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RaD Man : ウィキペディア英語版
RaD Man
__NOTOC__

Christian Wirth (born in the 1970s), better known by the pseudonym RaD Man, is an American computer artist and historian. He works in the field of ANSI art, a method of creating art using a limited set of text characters and color escape codes based loosely on the relevant ANSI standard (X3.64: Control Sequences for Video Terminals and Peripherals).
RaD Man was initially involved with the Aces of ANSI Art (AAA), an organization which created ANSI artwork for a number of computer bulletin board systems in the late 1980s. With others, he created the "ANSI Creators in Demand" group (also known as ACiD).
Starting in 1990, ACiD released artwork on an ''ad hoc'' network of BBSes, updating a collection of art known as the ''ACiD Acquisition'' by sending a compressed file of all the completed work up to that time. By 1992, the increasing file size made this process impractical, and this led to the development of the artpack, where groups of artists (including ACiD) would upload monthly update packages instead.〔Hargadon, Michael A. "(Like City Lights, Receding: ANSi Artwork and the Digital Underground, 1985-2000 )." ''Concordia University'', March 18, 2011. Retrieved October 18, 2011.〕 In early 2004, RaD Man directed and produced ACiD Acquisition Update #100, colloquially known as "ACiD-100, the final artpack released by ACiD as a group.
In 1996, RaD Man founded the ACiD Artpacks Archive to collect the artpacks created by the (hundreds of groups ) that followed in ACiD's footsteps. This collection eventually was transferred to DVD as ''Dark Domain: the artpacks.acid.org collection'' in 2004.〔http://cd.textfiles.com/darkdomain/whatisit.html〕〔http://www.defacto2.net/commercial/dark-domain〕〔http://www.worldcat.org/title/dark-domain-the-artpacksacidorg-collection/oclc/70198786〕
Since 2002, RaD Man has worked as a historian and spokesperson for the artscene, collecting information and interviews with the artists involved, and creating reports and presentations on the lineage of computer art. Some of this work includes ''The ARTS]'', a talk radio show which discusses the many different facets of the creative computer underground scenes 〔http://web.archive.org/web/20060507155100/http://www.acid.org/radio/〕 and the Pilgrimage 2004 demoparty.
In 2006, RaD Man became a member of cDc's Ninja Strike Force.〔http://w3.cultdeadcow.com/cms/2006/06/brand-new-nsf-1.html〕
In 2007, he co-founded Blockparty with Jason Scott, a North American demoparty.
The event was produced in cooperation with Notacon and took place annually in Cleveland, Ohio from 2007-2010.
In November 2009, ANSI art group Blocktronics paid tribute to RaD Man and his contributions to the ANSI art scene by releasing an artpack titled "Codename Chris Wirth". 〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Blocktronics website )
==External links==


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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