Reminds me of _Journeys Into the Outside_ by Jarvis Cocker.
And that reminds me of the time when I saw him in passing in a corridor at King's Cross Thameslink and my hand was halfway up into a wave before I realised that he wouldn't know who am.
archermarks•about 3 hours ago
There's a good People Make Games video about this from a few days ago
It's funny that I watched this less than an hour ago, and I click on hackernews and bam it's #1 on the front page.
Probably someone else must've also watched this in the past few hours or days.
runj__•about 1 hour ago
The world is increeeeeeedibly small with likeminded people (sometimes at least, which is most of the times).
mproud•39 minutes ago
I remember seeing a video on Jerry’s Map from nearly 20 years ago.
dylan604•about 2 hours ago
You know, it'd have been amazing if TFA has not opened with that video. So instead of clicking the link to view TFA, you went off and dug up the exact same link in TFA???
falcor84•about 1 hour ago
Oh, I see that there's two TFAs. The one in the description has the video, but this main one doesn't - http://www.jerrysmap.com/the-map
tarvaina•about 1 hour ago
The main linked article actually does not have that video; the article linked from in the description does have it. Not surprising that someone missed it.
Tepix•about 1 hour ago
For me it doesn't. Perhaps it's a cookie setting? Anyway, lovely video.
mdtrooper•about 2 hours ago
I know Jerry Map (I hope that someday will be a exposition in Spain) because I love it, I love the https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Outsider_art. The people who maybe mad and they built a world with own rules.
I used to do things like this when I was a kid (less extreme, never more than a single sheet of paper), where I would create some natural features: a lake shore or river, maybe a freeway or two or a railroad and then start platting out a subdivision in the open spaces. It was a delightfully meditative practice and maybe I should start doing it again.
wanderer2323•about 3 hours ago
The most Borgesian thing to ever be posted on HN.
jihadjihad•about 3 hours ago
From the first sentence and image on jerrysmap.com I seriously thought it was Jerry Garcia's doing for a second.
deadbabe•10 minutes ago
In high school I remember entertaining myself in class by using grid paper to draw little tile based maps. It’s like playing Minecraft by hand. I imagine the concept is lost to a lot of Gen Z or Gen Alpha by now. Too much imagination required.
I didn’t notice there was a secondary link, sorry. For everyone else, consider this comment a recommendation to click through and watch it then :)
RobKohr•about 3 hours ago
It would make an interesting map generation algorithm that could feed the card data and specified map tiles into an image gen AI system that would have to take the map tiles and try to follow the rules.
dabinat•about 2 hours ago
As I get older I’ve come to realize more and more how bad instant gratification is. There’s value and mental health benefits in doing things that are slow and take time and effort.
latexr•about 2 hours ago
As I was coming back to the thread, I was dreading someone might be making this submission about AI. I miss HN from before it became AIN and other types of intellectual curiosity were drained out.
What’s marvellous about this work is the antithesis of AI and computers, the artist and the process are what’s fascinating about it. Generative map and art programs are a dime a dozen. Those have value in their own way, but it’s different from this. There’s no need to conflate the two, most things do not need or benefit from AI.
brm•about 3 hours ago
Can't feed Jerry to the ai though
foobarian•about 3 hours ago
If he's been blogging as long as it says, he's already part of the collective
criddell•about 2 hours ago
When articles like this are published along with photos and videos, in a way it is feeding Jerry to the AI.
dmd•about 3 hours ago
Does every single thing need to be about AI? Really?
NBJack•about 2 hours ago
I mean, to be fair, some "super resolution" solutions for image generation do subdivide things into tiles to be re-done at a higher fidelity.
Discussion (29 Comments)Read Original on HackerNews
And that reminds me of the time when I saw him in passing in a corridor at King's Cross Thameslink and my hand was halfway up into a wave before I realised that he wouldn't know who am.
https://youtu.be/Is8N7B9b0GQ
Probably someone else must've also watched this in the past few hours or days.
I remember the book of https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_Darger or https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dwarf_Fortress or Cataclysm DDA .
And weird games as https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nomic .
What’s marvellous about this work is the antithesis of AI and computers, the artist and the process are what’s fascinating about it. Generative map and art programs are a dime a dozen. Those have value in their own way, but it’s different from this. There’s no need to conflate the two, most things do not need or benefit from AI.