Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/ANSI_Scene> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 34 of
34
with 100 triples per page.
- ANSI_Scene abstract "The ANSI art computer art form found wide popularity and distribution on BBS systems throughout North America and the world. Its use of standard computer symbols and colors by particularly talented individuals made it somewhat of a 'cult' art form and provided a springboard for talented computer artists in later years.This form gave rise to a 'scene', or subculture community of artists who created competitive groups, similar to hackers (and sometimes overlapping these groups). These groups would assemble their best, most current art into downloadable 'packs' for distribution on BBS systems. These could be simply zipped packs of loose art with some text files explaining them, or encoded programs that displayed the art, sometimes with music in MOD format accompanying.A subset of the broader ANSI art scene arose in 1993-1994, known as the 'Lit Scene'. Packaged and distributed similarly to ANSI art packs, zipped and uploaded to BBS systems throughout the United States and the world, Lit packs saw increasing popularity - and rising quality - until an abrupt end of the scene coincident with the explosion of the web-driven commercial Internet. These Lit packs often also contained ANSI art by authors and guest artists, and music that could be played by reader clients provided with the packs, composed on hexadecimal sound editors using instrument samples, typically in MOD format as originally developed on the Amiga and later also used on early Soundblaster-powered PC's. The effective replacement of the BBS scene with the Internet effectively decimated both sides of the ANSI and Lit scenes, creators and users.Two of the most well-known and prolific Lit groups were Soulz at Zero and its successor Candelabra, the latter of which restarted as a website a few years after its initial run as a traditional BBS-driven distributed 'pack'-zine. Candelabra's run as a website lasted the better part of a decade. The leader of SaZ, The Stranger, and one of its best-known writers, WiSH, joined Candelabra, whose founder and original editor The Alienist had also contributed briefly to SaZ during its run.".
- ANSI_Scene wikiPageID "36671802".
- ANSI_Scene wikiPageLength "2524".
- ANSI_Scene wikiPageOutDegree "17".
- ANSI_Scene wikiPageRevisionID "641228741".
- ANSI_Scene wikiPageWikiLink ANSI_art.
- ANSI_Scene wikiPageWikiLink Amiga.
- ANSI_Scene wikiPageWikiLink Bulletin_board_system.
- ANSI_Scene wikiPageWikiLink Category:Computer_art.
- ANSI_Scene wikiPageWikiLink Computer_art.
- ANSI_Scene wikiPageWikiLink Hacker_culture.
- ANSI_Scene wikiPageWikiLink Hexadecimal.
- ANSI_Scene wikiPageWikiLink Internet.
- ANSI_Scene wikiPageWikiLink MOD_(file_format).
- ANSI_Scene wikiPageWikiLink North_America.
- ANSI_Scene wikiPageWikiLink Personal_computer.
- ANSI_Scene wikiPageWikiLink Soulz_at_Zero.
- ANSI_Scene wikiPageWikiLink Sound_Blaster.
- ANSI_Scene wikiPageWikiLink Subculture.
- ANSI_Scene wikiPageWikiLink World_Wide_Web.
- ANSI_Scene wikiPageWikiLink Zip_(file_format).
- ANSI_Scene wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Essay-like.
- ANSI_Scene wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Merge_to.
- ANSI_Scene wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Multiple_issues.
- ANSI_Scene wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Orphan.
- ANSI_Scene wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Unreferenced.
- ANSI_Scene subject Category:Computer_art.
- ANSI_Scene comment "The ANSI art computer art form found wide popularity and distribution on BBS systems throughout North America and the world. Its use of standard computer symbols and colors by particularly talented individuals made it somewhat of a 'cult' art form and provided a springboard for talented computer artists in later years.This form gave rise to a 'scene', or subculture community of artists who created competitive groups, similar to hackers (and sometimes overlapping these groups).".
- ANSI_Scene label "ANSI Scene".
- ANSI_Scene sameAs Q4653039.
- ANSI_Scene sameAs m.0kvh11n.
- ANSI_Scene sameAs Q4653039.
- ANSI_Scene wasDerivedFrom ANSI_Scene?oldid=641228741.
- ANSI_Scene isPrimaryTopicOf ANSI_Scene.