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įor Win32 there's a promising little app called PabloDraw. While we're at it, we should also mention ACiDDraw, which some people prefer over TheDraw under DOS. I'm blushing, and I hope you can forgive me. and then, of course, there are those other forms of ascii art, as the hilarious The Adventures of the Boy with Immovable Hair and this wonderful flash anim synced to an Offspring song (Might be from the same author as that flash link in the parent post). Viewers available for most platforms, just use Google. Ansi happens :)Īscii is ascii and ansi is ansi, but these scenes are closely connected. Only active examples I can remember at the moment are Mimic and Remorse. $$$$$$ to fill shapes, and various other characters to make their outline smooth. Seems to be the part of the group-based ascii scene that stays furthest away from the warez scene. Two of the biggest groups are Superior Art Creations (SAC) and Chemical Reaction (CRO). These are the nice people that make most of those NFO files. All collections should be viewed with CygnusEd in Topaz 8, even though your browser could do the trick. Yes, I know, this might be look like madness to, hm, laymen :) If you really want to have a closer look, though, check out the works of e.g. Tools of the trade: Slash, backslash, underscore, pipe, you get the idea.į has a pretty good (though not updated) archive. The Amiga ascii scene (Now often refered to as the "oldschool scene"):įrom the early 90's people made "collections" - large textfiles - with logos (file_id.diz, bbs adverts, demo group names, etc), and later rants, poems and other forms of self expression. Some people might not agree on these categories (and there are some overlapping), but I'll try to list them: In some of them, the artists even are organized into groups, cooperating and releasing regular "packs" under the same label. Some friends at school told me about BRMB which came in in the daytime, and I can remember listening to Tony Butler doing his hyperactive sport show, but we had to wait until 1980 for good reception of commercial radio.Obviously, there's more than one ASCII art scene. I also listened a bit to Luxembourg, and remember their news intro "Compiled from News Agencies Around the World" which in school became "Compiled from the Newsagents Around the Corner". Noel Edmonds did breakfast, and on Saturdays we had "And now it's time for Playground Postbag.with Keith Chegwin!" On Sundays there was the Top Twenty with Tom Browne, and afterwards a complete gear change to either Sing Something Simple or, I think, Semprini Serenade (remember that? "Old ones, new ones, loved ones, neglected ones.") I only really tuned into Radio One when I was about thirteen or so. (And yes, John Turner is still there, now doing breakfast.) Then we moved to Bristol and I discovered Radio Bristol, which I listened to because it was like nothing we had had in South Wales. When Swansea Sound started, I tried to tune our HMV Transistor Stereogram into it with no success (we lived near Newport). Terry Wogan was on in the afternoon with "Fight the Flab". I vividly remember "What's the recipe today, Jim?" and then when he changed to Radio 2 only, being able to hear the edit in the jingle where "One" become "Two". I grew up with the very last years of the Light Programme, and then Radio 2 which my mum listened to. My first real memory is of Radio Caroline North, which I heard in a fish and chip shop.
#Naughty stereogram free#
I've often wondered what Spanish radio was like around that period with Franco still being about, was it heavilly restricted or were they free to play what they wanted to?
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#Naughty stereogram tv#
The fisrt FM station I heard was Armed Forces Radio and TV Service, Rota, Cádiz, Spain, on 96.6 Mhz with shows like American Top 40, with Casey Kasem, and that was in 1975 when I discovered my radio ( a German Nordmende receiver) had the FM band and that was the only radio station there was on the FM band. I still remember the name of the Show : "Música texto y pretesto". There was a musical show on COPE Jerez, from 5 to 8 pm, Monday to Friday and it was the first thing I used to do after school, listening to it. Both on Medium Wave, waiting for hearing more about ABBA. Since then, I started listening to Radio Jerez and COPE Jerez daily. I remember so well the day after ABBA won the Eurovision Song Contest in 1974, when my fav radio station talked about it and played the Spanish entry.
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