mark2222
mark2222
313 / 6
29th Dec 2017
29th Dec 2017
It's a color printer! Using photon stacks and a powerful new single-chamber particle ROM based on the latest particle-order manipulation paradigm.
printer subframe electronics 60hz memory sorcery electronic colors 4096 particle

Comments

  • KDUK2
    KDUK2
    31st Dec 2017
    how many pixels per second and minute?
  • 4e616d65
    4e616d65
    30th Dec 2017
    +00000000001
  • 4e616d65
    4e616d65
    30th Dec 2017
    NO DOWNV0TES?
  • RebMiami
    RebMiami
    30th Dec 2017
    If you want more color palettes then id:2230400
  • mark2222
    mark2222
    30th Dec 2017
    @WaffleOtter It's subframe! @danieldan0 Yeah it would, but you'd need a second ROM. There's also a new multiple-activation technique (create and delete particles in the same position with different IDs) that would allow much of the circuitry -- and the ROM -- to be reused, but I haven't (and probably wouldn't, for a long while) gotten around to implementing it. @UltraCheesyPies Thanks! @DrBrick Yay, someone who didn't pick the last image :D
  • danieldan0
    danieldan0
    30th Dec 2017
    nice save. would it be faster if it used multiple write heads or something? +1
  • WaffleOtter
    WaffleOtter
    30th Dec 2017
    What is this sorcery?
  • mark2222
    mark2222
    30th Dec 2017
    @Damian97 Thanks! I think my GPU and touchscreen, or Qweryntino's snake game on the R1 are cooler technologically, actually -- this is really just a fancy particle ROM. @sentinal-5 The color and position is encoded in the phot stack in the top left, and are passed into the four demultiplexers for decoding. Changing the fade pattern would require reordering the phot stack but not the particle ROM -- the particle ROM just converts a color value (e.g. #33e) into a deco'ed INSL.
  • Di97
    Di97
    30th Dec 2017
    Nevermind about quesiton, just read comments. But still, this work is pretty awesome compared to what I've seen in TPT for... 5 years?
  • Di97
    Di97
    30th Dec 2017
    This is realy breathtaking technology. As I understood, you use compressed photon as memory. And then decrypt using some conv, filt manipulations to get coordinates of pixel and color? Seeing the uniqueness, complexity of this device... I can say that this save can end somewhere in top 5 pages. Also, @mark2222 Did you use script to turn images into TPT insl and then encode them with some pattern into a photon?