Talent often has a way of biting off more than it can chew. He’s built better nerf guns, restored cars, among many other random and wonderful projects. Simon is like many rambunctious geniuses, prone to start projects and see them through as long as he’s interested. Jansen’s project started off as a joke, morphed into something bigger, and ultimately was something doomed to be unfinished. It lacks the majesty and spectacle of the original, but you get the point. The best part of Star Wars ASCIImation is the loving rendition of the opening scene. The last frame was added in January 2015. It seems that Jansen has finally abandoned the project. To date, the Star Wars ASCIImation only goes to the scene where Luke finds Leia in holding on the Death Star. Jansen’s moment in the spotlight was the 1999 Wired piece with him being called, “the creator of what could be considered the definitive ASCII animation masterwork”. It’s pretty tame, considering what most fans would do to Jar Jar given a chance. It has since been removed from the official Star Wars ASCIImation site but you can see it here: At this point, Jansen wasn’t just known for his burgeoning A New Hope, but also for his ASCII-animated Death of Jar Jar. Star Wars Episode I: The Phantom Menace was released in 1999 to massive hype and drew attention to all things Star Wars, Jansen included. (Parody versions of Star Wars are nothing new and some even gain praise from Lucas, who reportedly was a big fan of the Family Guy take on the franchise.) This might have had more to do with a seismic shift in Star Wars fandom that happened just as Jansen was getting started. Wired goes on to mention that LucasFilm was decidedly not a fan of Jansen’s work and the company refused to comment on the article at the time. “.if you were to sit down and a film over days and days, you’d go be a bit strange.” “I do little bursts,” Jansen told Wired in 1999, describing his work ethic toward the project. And Jansen had much less than that completed two years after he started the project, when he went viral before it was even a term. Those 18-plus minutes manage to cover almost 40 percent of the original. It’s not a perfect, shot-for-shot recreation. With more than 16,000 frames at 15 frames per second, the animation only lasts about 18 minutes. Obsessive is pretty much the only way to describe Jansen’s project. Though not particularly keen on animation or ASCII art, Jansen was just enough of a Star Wars obsessive to keep up with the project. But like any great innovation, ASCII gave a certain kind of artist a new tool to create.ĭespite being only 40 percent complete, Star Wars ASCIImation is an absurdly impressive featįor reasons that are a mystery even to himself, Simon Jansen began creating individual frames of A New Hope after a chain of joke emails. In addition to proposing the standard, Bemer also introduced the backslash, which has become a staple in a number of programming languages.īemer wanted people to send text to one another. It was a neat idea that basically became law when the US government announced it would only buy computers that complied with ASCII. Developed by a committee lead by Bob Bemer, a Pennsylvania-born computer scientist that proposed the idea, ASCII was a proposed standard for alphanumeric characters built into computers. Text means language and language is nuanced.ĪSCII was the answer. Numbers are easy, ten digits and a few operational characters. They needed text files between computers to understand all the characters within that file. In the 1960’s, computer scientists had something of standardization problem. Put simply, it’s how you’re able to read this now. The American Standard Code for Information Interchange (ASCII) is so basic that it’s overlooked. ( Wikimedia Commons) 128 characters and the man that gave us the backslash
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |