Kotaku

Atari Code Comes To Life


I'm just going to let the artist, Ben Fry, explain:


Like any other game console, Atari 2600 cartridges contained executable code also commingled with data. This lists the code as columns of assembly language. Most of it is math or conditional statements (if x is true, go to y), so each time there's "go to" a curve is drawn from that point to its destination.

When a byte of data (as opposed to code) is found in the cartridge, it is shown as an orange row: a solid block for a "1" or a dot for a "0". The row is eight elements long, representing a whole byte. This usually means that the images can be seen in their entirety when a series of bytes are shown as rows. The images were often stored upside-down as a programming method.

The original version of these images are a series of 13x19" prints where you can actually read the individual bits of text. I modified a version of distella to produce disassembled text output in the format that I wanted, and then used Processing to write a second program that creates the image of the output.


I'm not really down with what that actually means, but the end result is absolutely stunning.

distellamap [Ben Fry, via Think In Pictures]

5:30 AM on Tue Feb 20 2007
By Luke Plunkett
1,026 views