Things that will be impossible to explain two generations hence.

Apr 18, 2012 23:14

Sometimes when the people on the television want to you pay special attention to words because they think they are scientific or futuristic, they will make them appear slowly from left to right accompanied by a squelchy chattering noise like someone scraping TO220-packaged transistors down a sheet of galvanised steel ( Read more... )

pylon of the month, primary school but primed to kill, potentiometer

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Comments 4

jarkman April 19 2012, 08:52:47 UTC
How did it come to be that 'futuristic' and 'football scores' shared the same visual effect ?

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hirez April 19 2012, 09:00:01 UTC
Isn't it.

One of the odder typographical effects I've noticed is one where the notional 'print head' rattles through a random-looking sequence of characters before selecting one and moving on. Something halfway between a nixie tube and a barrel printer.

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jarkman April 19 2012, 09:15:21 UTC
I wonder if it is a half-forgotten folk-memory of looking at the back of the golfball as it printed ?

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hirez April 19 2012, 09:44:04 UTC
Somewhere between that and the Matrix effects, perhaps.

I recall that the footer teleprinter only jigged up and down when idling...

[FX: Google, wikipeejah, etc]

... Cor. This is excellent (description of plan 55-A, which is the best name for anything ever) http://www.webcitation.org/5gOoc3dQf

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