People who grow up using these sorts of bespoke software are gonna have some pretty weird nostalgia. "Hey when you were a toddler did you ever play with a paint app where the fill tool created flashing swirly patterns? ...no?"
scrame 20 hours ago [-]
I have a friend who's dad is a good carpenter, put a whole second story on his house, did the flooring and made a lot of furniture. He said it was about 4th grade before he found out that there were stores where people went and bought furniture instead of just making their own.
__MatrixMan__ 18 hours ago [-]
My parents aren't especially skilled carpenters, electricians plumbers, or HVAC technicians, but they managed to be good enough at those things. At sixteen my girlfriend's family was flabbergasted to learn that I had never seen my parents hire such people.
My dad was also a pirate, and I had a similar experience when I learned that you could buy VHS tapes with pictures of the lion king on them, rather than just "Lion King" in dad's handwriting.
benj111 10 hours ago [-]
Was he a pirate? Or did he just record off TV?
__MatrixMan__ 4 hours ago [-]
He did not wear an eyepatch or kill people, he did sail the high seas on occasion, he recorded both TV and made vhs and cassette tape copies, I don't think he ever sold these copies.
I'll let you decide if he was a pirate.
benj111 25 minutes ago [-]
Recording off the TV isn't pirating. Why do you think they were allowed to sell blank tapes and later hard drive recorders?
If he's selling copies then maybe. But for personal consumption that's legal.
The term pirate is already expansive enough. I don't think we need to expand it into legal activities.
jamal-kumar 14 hours ago [-]
Reminds me of the Nanny Lynn tapes that everyone was wondering what the hell it was about for a while like it was some kind of analogue horror thing and then it turned out to be just some cartoon someone made for their grandkids or something
On the subject of nostalgic paint apps, I distinctly remember one of the Kid Pix drawing tools/games that I had growing up... what a weird piece of software that was!
fwipsy 16 hours ago [-]
Yeah I remember kid pix! All the computer labs in school had it.
IncreasePosts 21 hours ago [-]
I spent my whole childhood trying to find someone who played Defender of the Crown and never found one :(
CodesInChaos 10 hours ago [-]
Apparently Defender of the Crown will get a remaster next month:
This is... strange? I wonder what the reason might be?
Anyways, you've found someone. Or at least someone who used to.
gikkman 11 hours ago [-]
That makes a whole three of us. I played it on NES, and it wasn't until I was in my 20s I learned to it existed on other platforms too. My dad and I spent days on that game trying to figure out good strategies and how to beat it. Good memories.
20 hours ago [-]
sublinear 17 hours ago [-]
I think we're well past the point where anyone is feeling that level of nostalgia for software.
Unless they are explicitly reminded (immediately ruining any sentiment other than indifference), they're more likely to find closure mistaking it for something else.
We just saw this play out over the last 20 years with meme pollution.
hiyfsch 17 hours ago [-]
The best one for me is Mario Paint on SNES!
NDlurker 16 hours ago [-]
I loved making animations on there.
Anyone remember Kai's Power Goo? My school computer lab had it on all the Macs
tzs 21 hours ago [-]
Using the pattern on the top left of the array of patterns I clicked several times and got a setup where it was still flood filling after maybe 10 minutes.
Unlike all the other times I'd tried where it quickly ended up with black or white dominating and then filling the whole area (except once when it became all white except for a single black pixel) this ended up with the whole area filled with a checkerboard pattern except for a jagged fault line running from top to bottom. The waves of filling would cause small changes to the fault line, and occasionally a small island of black or white would form and then be taken over by the checkerboard.
I was going to let it go for a lot longer but accidentally did the "back" gesture on my mouse bringing me back here. I've tried several times since then but that is the only time I got something that was long running.
Anyone else get any interesting long running ones?
tzs 16 hours ago [-]
I found one that looks like it is periodic and so will run forever. See first image here [1].
This evolved from clicking using the pattern that is 3rd from the left on the top row. In chess notation it is the one black on c1, e1, and d5.
The darker areas appear to move down and right, with new ones coming on the left as the olds ones disappear off the right and bottom.
It is at least a little bit resistant to damage. I accidentally clicked in the middle of the lighter region messing up the regular pattern there. That persisted for just a few steps and then was absorbed into the regular pattern.
This could really use a way to slow it down or single step it to see what is going on.
Oh cool. I tried clicking a few more times to introduce several anomalies. It seemed to absorb them but with a change in pattern, so that it had 3 diagonal stripes that no longer seemed to move, but the two outer ones were cycling through some fixed patterns, and the middle one had some diagonal lines that appeared to move through it. I don't think it was quite repeating. And then it just stopped.
I thought maybe it crashed, but I clicked inside again, and it filled from that click, so it is still running. It just finished all its filling. It now has 3 regions: (1) a large solid color that if I click in there changes between black and white. (2) a dark grey region that if clicked in results in small black or white triangles, which can be grown by clicking in them again. It effectively dampens that damage so it does not spread far. (3) A region full of squiggly lines. Clicking there either just messes up a couple pixels or it infects one of the squiggly lines turning it into a black bar. See second image here [1].
The app is true marking of a genius maker. A blank space app where all the interface elements and interactions and ideas are made from scratch. There's a George Lukas like "world building" in it, the blog, the website that is just so nice to watch. One of those things you hardly see in any new product/project/... these days. I loved this.
xyzzy_plugh 17 hours ago [-]
This might be the coolest site on the Internet. What an awesome paint program and what a great write up. I wish there was more of this sort of thing in the world.
It's hard to believe how spot-on this is to what I've been looking for. I thought about coding something almost exactly like this, for the exact same reasons as the author describes.
I see this is from earlier in the year; I've certainly googled for this kind of thing a few times since then, and never got this as a result.
Thanks OP for posting.
functionmouse 21 hours ago [-]
Good Lord what is happening in there?
These screenshots look awesome. Definitely checking this one out. Thanks for this!
edg5000 13 hours ago [-]
Those font tests are cool, he's created a unique way of rendering fonts, an interesting, playful look. And great that he's letting his son play with the computer.
fennec-posix 12 hours ago [-]
My parents had me setup on an old MacBook when I was about 1, It was an application called "babysmash" or something. It would pop up shapes and noises as you hit the keyboard. I have no memory of this, there's just a picture of me at a laptop in a high-chair.
I spy a Model m keyboard and a 17” crt compaq monitor
OP you’re amazing. It’s nice to see kids today can grow up to exposed to the same hardware I’m assuming you (well, me too, so us) grew up with!
kannanvijayan 21 hours ago [-]
What a wonderful looking piece of software :) My child is far past toddler age but I shall keep this in mind as a gift for friends of mine that are about to have children.
Cool project! Some of the patterns you can create are insane...
DonHopkins 19 hours ago [-]
I love this! May your baby grow up weird and unique like cellular automata rules, thinking globally and acting locally.
It's weird like the cellular automata painting system I've been working on for a long time, which I rewrote in JavaScript a while ago, and is in serious need to rewriting, but runs pretty fast now anyway in spite of itself.
Norman Margolus and Tommaso Toffoli's "Cellular Automata Machines: A New Environment for Modeling" from MIT Press is one of my favorite books of all time! It shows lots of peculiarly indented Forth code.
I recorded this demo for Norman Margolus, one of the creators of the CAM-6 and authors of the book about it, so it starts showing the book, gets pretty technical, and dives deep into some forth code, but then it gets into the demo and on to somẻ fun heat diffusions about here:
Here's where I demonstrate some meta rules that let you paint which of 16 dithered heat diffusion kernels to run per cell, that I use for storytelling, then an even weirder demo of painting with Ridiculous Instruction Set Code parallel cellular automata machine language with many diverse rules (not all diffusion, including life, brian's brain, cow spot anneal, torben's foamy anneal, 8 directional data moving "busses", and others):
Also here's some stuff about granular sound synthesis with a "musical gas" cellular automata, babies should love it! Includes farting and laughing gas!
My dad was also a pirate, and I had a similar experience when I learned that you could buy VHS tapes with pictures of the lion king on them, rather than just "Lion King" in dad's handwriting.
I'll let you decide if he was a pirate.
If he's selling copies then maybe. But for personal consumption that's legal.
The term pirate is already expansive enough. I don't think we need to expand it into legal activities.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H-x_JtsdCvA
https://www.gog.com/en/game/defender_of_the_crown_the_legend...
https://store.steampowered.com/app/4208140/Defender_of_the_C...
Anyways, you've found someone. Or at least someone who used to.
Unless they are explicitly reminded (immediately ruining any sentiment other than indifference), they're more likely to find closure mistaking it for something else.
We just saw this play out over the last 20 years with meme pollution.
Anyone remember Kai's Power Goo? My school computer lab had it on all the Macs
Unlike all the other times I'd tried where it quickly ended up with black or white dominating and then filling the whole area (except once when it became all white except for a single black pixel) this ended up with the whole area filled with a checkerboard pattern except for a jagged fault line running from top to bottom. The waves of filling would cause small changes to the fault line, and occasionally a small island of black or white would form and then be taken over by the checkerboard.
I was going to let it go for a lot longer but accidentally did the "back" gesture on my mouse bringing me back here. I've tried several times since then but that is the only time I got something that was long running.
Anyone else get any interesting long running ones?
This evolved from clicking using the pattern that is 3rd from the left on the top row. In chess notation it is the one black on c1, e1, and d5.
The darker areas appear to move down and right, with new ones coming on the left as the olds ones disappear off the right and bottom.
It is at least a little bit resistant to damage. I accidentally clicked in the middle of the lighter region messing up the regular pattern there. That persisted for just a few steps and then was absorbed into the regular pattern.
This could really use a way to slow it down or single step it to see what is going on.
Oh cool. I tried clicking a few more times to introduce several anomalies. It seemed to absorb them but with a change in pattern, so that it had 3 diagonal stripes that no longer seemed to move, but the two outer ones were cycling through some fixed patterns, and the middle one had some diagonal lines that appeared to move through it. I don't think it was quite repeating. And then it just stopped.
I thought maybe it crashed, but I clicked inside again, and it filled from that click, so it is still running. It just finished all its filling. It now has 3 regions: (1) a large solid color that if I click in there changes between black and white. (2) a dark grey region that if clicked in results in small black or white triangles, which can be grown by clicking in them again. It effectively dampens that damage so it does not spread far. (3) A region full of squiggly lines. Clicking there either just messes up a couple pixels or it infects one of the squiggly lines turning it into a black bar. See second image here [1].
[1] https://imgur.com/a/UkUQ4nE
I love the "show source" toggle!
I see this is from earlier in the year; I've certainly googled for this kind of thing a few times since then, and never got this as a result.
Thanks OP for posting.
These screenshots look awesome. Definitely checking this one out. Thanks for this!
OP you’re amazing. It’s nice to see kids today can grow up to exposed to the same hardware I’m assuming you (well, me too, so us) grew up with!
It's weird like the cellular automata painting system I've been working on for a long time, which I rewrote in JavaScript a while ago, and is in serious need to rewriting, but runs pretty fast now anyway in spite of itself.
Norman Margolus and Tommaso Toffoli's "Cellular Automata Machines: A New Environment for Modeling" from MIT Press is one of my favorite books of all time! It shows lots of peculiarly indented Forth code.
https://donhopkins.com/home/cam-book.pdf
I recorded this demo for Norman Margolus, one of the creators of the CAM-6 and authors of the book about it, so it starts showing the book, gets pretty technical, and dives deep into some forth code, but then it gets into the demo and on to somẻ fun heat diffusions about here:
https://youtu.be/LyLMHxRNuck?t=531
Here's where I demonstrate some meta rules that let you paint which of 16 dithered heat diffusion kernels to run per cell, that I use for storytelling, then an even weirder demo of painting with Ridiculous Instruction Set Code parallel cellular automata machine language with many diverse rules (not all diffusion, including life, brian's brain, cow spot anneal, torben's foamy anneal, 8 directional data moving "busses", and others):
https://youtu.be/LyLMHxRNuck?t=1398
More info that I'm hoping to cover in a future Repo Show video with Norman:
CAM6 — Don's cellular-automata machine simulator (firsthand)
https://github.com/SimHacker/WillWrightShowForFood/blob/main...
What I Made With Your Magic — the CAM6 Demo, for Norman
https://github.com/SimHacker/WillWrightShowForFood/blob/main...
Also here's some stuff about granular sound synthesis with a "musical gas" cellular automata, babies should love it! Includes farting and laughing gas!
https://github.com/SimHacker/WillWrightShowForFood/blob/main...
and their continuous counterpart Lenia, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AP3zeHyWakw
Ok, nerd sniped.
> The Margolus neighborhood — how partitioning the grid makes a rule reversible.
This reminds me of the https://www.youtube.com/@T2TileProject https://t2tile.com/
Edit: I bought a copy and I'm having a blast!
;-)