AminetAminet
Search:
84726 packages online
About
Recent
Browse
Search
Upload
Setup
Services

demo/aga/2000vt.lha

Mirror:Random
Showing:ppc-amigaosm68k-amigaosgeneric
No screenshot available
Short:Videotracker Animation for Christmas at Millennium 2000
Author:Andrew at basden.demon.co.uk
Uploader:Andrew basden demon co uk
Type:demo/aga
Architecture:m68k-amigaos
Date:1999-12-14
Download:http://aminet.net/demo/aga/2000vt.lha - View contents
Readme:http://aminet.net/demo/aga/2000vt.readme
Downloads:8319

CHRISTMAS'99 + MILLENNIUM 2000 ANIMATION

This is a Videotracker 'vidule' that can be run straight from floppy disk 
on startup, since it is self-contained and has within itself all that is 
needed.  It runs on a bottom-of-the-line Amiga 1200 with a single floppy 
disk - we turn it on and off with a timer.  Simply copy all the files
to a bootable floppy and boot off it.

Contents of Archive:
	vt.2000 - the vidule
	s/startup-sequence - what you might expect!
	2000.readme - this file
	2000.protext - Handout containing the info below in Protext.
	2000.pgs - my Pagestream file for a label

THE CONTENT

This animation is a portrayal of Christmas and the Millennium, 2000 years 
(approximately) since the birth of Jesus Christ.  2000 years ago, the 
Living God became a human being.  So that he would share our humanity, bear 
our problems and that we might truly live.  'Jesus' means that he can save 
us from those problems.  'Christ' means that he is the 'anointed one', the 
only one who has the real authority and power to do so.

Much of the cycle is pure visuals - circles, wire shapes, moire patterns, 
colour cycling, and the like - which have no deliberate symbolic meaning. 
At various places throughout the cycle, various short messages appear:
      The birth of Jesus via a woman called Mary who was still a virgin.
      "Christ - that we might truly live"
      "Jesus"
      and the Christian symbols of the Cross and the Millennium.
The Cross was the means of execution used to kill Jesus Christ nearly 2000 
years ago.  Nails were driven through your wrists into a cross piece, and 
you hung from them, arms stretched wide in the baking sun, until you die.

The message is that Christ, fully God, became fully human too, then died, 
not just because he annoyed the authorities of the day, but for us.  To 
sort out the mess we had made - and still make of the world.

While various other religions have stories about gods being born and gods 
rising from death, none give it the full meaning that it means that God is 
with us in the deepest way possible, rather than 'above' us - and none 
place it in history.  That is why 2000 is so important: it says this was a 
real happening, not just a story - and it affects us today.

THE TECHNOLOGY

This animation is played by Videotracker, a software package for the Amiga 
that puts visual events on the screen in time with a music track.  Each 
event - starting an animation, putting up a picture, changing colours, etc. 
- is attached to an instrument and comes up when that instrument is played.

The animation makes full use of the special hardware features of the Amiga:
  Fast swapping between visual fields: that is how the animation manages 
to show things in fast sequence.
  'Dual playfield', in which two visual fields are shown, one behind the 
other: e.g. see the moire fringe effects when two sets of circles move with 
respect to each other.
  Copper list, which changes the colour registers as the video beam makes 
its way down the screen, giving the smooth shading you see in some parts.
  Colour cycling, in which the colour registers are changed from frame to 
frame, so that colours come and go.
  Videoline shift, in which each line on the screen can be shifted 
slightly to right or left: see the 'wobble' in some parts.
  High efficiency: the animation is run on a bottom-of-the-range Amiga 
1200, (a mere 2 Mb of memory, 14MHz clock), single floppy disk.
  Safe switch-off: as long as the Amiga is not actually accessing the 
disks, it can be switched off without having to be 'closed down'.
  Fast, automatic start-up: the Amiga starts up in a few seconds from 
switch-on, loading the animation straight away and running it.
  So the animation can be run on a timer that switches on and off at times 
of our choice, and saving power at other times.

Andrew Basden, Main Street Chapel, Frodsham, 12 December 1999.


Contents of demo/aga/2000vt.lha
 PERMSSN    UID  GID    PACKED    SIZE  RATIO     CRC       STAMP          NAME
---------- ----------- ------- ------- ------ ---------- ------------ -------------
[generic]                  377    1057  35.7% -lh5- 9bd6 Dec 12  1999 2000.pgs
[generic]                  166     490  33.9% -lh5- 888e Dec 12  1999 2000.pgs.info
[generic]                 2075    4324  48.0% -lh5- f0d4 Dec 12  1999 2000.protext
[generic]                 1982    4061  48.8% -lh5- 001d Dec 12  1999 2000.readme
[generic]                   13      13 100.0% -lh0- a803 Dec 12  1999 s/startup-sequence
[generic]               165985  771784  21.5% -lh5- 06d4 Dec 12  1999 vt.2000
---------- ----------- ------- ------- ------ ---------- ------------ -------------
 Total         6 files  170598  781729  21.8%            Dec 14  1999

Page generated in 0.02 seconds
Aminet © 1992-2024 Urban Müller and the Aminet team. Aminet contact address: <aminetaminet net>