more informatio­n, visit GSDM.com.

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