"Not many people know this, but post-9/11, only 18 percent of the 4.5 million visitors that go out to Liberty Island from around the world can go inside the statue," said Foundation VP and Chief Advancement Officer Richard Flood. "Still fewer, about 7 percent, are able to climb up to the statue's crown." While that means some 315,000 people have gotten to visit the statue's highest publicly accessible point, many others will never even get close. Until now, that is.

Once installed, you can essentially plop a high-resolution Statue of Liberty on your coffee table, and once you move in close enough, your view pierces that tarnished copper shell to reveal the inner tower and the iron skeleton keeping it upright. Tilt your screen upward, and your view inside the shell fades away, leaving you looking face-to-face with Lady Liberty herself while the sound of squawking seabirds fill the air around you. For someone who has never actually seen the statue in person -- let alone from such a close vantage point -- the effect is both striking and serene. And to get a sense of just how big the statue is, you can also plant a life-sized replica of its foot onto the ground in front of you. (Spoiler alert: It's, uh, pretty big.)