![]() ![]() I responded to him why he should want to do that. Guth contacted me, asking for help to reduce the width of this logo to be "old school conform". Even with a screen resolution of 1024x768 would the logo fit the screen.There is no limitation of 80 characters.īelow is a screenshot of an ASCII by Guth, loaded in Windows Notepad with using font "Terminal" for the display. I had no problem to look at your ASCII with notepad. Yeah, in DOS you have the line length limit of 80 characters, 79 actually, because if you have anything at the 80s character, DOS is automatically adding a line break already. Nowadays you should also consider search engines like Google who pick this stuff up.If the NFO does not include your group name a couple times in plain readable text (without 元3T spelling shit), your legacy will become hard to find in search engines. Your insider knowledge and experience though frequent exposure to this kind of art makes things appear easy to you, where "normal" people would probably fail doing it. Never make the mistake and assume that everybody else can read what it says, just because you are able to read it yourself. It helps people to identify quickly the name of your group, even if they are not used to looking and decipher ASCII art text logos at all. ![]() It is always good to add the name or title what the ASCII is supposed to mean below the logo in plain text. But, the logo on top of a release NFO-file also serves practical purposes, which we should at least acknowledge and never completely disregard. It is important that the logo looks cool at what that means is a matter of personal preference. It does not matter, if you create ASCII logos for an NFO-file that is good readable like most of mine or if you create abstract or grafitty-style like logos that people cannot even make heads or tail out, even if they know what the logos is supposed to say. Spell out In Plain Text once More What the Logo Says in ASCII
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