Hi, I've been working on something I've been thinking for long time but since I had no experience with macOS screen savers I always posponed. Now thanks to Claude I was able to create a screensaver that scroll ANSI files while your computer is idle.
It allow to use local ANS files or packs directly from 16colo.rs.
primaryobjects4 hours ago
This would be great with an option to draw each ANSI line by line with pixels drawn left to right. The same way it was experienced over dialup.
The options could be baud rates: 56k, 14.4, 2400
lardissoneop4 hours ago
Sounds like a great idea.
b800han hour ago
This is brilliant - thanks!
There are so many packs on that site to choose from, it would be great to get some pointers on which ones to install.
ynac5 hours ago
You're inspiring me to attempt a rescue of my last BBS (MajorBBS system) from 1991-1993. It had some great ANSI room and section screens. It was run from a single 1GB(!!) drive that cost us $1000. We had email, a couple stores (one of the first online book stores) and store-n-forward mail systems, maybe finger and telnet(?). Unfortunately, a neighbor got stoned, had a cigarette in bed and burned up his house and ours. Nobody hurt, but the BBS wasn't backed up offsite.
lardissoneop5 hours ago
Beautiful! No backups at all of something? Sorry for your house burnt.
mike_d2 minutes ago
In the BBS days persistent storage was expensive. Backups were at best saving something to two different floppy disks. If you got lucky you could rebuild most stuff from files you had shared with friends.
ynac5 hours ago
It was a weird time frame. My partner was living in the house, and I was moving to Seattle. The backup was pretty much inches from the system itself. Not the last time I learned that lesson. But, the original SCSI drive did survive, even if the machines and desk and couches, etc. were all ruined. With HTML coming along we didn't rebuild. It's still seems like such a huge loss not having entities like BBSs on the internet. Just like the loss of IRC and other basic systems / plumbing of the capital I Internet. Yeah, they needed upgrades, but that's what IETF, RFC, and scrappy hackers are for. <sigh> Loving on the ANSI!
retlehs5 hours ago
This is really great work, I’m installing this immediately once I’m back on my machine
My terminal loads ANSI each time it opens, but requires downloading artpacks first: https://github.com/retlehs/ansimotd
I also like how your README suggests specific packs to grab
lardissoneop5 hours ago
Added a demo video and an explaining post on my own site: https://leandroardissone.com/posts/ansi-saver
pimlottc4 hours ago
Minor nit: I kept trying to tap the text to open the video before I realized I had to tap the image.
lardissoneop3 hours ago
ah, good catch.
binaryturtle6 hours ago
Those are some intense system requirements.
lardissoneop6 hours ago
Ah, yes, I’m not able to test in Intel Macs. Will try to make it available to lower macOS versions at least.
xp845 hours ago
You might find some volunteers here willing to make Intel builds :)
lardissoneop5 hours ago
it's open source, anyone can help with it, I'm happy to merge PRs
lardissoneop4 hours ago
Just added support to macOS Sequoia.
adambb6 hours ago
(unintentional) satire? almost a meditation on the seemingly inevitable bloat of software
user39393826 hours ago
As someone with a flying toasters tie, I can’t wait to try this.
jcynix4 hours ago
Ah, yes, After Dark, with the "Lunatic Fringe" module, which was fun (and was a time sink ;-0). And what I would like to see again is the "Stained Glass" module which produced phantastic visual effects when tuned a bit.
conception5 hours ago
On an aside, I’ve gotten After Dark to work on Windows 10 with some effort. Haven’t tried 11 yet.
superultra5 hours ago
Tahoe only? Yikes!
lardissoneop4 hours ago
I just pushed a new version with support to macOS Sequoia.
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