Path: utzoo!attcan!uunet!cs.utexas.edu!asuvax!ncar!boulder!frechett From: frechett@boulder.Colorado.EDU (-=Runaway Daemon=-) Newsgroups: comp.sys.handhelds Subject: Re: Melting 48 Display Message-ID: <28108@boulder.Colorado.EDU> Date: 15 Oct 90 00:02:15 GMT References: <9095@helios.TAMU.EDU> Sender: news@boulder.Colorado.EDU Reply-To: frechett@snoopy.Colorado.EDU (-=Runaway Daemon=-) Organization: University of Colorado, Boulder Lines: 19 I too have played with thhe "melting display" and I can't figure out any nice way of doing this in a purely electro-physical sense. The pixels are not turning on and off... They look like they are dying.. sort of when you press real hard on your favorite casio screen.... ;) I have found that with the right combinations I have had it melt in just a few seconds or really take its time slowly disolving the screen. I do notice that it take a little longer to come to full clarity when I do hit ON-C to recover. Especially if I hit it right after the A B C sequence (or A A A B B B C C C etc.... ). Mine generally starts at the left side of the screen and starts to fade out into the rest. Is this global, or do other people's do it differently? I would also love to here how and why this is done. ian -- -=Runaway Daemon=-