Author here, yes you're correct. The name is a bit of misnomer, and to do it truly with ASCII I'd have to move data back to the CPU which had pretty bad performance. I took a bit of artistic liberty and decided to draw my own ASCII-esque glyphs using signed distance functions. I'm considering adding a setting to swap the modes so that it does use true ASCII but again it'd be pretty rough performance on large screens.
Author here, you're mostly right in that it's a show piece. However, it uses no external libraries, I built it all myself using VanillaJS. I do use some famous noise algorithms, specifically Simplex noise and a method of domain warping.
It's a fun experiment into WebGL and graphics programming. I intended it to be a cool tool for getting inspiration for designing and creating other art in general. I do eventually want to build this out into a larger set of tools that would allow you to quickly iterate and build out various aesthetics for designing.
In it's current state, it's mostly practical for creating pretty images and videos that you could use in other projects. If there's more interest I could possibly turn it into more, would love to hear ideas and suggestions!
Author here. This is all done on the GPU using shaders. It's a few layers, and you can find the details over on my Bluesky post, feel free to read it there. I've been thinking about making a blog post covering how I went about building it.
Author here. Not ridiculous at all, the name is a bit of a misnomer. I had tried doing true ASCII but moving data back to the CPU to render it all was too slow. So I opted to recreate them as glyphs that are drawn using signed distance functions, which gets pretty close to looking like real ASCII while still being incredibly performant due to it never leaving the GPU.
Yes you're right in that it's not real ASCII, but more ASCII-esque. I took some artistic liberty to do everything on the GPU, if I had done true ASCII I would have had to move data back to the CPU and render the glyphs there. However it was too slow and didn't have the desired effect I was seeking.
I am considering building out an additional feature set where it allows for true ASCII rendering, but we'll see if I get around to that.
Author here. Haha that's so creative! I definitely thought about lowering the limit, but then it wouldn't really be ASCII-esque lol. I might just lower it so that you don't have to do this workaround.
Author here. Wow that's so cool! I've never heard of browsh but it's so cool to see that my site (which was built to be as static as possible) works well and even renders the WebGL in the terminal. Thanks for sharing!
Author here. Interesting point about the satellite-view clouds, I'm not very familiar with that domain. But I can point you to the article I read about domain warping on top of noise, which is what I use to produce this effect.