115 points by masswerk 16 hours ago | 21 comments
  • Nice writeup! Yeah, that font! :D I didn't have a deadtest cart back in ancient times, but I built one when I built my first C64 (from PCB and up), and the first thing I did with that machine, was to boot it with the dead test cart.. Which didn't work because the PCB I got didn't wire the pins it needed.. I thought on it until I figured that hey! chip select pin!! And then I jumpered that pin and saw for the very first time, a brand new C64 come up and vomit garbage all over the screen because I had gotten a wrong chip! :D

    https://dusted.dk/pages/c64/MaxFake64/

  • In Germany (maybe also Austria?), that font is probably best known from the logo of major computer magazine/site CHIP (https://www.chip.de/). Although, for some unfathomable reason, the C in the "dead test font" doesn't have the characteristic "thickening" in the lower vertical part, although the G has it...
    • This is basically the MICR font: Magnetic Ink (!) Character Recognition. Amazing idea.

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magnetic_ink_character_recogni...

    • And so many variant typefaces of the same graphical language were seen in a million products during the home computer boom of the late 70s and early 80s. Iconic.
      • It's a copy of the Westminster font from the 60s which was an adaption of the visual style of MICR digits and symbols to a full symbology (without being machine readable). It was a meme for computerbilia of the era that now seems quaint.
    • The other thing that caught my eye is that M has the thickening on the opposite side to N. I thought it was for easier recognition of similar letters (same with A and R, O and Q), but U and V have the thickening on the same side. Maybe C vs G is the reason why C doesn't have the thickening.
  • I was recently exploring fonts of the next decade from old Mac system 6-9 era on my still in progress personal blog site https://hankdoes.ai/design-system/

    Thank you author for the font and the lovely dive into computing and type history!

  • Good ol' It's A Computer (tm) font. A good while back I've been using Westminster in every piece of UI I wrote for myself. Maybe I should start doing that again.
  • I love the "MICR line"-like appearance, fonts of which type were heavily used in the 1970s and 1980s to indicate "computer/technology stuff".
  • Seeing typos like 'resulation' is now a nice hint that a human wrote the article.

    Nice exploration, bit of quirky fun.

    • > Even the glass dishes with tiny bubbles and imperfections, proof they were crafted by the honest, simple, hard-working indigenous peoples of wherever.
      • Every hand-knotted carpet has some error per design, since only Allah is perfect.

        But, I guess, "resulation" may be a bit blotchy for a sign of humbleness. :-)

        • > some error per design

          A single minimum error by design would obviously be perfection. And it appears to be a myth story anyways - in truth Islamic carpet weavers do aim for perfection.

          I've always thought it would be a catch-22 gotcha rule. Dieties presumably choose to either (A) care about rules or (B) not care about rules. An ambiguous rule is dangerous - especially if intent was what mattered?

          The Japanese wabi-sabi is the core behind an equivalent folklore story I heard: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wabi-sabi

    • Sorry, I had to fix this.

      (You're welcome anyway. And yes, I think, it's the sort of quirky article, an LLM can't come up with.)

    • As a perfectionist, I twitched ;-)
    • Don't say that, or else Ai will start inserting typos.
      • Oh, I'm sure there are people that already do it intentionally.
  • I am pretty sure that I saw that font on a C64 before. Paradroid used a very similar font for the logo, but the game itself uses a different font (Paradrew).
    • There are a hundred variants of it used in various software for the C64, the Amiga, the anything.