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- <link=g13.scr>Error in Line</l> 1 and 2 - A tale of two parties!
-
- CiH takes a slightly dispassionate look at the two editions of a world
- famous Atari Scene party.
-
- There's no doubt that the second Error in Line party was cool, and that
- it lived up to the spirit of the first one. We can even say that it may
- have been as significant release-wise, as the first. But was it
- 'better' than the first, the purpose of this article, is hopefully to
- find out..
-
- Okay, let's go!
-
- Weather:- A trivial point perhaps, but you remember the first EIL as
- having passable to good spring weather. This time around, Easter was
- devoted to blizzards! This didn't affect the in-party ambience one jot,
- and the cooler conditions may have helped some people to sleep better?
- It did add an unintended Xmassy festive air to our trips around the
- Dresden city centre though!
-
- Alcohol:- Another dumb personal satisfaction gauge. EIL 1, beer, thanks
- to those nice TNB people. EIL 2, Vodka, and lots of strange Macedonian
- red wine, thanks to Grey and a nice but unknown French bloke!
-
- Major demo releases:- Error in Line, more than some other recent coding
- parties, is a release driven event. Major demos were shown at both
- parties, including some genuinely groundbreaking material.
-
- The first Error in Line party showed off nine (count 'em!) major demos.
- Five of these were ST based There were two demos from the Mystic Bytes
- and Dead Hackers Society, each very similar in style, and although both
- were very good, they tended to reprise effects they had already coded
- for the Falcon. There was a neat combination old school/new effects
- surprise release from TNB, and of course, the highlight of the
- competition, the epic 'Suretrip', coming from the hands of Defjam of
- Checkpoint. So four high quality productions, with Checkpoint
- dominating centre stage.
-
- The first EIL Falcon demos were clearly showing a scene in transition.
- The best of a mixed bunch, in my opinion, was the energetic 'Alive'
- demo from Fun. This was pipped to the post by a DHS release with its
- main strength in its presentation. A lightweight intro from Mind
- Design, and a borderline "is it fake or is it real?" production from
- NoCrew made up the numbers. The third prize winner, a very slow 3D
- world by Cobra showed where the Falcon scene was going next, if only
- someone could put a rocket under that code!
-
- The second EIL stood things on their head, as it was rightly called
- 'The revenge of the Falcon'. Fewer overall major releases this time,
- divided up into six Falcon demos (one of these borderline fake), and
- just one ST demo. So, seven against nine big demos.
-
- But numbers aren't the whole story of course. Where the first EIL had a
- lot of competent stuff, with (hand on heart!) just one groundbreaking
- demo, the second EIL managed three totally new productions, the DSP and
- Sono smashing first prize winner from Escape, the accelerator loving
- epic from DHS, and a top class 3-D world from T.O.Y.S. This puts the
- second party way ahead of the first, in this all important category.
-
- The remaining Falcon demos were all of a good standard, including
- entries from the Paranoid (tunnel paradise!), something slightly
- different from an unknown GFA basic fan, and a well-realised joke demo
- from the Spice Boys, or is that a harrowing true-life documentary on
- the (short) life of a pizza slice!
-
- The ST section suffered a big crash, and it was only thanks to the
- efforts of Sector One and friends, that we saw anything ST related at
- all! And this was a demo previously previewed at the Xmas STNICCC
- party! To be fair, this was extremely high quality in a French
- oldschool fashion, and an interesting counterpoint to Defjam's work,
- two years previously.
-
- Of other contenders of potential interest, Cream stayed away, as did
- Defjam, who would have otherwise surely mounted a challenge comparable
- to his first EIL demo? There were others who didn't make it for the
- Falcon competition too, as Mystic Bytes put their demo on hold, but
- promising something special later on, and Mind Design who simply ran
- out of time.
-
- Conclusion.. EIL 2 wins, in spite of big holes showing in the ST
- category, due to the greater levels of innovation in the Falcon
- section.
-
- Minor stuff:-
-
- Eil 1, famous for 128 byte intros, (three), and a strong fake
- competition (3).
-
- Eil 2, missing both the above categories, but bringing back proper
- 96ktros, with a strong ST based entry from tSCc, and a cute lightweight
- affair from Exocet. Also a couple of 4K intros from Escape and tSCc.
- The faketro's can possibly said to have been replaced by the Atari 8-
- bit intro section, where there was no evidence of anyone trying too
- hard!
-
- Conclusion.. Very close, the Ibiza faketro almost pulls it off
- singlehandedly for the first party, Ray of tSCc fights for the honour
- of the second EIL with his 96k and 4ktros. Shoving the Whip! plugin
- competition, a totally new category in here, clinches it in the end for
- the second party!
-
- Wild Compo:-
-
- Eil 1, had quite a large mixed bag, with various musical, and audio-
- visual productions, in the end, all blasted aside by the first sighting
- of the awesome Whip! sound to light effects program for the Falcon!
-
- Eil 2, a big drop in interest here. The author of this piece found that
- he was roped in to make up the small number of entries with his ASCII-
- Nation diskmag! A very professional video production from Havoc wins
- it.
-
- Conclusion.. Error in Line part 1 wins this by the proverbial country
- kilometre! Although the author of this article personally found the
- second EIL wild compo much more personally profitable (grin!)
-
- Graphics:-
-
- Eil 1, a reasonable number of entries in the truecolour and sixteen
- colour categories, truecolour won by Agent T, and sixteen colour
- section by Havoc.
-
- Eil 2, dear or dear, a big crash down to just five entries! Giving the
- sparse number of entrants three categories to play with (a four colour
- compo, in addition to the other two) didn't help. In the end they are
- all rolled together into one! Flash of TNB is the winner here.
-
- Conclusion... A disaster for EIL 2. It seems perhaps that graphics
- people are more vunerable than most to sudden decisions to quit active
- scene work, when the pointless arguments start raging on the DHS
- bulletin board?!
-
- Music:-
-
- About even between the two parties, the major interest moves from the
- four channel protracker compo to chip music, as does the first prize
- winner, MSG! The Multichannel category is about the same between the
- two.
-
- Conclusion... Nothing between them on this one.
-
- Stupid spur of the moment thing that helped define the party:-
-
- Eil part 2 walks this one, thanks to the Whip!Pong competition. A
- "sporting" event with a difference, and possibly quite useful in
- identifying future threats to the well-being of society at large!? Tam
- was the unsurprising winner here!
-
- So, to wind things up, both parties had their happy memories to take
- home, both parties had their many good points, and few slightly less
- good points, but in the end we have to pick a winner...
-
- In spite of the first EIL's valiant attempts to catch up in the minor
- categories, the winner is the second EIL, due to the higher quality of
- the major demo releases. Very simply, we are setting four groundbreaker
- demos for EIL part 2, against maybe one or two from the first party.
-
- I'm sure lots of people may well have differing views on the matter, so
- feel free to write to the editor and tell him what you think of this
- topic!
-
- CiH, for Chosneck diskmag, May '01
-
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