Demosplash, the long-running North-American demoparty, has reached the 10-year mark with this edition, and we're happy to extend our congratulations to the persistent organization team. As more or less expected those days, this year's event was online only, but that obviously didn't deter the motivation of the hardworking people who submitted many entries in the various competitions. There's a bit of everything, newschool and oldschool, so please have a peep!
Function took place last weekend in Budapest, Hungary as an actual physical event with actual people meeting in an actual room! That doesn't happen very often those days. Plenty of releases came out of it, with a nice balance of newschool and olsdchool productions.
A new website was launched yesterday, all about the wonderful world of 4k executable graphics. Plus, it links back to your friendly neighborhood Demozoo which we naturally appreciate a bunch. So head on over and shove some eyecandy into your eyeholes - and be sure to tell yx what an excellent site it is :)
Ah, the sweet summer nights of Salzgitter... Camping, barbecue, campfire, and... C64? That's right, Atwoods Summer Open-Air, the first outdoor-only C64 party in Germany, managed to go ahead in August unlike many other events this year. It took us a little while, but the results and releases are now properly listed and eager to catch the attention of more pairs of eyes.
Before access to the internet was universal, BBS'es were a huge part of scene culture. Once modems became more widely available, mailswapping died down it was where we communicated and shared files. The bbs systems were extremely modular, with plugins - or "doors" - available to enhance and replace core functionality, allowing for every system operator to tailor make their bbs a unique experience. Entire groups existed solely to create these doors for the bbs scene. Now, while working on a recent project I came across quite a few of these, and while they've been part of Demozoo as any other scene-originated tool for a long time, it was time to rethink how we'd categorize these a little better. Context brings great opportunity in mapping these out, and being able to group together tools that provide the same basic functionality can be very helpful in understanding the evolution of a certain subset.
https://files.scene.org/browse/resources/bbs/ has - I'd like to say always - been the largest collection of such doors on the internet. The collection features doors both for Amiga and PC systems, and our initial approach here features mostly specfic tags for the AmiExpress system. We may expand this in the future, as we figure things out for other bbs software. If anyone is looking for something to do, quite a few of these are still to be added to the database, so get cracking :) And if anyone wants to help out by setting up classic bbs systems for testing and screenshotting of these tools in action, then we would certainly not hate that. Now, for the tagging bit which I mentioned in the title. We've chosen to arrange together both actual doors and executable tools that are tailor-made for bbs use and come with instructions how to add them together under the same umbrella. Semantics. So, every tool should be tagged with bbs-door. In addition, we've implemented the following;
AmiExpress specific
amiex-bulls
amiex-chat
amiex-filecheck
amiex-game
amiex-logoff
amiex-logon
amiex-misc
amiex-pager
amiex-stats
amiex-textadder
amiex-who
Other bbs software
cnet-bbs
daydream
fame
logic-bbs
pcboard
proboard
remoteaccess
tempest-bbs
Door file standards