Similar to how getting Doom to run on obscure or odd hardware is kind of a long running joke, getting the music video for Bad Apple!! to play in odd or obscure places is also a long running joke where people have got the video to play on HTML checkboxes, calculators, and other display locations (apparently there’s a whole subreddit).
The code here is a tool to find keys with particular patterns for art (or collision?) purposes, though I had to squint pretty hard to see it (and I’ve made a rather low resolution Bad Apple rendering myself in CD+G).
I really didn’t comprehend with this article was about. Could anyone explain it to someone who doesn’t know how to read this kind of code?
Similar to how getting Doom to run on obscure or odd hardware is kind of a long running joke, getting the music video for Bad Apple!! to play in odd or obscure places is also a long running joke where people have got the video to play on HTML checkboxes, calculators, and other display locations (apparently there’s a whole subreddit).
poptart’s response covers the Bad Apple part. If your question is about ssh key art you can find some discussion here, it’s meant to be a recognizable fingerprint for an ssh key if you need to check it visually. https://superuser.com/questions/22535/what-is-randomart-produced-by-ssh-keygen
The code here is a tool to find keys with particular patterns for art (or collision?) purposes, though I had to squint pretty hard to see it (and I’ve made a rather low resolution Bad Apple rendering myself in CD+G).