The article branches out to Glen Fisher and Dave Dixon, who were the first to develop a demo using this effect in 1980.
While modern demos easily outperform the early usages of retro tricks on any system, and this in itself is highly impressive and a feast of its own, I share the author's homage to the early discoverers.
My background is the C64, and I had my share of high-profile participation as a member of groups like Beastie Boys, X-Rated, for example.
To this day, I remember talking to first-time trickery explorers like Einstein of Upfront and Honey from 1001 Crew or Radwar back then and later on.
Especially Einstein was a nice chap. It seems so far away compared with today, but back then it was pretty normal to hang on a low-level computer like that with a TV CRC as a monitor, destroying your eyesight for 8 hours or longer with no interruption.
There was plenty of time, especially during the holidays. And the Scandinavians had an "unfair" advantage: hard winters with few sunny hours, so what else could you do than do stuff on a "breadbox"? ;)
We all had some schemes or sketches of effects on paper. It was pretty normal, what today is perceived as weird: having plenty of guilt-free and blame-free time, and utilizing pen and paper.
There wasn't any other option. Stuck? Well, no Google, etc. Calling someone else? Whom? And even then, at the time (80th), telephone calls were expensive, and especially calling someone in a different country was kind of novel and cost a fortune. So resort to - pen and paper. This was cheaper, but express delivery also costs you dearly.
Also, you had to come up with something in exchange for a bargain. And exactly this information sharing and this special mix of curiosity and need for discovery was a topic I remember fondly talking and marveling about with Einstein and some other coders.
Different times, easier times despite the Cold War, which loomed as background noise.
While modern demos easily outperform the early usages of retro tricks on any system, and this in itself is highly impressive and a feast of its own, I share the author's homage to the early discoverers.
My background is the C64, and I had my share of high-profile participation as a member of groups like Beastie Boys, X-Rated, for example.
To this day, I remember talking to first-time trickery explorers like Einstein of Upfront and Honey from 1001 Crew or Radwar back then and later on.
Especially Einstein was a nice chap. It seems so far away compared with today, but back then it was pretty normal to hang on a low-level computer like that with a TV CRC as a monitor, destroying your eyesight for 8 hours or longer with no interruption.
There was plenty of time, especially during the holidays. And the Scandinavians had an "unfair" advantage: hard winters with few sunny hours, so what else could you do than do stuff on a "breadbox"? ;)
We all had some schemes or sketches of effects on paper. It was pretty normal, what today is perceived as weird: having plenty of guilt-free and blame-free time, and utilizing pen and paper.
There wasn't any other option. Stuck? Well, no Google, etc. Calling someone else? Whom? And even then, at the time (80th), telephone calls were expensive, and especially calling someone in a different country was kind of novel and cost a fortune. So resort to - pen and paper. This was cheaper, but express delivery also costs you dearly.
Also, you had to come up with something in exchange for a bargain. And exactly this information sharing and this special mix of curiosity and need for discovery was a topic I remember fondly talking and marveling about with Einstein and some other coders.
Different times, easier times despite the Cold War, which loomed as background noise.