Showing posts with label text art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label text art. Show all posts

Monday, January 25, 2010

Batch MS DOS ASCII to Web Converter Script 2

This is an update to my  little script that converts MS DOS ASCII files, such as NFO's  or FILE_ID.DIZ text files (Code Page 437, USA) to ASCII files with HTML encoded Unicode characters and also to Unicode text for the use in MS Windows. The HTML encoded ASCII files can be used to display the ASCII art, specifically the "High ASCII" or block ASCII art on a web site. The script is written in VBScript, but the release package also includes a Windows executable, which is the VBScript converted via VBSEdit by Adersoft.

I used the same script to prepare the ASCIIs in my text art galleries on my web site, such as:

just to name a few.

You can download the script here:   ROY-BATCHCONVERT-ASCII2WEB2.ZIP (700KB)

The Release NFO File :)




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█ █ ▀▄ ████ ▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀ ▀
█ █ ▀▀▄▄ ▄███▀ Roy<SAC>
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Roy/SAC presents

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▓ Batch ASCII to Web File Converter 2 ▓
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▀▄ Packaged and Released on January 25, 2010 ▄▀
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A little script that converts MS DOS ASCII files, such as NFO's
or FILE_ID.DIZ text files (Code Page 437, USA) to ASCII
but HTML encoded files that can be used to display the ASCII
art, specifically the "High ASCII" or block ASCII art on a
web site or to Unicode Text files for the use in Windows Apps.


───────── ▄ ▄▄▄▄ ▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄ ▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄ ▄ ▄▄▄ ▄ ▄▄▄ ▄▄▄▄▄ ▄ ─────────
·R·E·L·.· ▄ ▄▄▄▄ ▀▀▀▀▀▀███ ▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀███ █ ███ ▀ ███ ▄▄▄▄ ▄ ·2·0·1·0·
─────────── ▄ ▄▄▄ ███ ▄▄██▀ █ ███ █ ███ █▄ ▀▀▀▀▀███ ▄▄▄ ▄ ───────────
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▀▀▀ ███ ▀ ▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀ ▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀


For example the small logo above (which is in DOS ASCII Format)
would be converted to the following;


&#9472;&#9472;&#9472;&#9472;&#9472;&#9472;&#9472;&#9472;&#9472;
&#9604; &#9604;&#9604;&#9604;&#9604; &#9604;&#9604;&#9604;&#9604;&#9604;
&#9604;&#9604;&#9604;&#9604; &#9604;&#9604;&#9604;&#9604;&#9604;&#9604;
&#9604;&#9604;&#9604; &#9604; &#9604;&#9604;&#9604; &#9604; &#9604;&#9604;
&#9604; &#9604;&#9604;&#9604;&#9604;&#9604; &#9604; &#9472;&#9472;&#9472;
&#9472;&#9472;&#9472;&#9472;&#9472;&#9472; &middot;R&middot;E&middot;L
&middot;.&middot; &#9604; &#9604;&#9604;&#9604;&#9604; &#9600;&#9600;&#9600;
&#9600;&#9600;&#9600;&#9608;&#9608;&#9608; &#9600;&#9600;&#9600;&#9600;
&#9600;&#9600;&#9600;&#9600;&#9608;&#9608;&#9608; &#9608; &#9608;&#9608;
&#9608; &#9600; &#9608;&#9608;&#9608; &#9604;&#9604;&#9604;&#9604; &#9604;
&middot;2&middot;0&middot;1&middot;0&middot; ...


Note: I manually added line breaks and spaces to the example for
NFO layout reasons and it is also not the entire logo.
I included the files roy.asc and roy.web as examples also.
The file Roy.TXT contains the same example for the conversion to
Unicode text result.


The Web Encoded ASCII does not include <BR> Tags for the line–breaks
You have to add those manually or do what I do on my web site and
enclose the code in <PRE> </PRE> tags, which preserves the line–breaks
within the enclosed text.

Since the result is Unicode and not DOS ASCII anymore, you can
use any monospace font to display the ASCII somewhat correctly.
You won't get a 100% acurate result anyway, because the old
MS DOS font set is not part of Windows anymore. What you can get
is only a close aproximation. I use on my web site the font
"Lucida Console", which seems to be installed on many machines.
If the Windows of the user who visits your page with the ASCII for
example does not have that font installed, Windows will automatically
pick another font that comes close. I use the following CSS formatting
for the PRE tags where I show ASCIIs.

pre {
background–color:#000;
color:#FFF;
display:block;
font–family:"Lucida Console", monospace;
font–size:9pt;
line–height:12px;
padding:10px;
text–align:left;
}

If the PRE Tag is also used for something else on your web site
then you can also define it for a specific class selector like


pre.asciiart {
...
}

You would then also have to extend the PRE HTML tag like this:

<PRE class=asciiart>
...
</PRE>

The script is designed to convert all files with a specified
extension (.ASC by default) to web ready files with a new
extension (.WEB by default, but you could also make it .HTML or
whatever).

There are two additional options, where I recommend
to use the defaults (which is "yes").

The first option is "HTML Encode?", which means that all non–US–ASCII
characters (the 7 bit ASCII codes) will be converted to HTML codes
like &#XXX;. Also standard ASCII characters that could be misinterpreted
by HTML or DHTML and XML are also encoded, like the " becomes &quot;,
& becomes &amp;, < becomes &lt; and > becomes &gt; etc.
If you select "No", the ASCII will be converted to Windows Unicode (UTF–8)
instead.


The second one is "Sanitize?"
What that does, is removing ASCII characters with an ASCII code
smaller than 32, which are special control characters that cannot
be printed anyway, with 3 exceptions, chr(10) = line–feed,
chr(13) = cariage–return and chr(9) = tab. LF and CR remain unchanged.
Tab characters will be converted to 8 spaces, which is the default
MS DOS tab–stop. You might not want to select "Yes", if you convert
ASCII files to Windows Unicode, but you could, if you like.


Part of this package is the image "Batch–ASCII2WebOrUniCode–Steps.jpg",
which shows screenshots of all the steps where the script goes through.

Enjoy!
Carsten aka Roy/SAC

p.s. This script is freeware. Do with it whatever you like, except
selling it. You can use it free, copy it, share it, even modify it
if you like to. You are using it at your own risk. You cannot make me
liable for any damage or loss of data that might results directly
or indirectly because of the use of my script.

p.s.2 I also included a very early beta of a HTA version of the tool
with an interface. The conversion from Unicode to ASCII is not supported
by the HTA application yet and the file selector uses MS Word and might
not work, if you don't have Office installed. Since the latest security
updates for Windows XP as well as Vista and Windows 7, the drag and drop
feature also stopped working unfortunately.

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You can either execute the VBS script file (which is the source code
and should be executed by WSCRIPT.EXE, which comes with Windows) or
run the EXE file. The EXE is just the VBScript converted to an
executable via VBSEdit by Adersoft.

Also check out my little intro "RoySAC.exe" :)

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Defacto2.net, Scene.org, Textfiles.com, Pouet.net
Demoscene.tv, GfxZone, Intro Inferno, C64.org, OSDM,
AMP, Edge, Sizteen Colors, Flashtro, Old–Skool.net,
Untergrund.net, Bitfellas, Exotica and everybody else who
works on preserving the rich history of the scene and makes
it accessible for future generations to enjoy.

Group Greetings:
Blocktronix (thanks for keeping the ANSI scene alive and kickin)
CPI (Oldskool forver!)
Andomeda Software Development (Your demos rock! Period!)

Personal Greetings to:
Madmax/CPI, Peace/Testaware, Smash/Fairlight, Shamen/Dytec,
DaLezy, Dipswitch, Mandibular Joint Dysfunction, RaD Man/ACiD,
Jason Scott/Textfiles.com, Ben Garrett/Defacto2, my blog readers,
Lord Scarlet/SixteenColors, Zerovision/Blocktronics and everybody
else I know and forgot to mention :)

For a full list of greetings, check out my Intro, which is
included with this release.

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Check out the intro in this release "RoySACIntro.exe" :)

and don't forget visiting http://www.RoySAC.com
and to check out my blog at http://www.roysac.com/blog

Additional URLs you might want to check out

Over 300 demos, cracktros and other scene related videos
http://www.youtube.com/sacreleases

Scene Images of all sorts
http://www.flickr.com/photos/cumbrowski/collections/72157611288618058/
http://www.flickr.com/photos/cumbrowski/collections/72157612320706642/

My Mediafire.com file share with tons of files to download!
http://www.mediafire.com/?sharekey=b570d9e07985879c7069484bded33bcd06b0971baa3373fa

My ASCII Art Academy to learn more about classic Text Art
http://www.roysac.com/learn/

Links to other useful resources online to learn more about the scene
http://www.roysac.com/roy_links.asp

Signing off!

Roy of Superior Art Creations, CPI, Dytec,
Razor 1911, TRSI, TDU–Jam, PNS

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You can download the script here:   ROY-BATCHCONVERT-ASCII2WEB2.ZIP (700 KB)

Batch-ASCII2WebOrUniCode-Steps

You can download the script here:   ROY-BATCHCONVERT-ASCII2WEB2.ZIP (700 KB)

Enjoy!
Carsten aka Roy/SAC

PS. This script is freeware. Do with it whatever you like, except selling it. You can use it free, copy it, share it, even modify it if you like to. You are using it at your own risk. You cannot make me liable for any damage or loss of data that might results directly or indirectly because of the use of my script.

BatchASCII2WebBeforeAfter6

Tuesday, January 12, 2010

A Tale About A Group Called Superior Art Creations

The recent unfortunate events surrounding SAC were not only a surprise for me and a disappointment, but also caused me to stand back for a little and reflect on what happened over the past 16 years when a friend of mine and me started the group 16+ years ago. I did not plan to write as much in detail about stuff as I ended up eventually, but what is new? Hehe. Yes, this tale is written in a personal narrative and describes things the way I experienced them and remember today. This means that it is probably full of errors and bias’ that I might or might not was aware of.

I already wrote about how I got started with creating art. You can read all about it here.

How it Started

I co-founded SAC in December 1994 together with Hetero, whom I had just met in person for the first time a couple weeks earlier. I discussed with him the lack of a German art group and also the lack of an art group that has closer ties to the Warez scene. At that time the requests that I received just for NFO file logos and designs increased significantly. Instead of sitting around and just whining about those facts, we decided to start something. He and I knew some other local artists who were “independent” at the time. We asked them if they would join a local art group and that’s how it all started. The name for the group was my idea. I wanted a name that can be abbreviated to 3 letters that also sound cool. 3 Letters, because of the possible use as a file extension (EG. ICE used to do it for their ANSIS)

 


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░░ ▀██████▓▒ ░ ■ ▄▓█▄ ▀█▄ █ ░ ▓██ ░ ▒▓████ █▀ ░░
░░ ▀████▓▒ ░░▄ ▓██ █ ░ ▓██ ░ ▄■ ▒▀█▀▀█▀▄▄ ▄ ▄
░░ ▀███▓▒ ░ ▄ ▓██ ░ ▓██ ░ ▄ ▒▓███▀ █
░░ ▀██▓▒ ░ ▓ ▄ ▓██▀▄ █ ░ ▓████▄ █ ▒▓██▀ ▄
░░ ▀███▄▄██ ▄ ▄████▄██ ░ ▓███▀ ▓█▄▄▓██▀ ░░ HETERO
░░ ▀▀██▀ ▀▀ ▀███▀ ░ ▓██▀ ▀██▀▀ ░░ · ··SAC!
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Members of the First Hour, First Pack


The first members were Toxic Trancer, a musician, Dream Design, a gifted pixel artist active primarily on the Commodore Amiga for a group called Remedy at the time, Kaethe, a local female ANSI artist and Wife of the sysop of a local pirate board called “Mystery”, Hetero as Coder and ASCII/ANSI/Pixel Artist and me, as ANSI/ASCII/VGA Artist and Sysop of the World HQ for the group. I had started my own BBS in Spring that year.

Almost the entire crew planned to go together to The Party 1994 demo party in Herning, Denmark, so we thought that this is a good place and time to  release our very first art pack and introduce us to the world.

It was clear pretty early on that I was taking on the main responsibilities for managing the group. This made not just sense, because I also happened to run the WHQ of the group, but also because I seemed to have the required skills for this kind of job, which I performed for other groups beyond SAC also throughout my active scene years.

What SAC Was Not


We did not want to be German or European answer to the major US art groups like ACiD, iCE and the countless others which emulated the leading groups pretty much. We were focused on the pirate scene, which means that our recruitment efforts happened naturally among folks who were also active in Warez release groups. We also did not want to pressure ourselves to crank out an art pack release every month. We did not intend to compete with all those other groups. However, without some plan or goals, you won’t get anything done. So we decided to release quarterly packs with a fix release date, to have always the next goal in sight, but at the same time don’t pressure any of us too much to produce stuff for the packs. It should be possible for anybody who is even only somewhat active to get something done within 3 months, right? That was the thought.

Artists were working pretty much independent and took requests by themselves and also decided if they want to take a job or not. Only some projects required closer collaboration between multiple members, such as crack intro productions for the various release groups where somebody of us was a member of or had some buddies who called in a favor. There were attempts to establish some sort of centralized “requests” taking and distribution system that passes down art requests to available artists with the required skills, but they never went anywhere.

Global Expansion


SAC remained a relative democratic structured group that provided an outlet for pirate sceners with artistic talents to publish and promote their art work produced. This was especially beneficial for young and still unknown artists as an efficient method to get their name out. With the increasing popularity and fame of SAC as an art group in its own right, applications increased. Even more so once we did the jump into the internet and opened the #SAC IRC channel on the EFNet. The move into the Internet also transformed the group from a mainly local group with its largest member base in Berlin, Germany with some artists here and there in Germany to become a truly international group. The artwork produced before that was already international, but the members in the group itself were not.

Dealing with Applications to Join the Group


In the past most SAC members became part of the group, because somebody in the group noticed them and their work and asked them, if they would like to join. Nobody was doing this all on his own of course. Typically mails were sent on my BBS to the other members and sample artwork was uploaded to show the rest of the clique what they think. That was not a problem while we were only a few guys. It became one, when the group suddenly expanded quickly and at the same time applications of artists seeking us out exploded.

Not every new member was really that much interested in things like thinking about another artist and if he would be a good fit for the group. So decisions about some applications were not made for a long time, because we were waiting for the opinion of several l SAC members about a particular artist, which they never expressed. So a voting system was establish, where every member in SAC was able to cast his vote, his YAH or NAY to any artist application, if the member chooses to make use of this right. If nobody voted for a new applicant for some weeks anymore, the polls were closed and counted. Every vote counted equal, including mine and Hetero’s.

This system also became increasingly difficult, because it required members to call my BBS in Berlin frequently or some member had to try to catch a member of the group on IRC and send him the latest applications to cast votes. Blue Boxing and Calling Cards were pretty much dead and long distance calls by members to the WHQ an unacceptable burden. And with all things that grow bigger beyond a certain point, keeping everybody together becomes also impossible. It also becomes the time when parasites take advantage of the group, trying to join making promises and coming up with grandiose ideas, but never actually doing something, including not producing any art work. For the first time members had to be kicked out of the group, rather than leave it, almost always because the member left the scene or got into other projects that SAC wasn’t able to support at the time (e.g. Some of the musicians left to produce “real music” when MP3s just appeared but not wide spread and okay to include in an art package. Any pack over 2 MB was considered “large” back then.

Membership Levels in a Democracy?!


It became somewhat the rule that somebody who wants to explore other things for any reason, knowing that he cannot contribute to the group with it at the same time, would come forward and “retire'” from the active membership in SAC. Nobody saw any benefit of having a bloated up membership list, if only a fraction of those members would actually be represented by at least one piece of art in SAC pack release every quarter. Several of the members who retired, decided one day that they want to become active again and joined the group with full member status restored. I do not remember any case where somebody was rejected who retired himself from the group previously. To deal with those flaky kind of members who joined and then stopped doing anything without retiring on their own, something had to be done. The answer was to introduce some sort of hierarchy to the group, which was not a chain of command like hierarchy, but a way to express seniority and amount of contribution to the group. New members joined as “trial members”. After a pack or two, the trial was over, if the artist contributed to the art packs during this time. After even longer active membership, the status changed to “senior member”. Trial members saw a much larger fluctuation and were in many cases also just the type of members that were kicked out versus left by themselves.

The Scene Changed


At the end of 1997 things changed. The Internet changed the scene a lot, for the better and unfortunately also for the worse. A lot of idiots and jerks seemed to got access to what used to be a relatively small and easy to keep track of bunch of folks who were bound by common motivations, interests and goals and for the most part also similar ethics and universally accepted rules of conduct.

I was not so happy anymore and did not like the direction where things seemed to be heading at that time. Towards the end of 1997 and beginning of 1998, I started to quit member and even leader ship and senior positions in various release groups, some of which I helped founding and growing myself. I left Dynasty, Backlash and Razor 1911. I still continued with SAC and also Peanuts (the former SAC PPE section), focusing more on the demo scene and the development of free tools for other sysops. A slow retreat from the pirate scene was underway and plans were made to move my pirate BBS from the underground to the light of day. I had already purchased licenses for the BBS software months earlier when suddenly in 1997, the Berlin State Police raided my place and I got busted. I was trying to find the paperwork from this, but it must be buried somewhere and I don’t remember when exactly the bust happened. Sorry. I will update this post when I figure it out. I wrote about the experience of the bust itself on my web site, if you would like to learn more about it.

I got eventually fined in 1998, but already got my personal PC back since it had virtually no pirated software on it and was also not used for the BBS, which was the reason for my bust. Since I already bought a new PC shortly after my other ones were seized, I had two computers again, also ISDN cards and a modem, licensed BBS software and OS/2 Warp operating system to re-launch my BBS now as public demo scene board right from the get go. But it was already late 1998. I was drafted into the German army in January 1998, out of  a full paid job, on only of a fraction of my jobs income and not covering any of my expenses to run the BBS. Every day I was in the army to serve my mandatory military service, I lost money. At the same time callers dried up for any BBS anywhere in the world. The Internet had already won, even if some sysops did not want it to be true and tried hard to keep their BBS alive. I shut it down one day and cannot even remember on what day that actually happened.

Meanwhile I was fighting a “cold war” with the German Army. I also got my court appointment because of my BBS while I was in the army. I got a fine and the BBS hardware that the police seized was kept as punishment for what I did. It wasn’t illegal when I started with this stuff, became somewhat not okay, but ignored later, to become illegal eventually with the BSA and other entities trying to fight back and make examples of as many of the pirates as they could. German laws shielded me from this at that time, fortunately. The court noticed the complete lack of selfish and financial motives for what I was doing and decided that it would not be of the states interest to make me to a criminal with all its far reaching consequences. I ended up with the equivalent of a very expensive speeding ticket and community work in form of a monetary donation to a charity of my own choosing.

This also meant that the software companies could not come after me because of it. Something that some of my American buddies were not so lucky with, unfortunately.

I was working after I finished military service for a couple months as a business consultant in a different city and living in hotels 5 out of 7 days of the week. I knew already when I started with this project that I would leave the company and Germany altogether when my current assignment will be over. I made that a condition for taking the offer of the foreign company, that I will not abandon a limited term project where it would be very hard to replace me, if I just leave them behind. In March 1999 the project was done and I flew in April 1999, one day after my 25th birthday to Switzerland.

On the Road


There I lived only for a year. I knew that from the start, because the position they hired me originally for was in the United States. The time in Switzerland was primarily for the company to test me and to check if I am the right guy for the job and also gave them time to get the required work visa for me to move to the United States. The main office in Switzerland was in St. Gallen. I only rented a studio there, nothing big and put most of my stuff that I did not want and could take to Switzerland into storage in Germany. I also ended up living 5 days out of 7 in a hotel at the other end of Switzerland in Basel to work on a lucrative assignment for the Pharmaceutical giant Hoffmann La Roche. It became increasingly hard for me to do any serious management of Superior Art Creations. That things did not work too well is clearly visible at the release dates of SAC packs at the time. The quarterly release date was missed ever more frequent.

Organizing and “Leading” a group is a lot of work. More work than most folks can imagine. Anybody who tried it will agree with me on this one. It is funny, I always got the feeling as if nothing would get done if it would not be for a few stupid idiots who try to get their buddies on track with a goal and focused, holding their hands, yell or grow gray hair until the next goal was finally reached, just to be replaced by the next one (e.g. next release). Taking on responsibilities on their own, planning and focusing on something specific, short term, but part of a larger picture, seems to be a trait that the majority of people apparently lack.  

Handing Over Responsibility for the Group


I decided to do the only right thing that I could think of, which was handling over responsibility to somebody else. I did that while I was in Switzerland. The person I chose was Ferrex. I remained in the NFO file for a bit longer and also contributed to a pack with a few things once in a while. But in 2001 I asked to be removed from the active member list and officially retire. I had moved to the United States a year earlier. My company was in the Internet Business and we know what happened in 2001, starting already at the end of 2000. The DOT.COM crash of course. I was mentally prepared to pack up again to return to Germany because of another round of lay-offs that shock many businesses in the industry, including the company I worked for via a work-visa bound to my employment contract with this company.

The company had to think fast and act even faster to change focus and strategy in order to survive.

A Lot of Changes With Lasting Impact


The few people left to do the work had to put in over time, a lot. I learned a lot during this time, which also lead to me becoming self employed in 2007, leaving my former visa and green card sponsor in good terms, still maintaining personal contacts with its owners and management. The company is doing good today, which is good. I also got the time to do something else for myself again and was for the first time thinking about the old days of bulletin boards and text art again. windows 95 was replaced by Windows 98, which were both pretty much compatible still with the old fashioned MS DOS operating system. By the time I looked back again, Windows 2000 came and went and Windows XP and Windows 2003 Servers were the OS that dominated the PC market. Many of the old stuff did not even run on the machines anymore. MS DOS was virtually gone with some fragments of it left here and there. At was at this time when I started to worry about the legacy of SAC and my own work as ASCII/ANSI artist. Displaying an ANSI required already special software that did not come with the OS anymore.

Here are some posts and comments from the Time before I became involved with SAC again, starting with nice story that describes how the old stuff (scene, BBS, ANSI art) was ultimately responsible for other things that became relevant for my life, but had nothing to do with my scene past per se.

Feb, 11 2006 - How things happen such as this Blog

Launch of RoySAC.com


The old version of Cumbrowski.com had multiple subjects and content for each of those subjects grew, the family part, the professional part and the oldskool scene part. So I decided in 2006 to create three web sites out of the one to keep things separated. The result was the move from Cumbrowski.com to its own domain, just for the old scene stuff.  May 21, 2006 - Site Cleanup and Re-Structure and a New Site launch
Aug 19, 2006 Move to RoySAC.com - Official Re-Launch of RoySAC.com


Meanwhile


I had contact with “Idiana” (the girlfriend of Ferrex, not an active artist, but keeping things together and do Ferrex job) and was able to gather some more information. I even had a Wiki up for a short period of time to gather more information, but I remained the only contributor despite the promises that were made by others
to do something as well.

May 2007 - I got contacted by “Xeek” regarding the domain “SuperiorArtCreations.com”, which was just about to expire. Transferred the domain. He also sent me a ZIP with some Site Layout Ideas in a early stage

Expansion of SAC Section at RoySAC.com Began


To see how things progressed, check out the Web Archive (Unfortunately it only has data  since 11-2007, but you can see the difference between the site in November compared to the expanded version a month later.

Aug 01, 2007 - Major Site Expansion and New SAC Section with Art Packs Page
Aug 31, 2007 - Welcome to the ASCII Art Videos

I started Capturing SAC Cracktros and Intros and made them available on YouTube mainly and some also at other video sharing web sites. I created a special account on YouTube called “sacreleases”. The account started out with SAC related content only, but was then expanded, since I only made little progress on the few remaining SAC productions that I was unable to capture on video.

I created special play lists for the SAC stuff though, to keep it separate from the other videos


Oct 15, 2007 - It Was Time Again For A Clean-Up


Dec 3, 2007 - Web Archive After Phase 1 - SAC Updates and Site Content Additions

Getting the SAC Pack Content Online


Major Work began in December 2008. Multiple Posts 12-2008 and 01-2009

Dec 29, 2008 - Interesting SAC Art Packs Statistics, Figures and Downloads
Dec 39, 2008 - Interesting SAC Art Packs Statistics, Figures and Downloads - Part II
Jan 18, 2009 - First ASCII Art Piece of Mine in Ages

Before I had the stuff up on my website I already put up many of it on sites like Flickr, YouTube and others.
I did that with stuff that I processed throughout the year. I created Flickr Sets with converted ANSI/ASCII and VGA art from the packs as early as January 2009. I also uploaded converted content to my file share account at Mediafire.com where people could download the content in packages and collection format.

My Flickr.com Collection for SAC artwork

Side Project - The SAC All Time Member List. Decision Made to post what I had so far publicly in the hope that SAC members would respond and provide info on outstanding and open questions. I maintained the list via Google Docs and Spreadsheets  and even gave several SAC members with whom I was able to get in touch with access to the document for collaborative editing. Nobody ever did a single edit.

Apr 27, 2009 - The SAC – Superior Art Creations All-Time Member List Project Update

Almost One Year of Work Bears Finally Fruits


1. Begin Oct 2009, Cracktro Browse
    Oct 2, 2009 - SAC Crack Intros and BBS’tros Collection Finally Live on RoySAC.com

2. End Oct 2009 SAC Pack Browse (Some Long Weekends for the last stretch and get the packs finally up)
    Oct 15, 2009 - SAC Art Packs Now Accessible Via Web Browser Online

Final Words


I knew that a SAC channel was kept up on IRC and also spend a little bit time there now and then. Never for extended periods of time, because I wasted too much time on IRC already in the many years before. There was not much going on there, but somebody was always there, not a SAC member but somebody who was not a bot. That's also the reason why I referred people time and again to the channel and also others like #ACID to try to find an active artist who is willing to take requests for artwork.

At the same time, i made myself accessible and reachable. A simple search in any of the major search engines for “Superior Art Creations”, “Roy/SAC” or even “ANSI Art” would have lead anybody who was looking for me or information about SAC right here and to all the stuff that I did over the years. I expanded my outreach beyond the steadily growing web site here at RoySAC.com even further with creating a MySpace page for Roy and a MySpace group dedicated to ANSI Art. I started a text art group on Google Groups, started a Facebook group for Superior Art Creations, a YouTube channel, Flickr collection and sets, Picasa Albums. I updated content at Pouet and made content available for backup at my file share account at Mediafire.com and on my web site.

The only place where I did not publish was on Warez FTP Servers and on IRC. While the FTP option was a problem due to the lack of access, it had just like IRC one major flaw, it only lasts for a very short period of time and is  then gone for ever into oblivion and camping out there like a bum was out of the question, but I did not feel it necessary. Even the most reactionary scener from the old days could not forever ignore the developments and changes around him and stuck to only use the Internet Services FTP, IRC and EMAIL, ignoring the WEB entirely. One search in Google and everything would be right in their face. What they decide to do with it is a quite different story, but ignoring it was virtually impossible.

Whenever I encountered another former SAC member at any of those places or got contacted via my email address at GMX.DE, which was my scener email address since 1995 already and was continuously working with only a couple months interruption in 2009, I pointed to what I did and what I wanted to do, asking for their help and opinions. I also noted contact information in the non-public version of the SAC member list. Emails, Web Sites, Facebook Profiles, Phone Numbers, Real Names etc. Nothing happened suddenly and certainly not secretly either. At stake was the legacy of a group that I helped founding and growing for 7 years and a scene I was part of for 9 years of my life. I could not allow this to slip away into the darkness and become lost forever. I was not just talking about doing something, but went ahead and did it. How good of a job I did might be debatable, but out of the question should be the fact that doing something is indefinitely better than doing nothing at all.

During all this time I stated over and over again, that I consider the stuff I did for SAC on the Web to be only “preliminary” until a better solution is found, involving other SAC members to build a final and official legacy for the group together. It’s not about me, it’s about us. SAC is a result of a joint effort by over 100 individuals over a period of more than a decade of work and dedication and only another joined effort can secure the legacy of it eventually. I hope my efforts contribute to this effort, but they should not be the end of it.

I appreciate the work of others who are driven by very similar motives like Lord Scarlet of Sixteen Colors, Ben Garret of Defacto2.net, Jason Scott of Textfiles.com (and director of the BBS Documentary DVD), RaD Man of ACiD (Dark Domain DVD and public speaker about the subject), the folks at Blocktronics and the many others like them or supporting those efforts. See my links section for more scene preservation efforts and more.

I will continue with my efforts regardless of what happened and hope that others will also start helping to preserve a legacy that became part of the history for all of us and should be worth remembering, even after our deaths long time in the future.

Cheers!

Carsten aka Roy/SAC in 2010

Friday, December 25, 2009

Batch MS DOS ASCII to Web Converter Script

A little script that converts MS DOS ASCII files, such as NFO's  or FILE_ID.DIZ text files (Code Page 437, USA) to Unicode  and HTML encoded files that can be used to display the ASCII art, specifically the "High ASCII" or block ASCII art on a web site. The script is written in VBScript, but the release package also includes a Windows executable, which is the VBScript converted via VBSEdit by Adersoft.

I used the same script to prepare the ASCIIs in my text art galleries on my web site, such as:

just to name a few.

NOTE: An Updated Version of the Script is also available now!

You can download the script here:   ROY-BATCHCONVERT-ASCII2WEB.ZIP (555 KB)

For example the top logo of this NFO file, which is in DOS ASCII Format and looks like this:


───────── ▄ ▄▄▄▄ ▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄ ▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄ ▄ ▄▄▄ ▄ ▄▄▄ ▄▄▄▄▄ ▄ ─────────
·R·E·L·.· ▄ ▄▄▄▄ ▀▀▀▀▀▀███ ▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀███ █ ███ ▀ ███ ▄▄▄▄ ▄ ·2·0·0·9·
─────────── ▄ ▄▄▄ ███ ▄▄██▀ █ ███ █ ███ █▄ ▀▀▀▀▀███ ▄▄▄ ▄ ───────────
▄▄ ███ ▄ ███ █ ███▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄ ▄▄▄▄▄███ ▄▄
▀▀▀ ███ ▀ ▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀ ▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀


would be converted to the following;

&#9472;&#9472;&#9472;&#9472;&#9472;&#9472;&#9472;&#9472;&#9472; &#9604; &#9604;&#9604;&#9604;&#9604; &#9604;&#9604;&#9604;&#9604;&#9604;&#9604;&#9604;&#9604;&#9604;   &#9604;&#9604;&#9604;&#9604;&#9604;&#9604;&#9604;&#9604;&#9604;  &#9604; &#9604;&#9604;&#9604; &#9604; &#9604;&#9604;&#9604; &#9604;&#9604;&#9604;&#9604;&#9604; &#9604; &#9472;&#9472;&#9472;&#9472;&#9472;&#9472;&#9472;&#9472;&#9472;
&middot;R&middot;E&middot;L&middot;.&middot;  &#9604; &#9604;&#9604;&#9604;&#9604; &#9600;&#9600;&#9600;&#9600;&#9600;&#9600;&#9608;&#9608;&#9608; &#9600;&#9600;&#9600;&#9600;&#9600;&#9600;&#9600;&#9600;&#9608;&#9608;&#9608; &#9608; &#9608;&#9608;&#9608; &#9600; &#9608;&#9608;&#9608; &#9604;&#9604;&#9604;&#9604; &#9604;  &middot;2&middot;0&middot;0&middot;9&middot;
&#9472;&#9472;&#9472;&#9472;&#9472;&#9472;&#9472;&#9472;&#9472;&#9472;&#9472; &#9604; &#9604;&#9604;&#9604; &#9608;&#9608;&#9608; &#9604;&#9604;&#9608;&#9608;&#9600; &#9608; &#9608;&#9608;&#9608; &#9608; &#9608;&#9608;&#9608; &#9608;&#9604; &#9600;&#9600;&#9600;&#9600;&#9600;&#9608;&#9608;&#9608; &#9604;&#9604;&#9604; &#9604; &#9472;&#9472;&#9472;&#9472;&#9472;&#9472;&#9472;&#9472;&#9472;&#9472;&#9472;
               &#9604;&#9604; &#9608;&#9608;&#9608; &#9604; &#9608;&#9608;&#9608; &#9608; &#9608;&#9608;&#9608;&#9604;&#9604;&#9604;&#9604;&#9604;&#9604;&#9604;&#9604;  &#9604;&#9604;&#9604;&#9604;&#9604;&#9608;&#9608;&#9608; &#9604;&#9604;
                  &#9600;&#9600;&#9600;   &#9608;&#9608;&#9608; &#9600;  &#9600;&#9600;&#9600;&#9600;&#9600;&#9600;&#9600;&#9600;&#9600;  &#9600;&#9600;&#9600;&#9600;&#9600;&#9600;&#9600;&#9600;

Note: I included the release ZIP archive are the files roy.asc and roy.web as examples also.

It would look just like the ASCII above the blue code, if you use it properly in your HTML page.

The Web encoded ASCII does not include <BR> Tags for the line-breaks. You have to add those manually or do what I do on my web site and enclose the code in <PRE> </PRE> tags, which preserves the line-breaks within the enclosed text.

Since the result is Unicode and not DOS ASCII anymore, you can use any mono-space font to display the ASCII somewhat correctly. You won't get a 100% accurate result anyway, because the old MS DOS font set is not part of Windows anymore. What you can get is only a close approximation. I use on my web site the font "Lucida Console", which seems to be installed on many machines. If the Windows of the user who visits your page with the ASCII for example does not have that font installed, Windows will automatically pick another font that comes close. I use the following CSS formatting for the PRE tags where I show ASCIIs. 

 


   1: pre {
   2:    background-color:#000;
   3:    color:#FFF;
   4:    display:block;
   5:    font-family:"Lucida Console", monospace;
   6:    font-size:9pt;
   7:    line-height:12px;
   8:    padding:10px;
   9:    text-align:left;
  10:  } 

If the PRE Tag is also used for something else on your web site then you can also define it for a specific class selector like


   1: pre.asciiart {
   2: ...
   3: } 

You would then also have to extend the PRE HTML tag like this:


   1: <PRE class=asciiart>
   2: ...
   3: </PRE> 

The script is designed to convert all files with a specified extension (.ASC by default) to web ready files with a new extension (.WEB by default, but you could also make it .HTML or whatever).

There are two additional options, where I recommend to use the defaults (which is "yes").

The first one is "Sanitize?"


What that does, is removing ASCII characters with an ASCII code smaller than 32, which are special control characters that cannot be printed anyway, with 3 exceptions, chr(10) = line-feed, chr(13) = carriage-return and chr(9) = tab. LF and CR remain unchanged. Tab characters will be converted to 8 spaces, which is the default MS DOS tab-stop.


The second option is "HTML Encode?", which means that all non-US-ASCII characters (the 7 bit ASCII codes) will be converted to HTML codes like &#XXX;. Also standard ASCII characters that could be misinterpreted by HTML or DHTML and XML are also encoded, like the " becomes &quot;, & becomes &amp;, < becomes &lt; and > becomes &gt; etc.


Part of this package is the image "Batch-ASCII-2-Web-Steps.jpg", which shows screenshots of all the steps where the script goes through.

You can download the script here:   ROY-BATCHCONVERT-ASCII2WEB.ZIP (555 KB)

Batch-ASCII-2-Web-Steps

You can download the script here:   ROY-BATCHCONVERT-ASCII2WEB.ZIP (555 KB)

Enjoy!
Carsten aka Roy/SAC

PS. This script is freeware. Do with it whatever you like, except selling it. You can use it free, copy it, share it, even modify it if you like to. You are using it at your own risk. You cannot make me liable for any damage or loss of data that might results directly or indirectly because of the use of my script.

Batch-ASCII-2-Web-BeforeAfter

Thursday, November 19, 2009

RoySAC.com Updates Brief

I have not posted at my blog for a long while (in comparison to the months before). This was actually not because of the lack of things to write about. There was plenty for me to write, but it seems that I tend to write less, the more is happening. Maybe because of the lack of time that usually concurs with more events happening or maybe it is just that I think too much about all the stuff I should write about that I forget to actually write something altogether.  Well, I need to think about that one :).

I decided now to write about each thing that I consider noteworthy only briefly and consolidated in this and another post to follow. Each thing by itself would probably have warranted its own post, but not at this time.

Downloads Section Expanded

   

I expanded the downloads page of my website to include two new sections.

1. Music Trackers tools for Windows and DOS.

See Tracker Downloads

Tracker music is a staple of the classic demo scene before the computers became powerful and advanced enough to use fully digital recordings of music for programs, demos and games. It was also the limitations of hard disk space and memory that lead to the development of alternatives such as the “Tracker”. The most famous known tracker software is probably the program “Sound Tracker” for the Commodore Amiga. Its file format, the classic “.MOD”, is still a pseudo standard today, including on the PC and supported by virtually all other tracker programs that came later. A tracker uses sound snippets (samples) rather than a full recording of a song, which can be played back at specified times with effects applied to them to change things like the tempo, volume and  octave.  Those settings are arranged in patterns and tracks with one track for each output “channel” for allowing stereo effects. Most of these tools were developed by members of the demoscene and are available for free for anybody who wants to use them. I made the most popular ones for DOS and also some newer ones for MS Windows 32b available for download, including FastTracker 2 by Triton (.XM files) and ScreamTracker 3 by Future Crew (.S3M files).

2. MS DOS Emulators

See Emulator Downloads

During the video capture of old MS DOS intros and cracktros that where created by SAC I became aware of the problems with running those old DOS programs on modern day PCs with operating systems like Windows XP and later. Most won’t run and with the introduction of 64 Bit versions of Windows, not even start, because Microsoft does not support old 16 bit applications with those operating systems anymore.

I had to use MS DOS emulators in order to be able to run and then capture those intros. Again, many of those emulators are free to download and use. Famous examples of DOS emulators that are available for download at my site now are the programs DOS Box and Bochs.

TheDraw Fonts Page

See: Over 100 fonts for the DOS ANSI Editor TheDraw

I am using since 1993 or so the DOS ANSI Editor TheDraw. Although later tools like ACiDDraw provided more features and problems with using the editor under Windows XP and Vista and the emergence of editors for Win32 operating systems, like PabloDraw, I continued to use it to this day. TheDraw provides a nice feature that was appreciated by sysops who were not ANSI artists themselves and could not find one to do custom artwork for their Bulleting Board System, called custom fonts. Unfortunately only too few fonts were made and released though, but I was able to collect over 100 of them. I made them available for download in one single package and also for individual download.

I created a special page where I also show the full character set of each font to show how they look and to show the characters that each font supports. I also added additional information to most of the fonts, like the style and the colors used (for the ANSI fonts). I broke the fonts up into two groups, ASCII fonts (no colors) and ANSI fonts. Those fonts are still a viable option for anybody who needs an ANSI for whatever reason and cannot find an artist who is willing to make one for you (Like me, many oldskool ANSI artists are “retired” today and don’t accept any new art requests by anybody).

My collection also includes fonts that I created myself. I created two fonts for example to be able to quickly create new page headers for my site. Those fonts can also be downloaded and reused by you.

I also provided instruction for how to install and use custom TheDraw fonts. The tool TheDraw itself is also available on my web site at the download section, where you can also find the other editors for download that I mentioned earlier.

Dytec – Dynamic Technologies Homepage

See Dytec Temp Homepage

I was a senior member and at some point in time even leader of the PC section of the German release group Dynamic Technologies, short Dytec, which was founded for the Commodore 64 in East Berlin, Germany in 1990 by a my personal friend with the handle “Fatman”.

Dytec has no official homepage on the Internet and information and productions, like intros, cracktros and dentros created by the different sections for the Commodore 64, Commodore Amiga and PC are scattered all over the Internet. I created a page that provides some historic background of the group and video captures of all productions from all three platforms that I was able to find. I also show some of the ASCII artwork that was used by Dytec PC for its releases, like NFO files and FILE_ID.DIZ.

It’s not the official homepage for the group by any means, but the best there is IMO to compare it to something like that, until a real homepage/site is maybe created for Dynamic Technologies one day.

OldSkool DemoMaker (OSDM) Intros Page

See My OSDM Intros Page

I created a bunch of nice oldskool intros and cracktros for RoySAC.com and other purposes using the cool and free tool called OldSkool DemoMaker by Peace/Testaware. I showcase each of my intros and show the video capture for each of them. Links to download the videos and the intros themselves are also provided.

I also provided some background story and information for each of the productions, including full credits for the music that I used and graphics that I did not create myself.

For all the folks who are interested to learn more about the tool itself, I provided some background information and useful links related to the OSDM in general as well.

FILE_ID.DIZ Collection

Update! See File_ID.DIZ Collection

I almost forgot this to mention. I also created a small collection on the side for FILE_ID.DIZ logos used by scene groups to describe and promote their releases in bulletin board systems and FTP sites.

I have so far already 131 individual File_ID.DIZ ASCII designs collected and added to my collection. File_ID’s are not large, so the whole collection is displayed on just a single page. Check them out!

          ____:_THE_:_        ________  _:_  _____:_
\__ |___/ |______ / ____ \/ | | ___/
D/ i _ | ___ \/ | | / |__| __|_
/ _ | l | \ / | | \ l \ _l |
\___| |_____|__|\/| |_____/\_____\_____|
: .`--' . : `—-' -*GUYS*- . : .
. Dungeon Hack Disk [1/4] .
FROM STRATEGIC SIMULATIONS INC.

Other Things I Already Reported


I already wrote about other additions and changes to my site in previous posts of mine that you might want to check out for more information.



That’s it, regarding news about my Site RoySAC.com 


Cheers!


Carsten aka Roy/SAC

Monday, April 27, 2009

The SAC – Superior Art Creations All-Time Member List Project Update

scr-sac.NFO I am trying for a while now to create an all time Superior Art Creations member list. This is unfortunately no easy task, because the information in the SAC.NFO files of the SAC Pack releases were not always as well maintained as they should have been. I don’t want to point and blame anybody, but its is pretty tough to get a clear picture of who is who and who was in when as what, with the amount of information that can be extracted from the releases of the group itself.

Here is what I came up with so for. The stuff that is high lighted with an orange background is where I would be happy, if anybody has an answer to my question or the missing information, whatever the case might be.

Also, the whole last section with “Non-Contributing Temp Members” is open for input. Listed there are names that were mentioned that they are members of SAC, but I could not find any contribution of those guys in any of the SAC art packs. Maybe they did something under the name of SAC, but nothing that found its way into an art pack. If that is the case, then I want of course give the credits where credits are due and remove that person from the “non-contributing” section.

asx-s30

If you know any of the folks where questions are still in the room or if you have any tip how or where I could find out more about them etc. Please let me know. The comments section of this blog post would do just fine.

I’d appreciate it. Thanks.

# Handles / Aliases File Prefix(es) Country PPE PRG VGA MFX ANS ASC ADM Notes/Comments
Contributing Members (Included in Art Packs)                
1 2Fast 2F
Germany           X    
2 Acen AC
Germany       X        
3 Allanon ALN
Sweden           X    
4 Antibody ANTI / AB Denmark     X   X X    
5 Argon Factor AR Germany       X        
6 Arlequin ARL / AR Argentina         X X    
7 Asphyx ASX
France     X   X X    
8 Axess AXS
Germany     X X        
9 Barium B5
n/a     X   X X    
10 Bazilla BAZ
Germany     X          
11 Brane BNE
Sweden           X    
12 Cokine COK
Sweden     X          
13 Comrade COM
Canada   X            
14 Creator CRE
Australia     X          
15 Creature of Hell COH / CH USA     X X X      
16 Crome CROME / CRM Germany       X        
17 cRu / Maverick CRU
Germany         X X    
18 Crusader CDR
Sweden           X    
19 D0n DN
n/a           X    
20 DAC DAC
Germany       X        
21 Dalezy / The Unconsciousness / Animal DLZ / TU / AN Germany       X        
22 Dark Star / Puschel DS / PL Germany     X   X X    
23 Davek DKNY
USA         X X    
24 Desolation Angel DA
USA     X          
25 Dipswitch DIP
Germany           X    
26 Don Rapello DON
Finland           X    
27 Dream Design DD
Germany   X X   X      
28 DW0 DW0
n/a         X     What's the full name?
29 Eboy EB
Finland     X   X X    
30 Edge ED
USA     X          
31 Ex0 EX0
Australia         X X    
32 F0st FST / FS France     X     X    
33 Ferrex FRX / FX Germany   X X   X X    
34 Flames FLAMES
Germany     X     X    
35 Fourth 4TH
n/a           X    
36 Geareo MYD
n/a           X    
37 Giovanni GIO
Germany       X        
38 Grap GP
Germany   X            
39 GrymmJack GJ
USA           X    
40 GTI GTI
Canada     X   X X    
41 Helix HLX
USA           X    
42 Hetero HT
Germany   X X   X X    
43 HKultra HKU
n/a     X          
44 IxLover Buddha IX
n/a     X     X    
45 [K] K Germany   X X          
46 Kaethe KT
Germany         X X    
47 Kenet K
France     X          
48 KMX KMX
Poland   X           What does KMX stand for?
49 Maktone MT / M1 Sweden       X        
50 Markgoh MG
Canada           X    
51 Marky MY / M Germany     X     X    
52 Matador MTD
Russia   X       X    
53 Mattey MATTEY
n/a     X          
54 McBarn MB
Sweden       X        
55 Midfit MF
Germany   X            
56 Moolok MOO
Germany     X   X      
57 Mr.Death MRDEATH / MRD Sweden       X        
58 Mr.Jezus MRJEZUS
Finland     X          
59 Mydknight MID
Canada           X    
60 Myth MYTH
Germany   X            
61 Neophyte NP
Germany   X            
62 Nerv NERV / NR France     X   X X    
63 Nova N Australia     X          
64 Pasha P
Germany     X     X    
65 PDZ PDZ
n/a           X   PDZ = Podzi?
66 Poldi PD
Germany     X   X X    
67 Quasar QS
Sweden           X    
68 Rainer RN
Germany       X        
69 Raiser RS
Germany         X X    
70 Rave RV
Germany     X   X X    
71 Rez REZ
Netherlands   X   X       Is Rez an abbreviation?
72 Roodolph ROO Poland           X    
73 Roy ROY
Germany/USA X X X   X X    
74 RZ RZ
n/a           X   RZ = Rahzel? Uses }8]a or }8] as sig in pics
75 S! S!
n/a           X   S! = Stylez or S! = Serges or somebody else?
76 Scour SCR
USA           X    
77 Senser SNS
France     X   X X    
78 Sergeon Cuts SERGEON
USA     X          
79 Stonehedge SH
Germany       X        
80 Shaq SQ Russia           X    
81 Shot ST
Germany         X      
82 Silent SiL
n/a     X          
83 sOul SOUL
Germany       X        
84 Spectrum SPC
Germany   X            
85 Spoon SPN
Germany       X        
86 Sprocket SPROCKET
Norway     X          
87 Squizzy SQZ
Netherlands           X    
88 Strike Light SL
Canada         X X    
89 Svenzzon SVENZZON / SVEN / SV n/a       X   X    
90 Synec SY
Germany   X            
91 Techbit TB
Canada     X          
92 Teepak TPK
Germany     X   X X    
93 Toxic Trancer TOX
Germany
      X        
94 v0uck VK
n/a           X    
95 W.O.T.W. WOTW
Germany       X        
96 Webpige0 W0
n/a     X   X X    
SAC PPE Coders (Had no file prefix)                
97 Cyz   Germany X              
98 Monster   Germany X              
99 Fox   Germany X              
100 Cyber Brain   Germany X              
Administrative Members                    
Internet Coordinators, except for Idiana who did Group Management and Organization
101 Hoziris   Israel             X  
102 Cercyon   Germany             X  
103 Corex   Germany             X  
104 Idiana   Germany             X  
Guest Contributors                    
Included in one or more SAC Pack releases, but never had status of SAC member
n/a Z80 Z80 Germany   1            
Non Contributing Temp Members                
This list may includes members where I could not match them up confidentially with a file prefix from the pack.
It could also be that one person is listed with multiple nick names or real name.
If you know of any contributions to the group and it to the comments please.
  Ripper   Germany                
  Prosthesis   Finland                
  Paledeth   Sweden                
  White Zombie TWZ Denmark                
  Darkheart   Sweden                
  Felix   Germany                
  Timelord   Italy                
  Necrotoad   Canada                
  Nitrifik   Sweden                
  Spinsane SP n/a                
  Xeek XK n/a                
  PODZI   n/a               Podzi = PDZ
  Stylez   Germany               Styles = S!?
  Serges   n/a               Serges = S!?
  Sick Doctor   n/a               Serges = Sick Doctor?
  Rahzel   n/a               Rahzel = RZ?
  Shady   Germany               Shady = S!?

Explanation of Columns
PPE = PCBoard BBS Tools Programmer (using PPL-PCBoard Programming Language, which are compiled to PPE’s)
PRG = Programmer/Coder of Intros, tools etc. such as the SACtros for SAC artpack releases.
VGA = Pixel Art Graphician and later also hi-res art via Photoshop etc.
MFX = Musician, mainly old-school tracker MOD modules (or FastTracker, ScreamTracker etc.)
ANS = ANSI text artist (like the image below)
ASC = ASCII text artist, 7-Bit and/or “high ASCII” (Block ASCII)
ADM = Administrative work, Internet Coordinator, Bot-Master (IRC) and those sorts of things)w0-sacns.ANS

I am feeling that we come slowly but surely closer to the goal of having a complete and correct all-time Superior Art Creations member list that I can post on the SAC section of the site as I promised to do so already two or some more years ago.

Cheers!

Carsten aka Roy/SAC