Matt Parker and Steve Mould are two of the best STEM educators on YouTube. They are both witty and experimental. Parker is a straight maths kind of guy but Mould goes all over the place and really scratches that experimental/DIY itch.
If you enjoy this video, I highly recommend checking out more of their channels.
Author of "wake up" here. Yes, that one reactivated me again. We thought (as size coding community) that we found every cellular automaton trick years ago, but then Plex came around and showed us otherwise ♥
kennywinker 20 hours ago [-]
Definitely thought this was a 16b parameter llm, not a 16 byte demo.
userbinator 4 minutes ago [-]
9 orders of magnitude difference!
msikora 20 hours ago [-]
Same! This is way cooler tho!
hei-lima 19 hours ago [-]
I'm really impressed. Those are the things that made me love programming and computing. It's all so beautiful, it's TRULY art. It's a shame that in the industry we don't usually have the opportunities to make something like that, with AIs and all that...
jonhohle 16 hours ago [-]
If this was made in Electron it would probably be a 300MB download and around 1GB of RAM.
adastra22 1 hours ago [-]
I once made a ray tracer demo in 4K. I thought that was hard…
torben-friis 7 hours ago [-]
I swear watching this kind of projects occasionally is the only thing keeping me from dropping tech and going to work as a mailman or something.
__del__ 14 hours ago [-]
i can barely accept this is possible
smokel 9 hours ago [-]
There are only 2^128 of such demos. How much of those are valid DOS programs? If we narrow it down to ones that generate both video and sound, I guess there are much less, which should motivate more people to try and find one :)
nojvek 8 hours ago [-]
2^128 is still a huuuuuge space.
mg 11 hours ago [-]
Makes me wonder how many bytes the shortest possible Mandelbrot implementation would need.
HellMood 11 hours ago [-]
Author of "wakeup" here. You would would need between 32 and 64 bytes. I have something that almost looks like one in 32 but it's not published yet ;)
HellMood 10 hours ago [-]
At the same event I released "Broccolori", a 32 Byte fractal for old-school PCs.
I did NOT expect this 16 bytes demo to also have sound! What an outstanding piece of art.
19 hours ago [-]
electroglyph 17 hours ago [-]
i'll upvote this each time it's submitted
Dwedit 7 hours ago [-]
Did not work on PCEM for some reason.
nzhumasseiit 7 hours ago [-]
that's crazy. level to which i'm striving haha
selfsimilar 5 hours ago [-]
16 bytes equals immediate “black magic” and “it’s a witch”. I get it in the abstract - generative art and CAs and fractals have infinite depth. But this is madness. I love it so much
immanuwell 13 hours ago [-]
love the sign "This text is handwritten" at the bottom, that's awesome
sneak 20 hours ago [-]
This is absolutely obscene. I am floored. Sweet hack.
I'm not sure if they did a writeup for m8trix (a predecessor) but I tried dissecting it around when it came out (2014): https://scot.tg/2014/05/31/amazing-code-density/
https://youtu.be/b-Fa6HtvGtQ?si=LpQszgA9_K-m3V3-
If you enjoy this video, I highly recommend checking out more of their channels.
https://www.youtube.com/@standupmaths
https://www.youtube.com/@SteveMould
That other demo didn't even have sound.
This is hell of a good work. A masterpiece to retire after. (or more realistically, chase it on other architectures)
https://www.pouet.net/prod.php?which=106205
Related to the Dragon Fractal, with a twist:)