Lloyd's screensavers
Macintosh users may also be interested in my index to Kaleidoscope schemes.
First things... second.
The screensaver is dead.
This is why. As a result, this
page is not actively maintained. If you really think something needs adding or
changing, you could contact me.
Now macscreensavers.com is up and running, it should all be their problem, as far as I'm concerned. Unfortunately, they're
concentrating on screensavers made with their MacSourcery software...
If you're tired of manually surfing the web for
interesting pictures to look at, let
the first
Web screensaver I'm aware of do it for you. Or let jwz's webcollage do it better. Technology makes
yet another pointless leap forward.
This material is mostly for the Macintosh, simply because
I own a Mac.
However, I no longer use a Mac, preferring real computers with
real operating systems. So I can't tell you about Mac OS X screensavers.
There are some cross-platform
musical screensavers,
and some pointers to
Windows screensavers here, too.
A small
programming-orientated screensavers archive
(ftp access)
is still available, with material for the Mac and for X. Speaking of...
X screensavers
Get xxlock.
xscreensaver and xlockmore (with hypercubes) have cornered the market and now even Solaris has
sorted out Energy Star support, screensaving under X is pretty much a solved problem.
Macintosh screensavers
I've wasted a lot of time playing with Macintosh screensavers, and my
distilled wisdom on this esoteric topic is available for your perusal
in
my Mac screensaver FAQ.
That FAQ hasn't been updated since 1994, and a small
list of updates is available.
to be read in conjunction with the FAQ. For other FAQs, here's a
useful FAQ archive.
If you want to download hard-to-get Mac screensaver programming
information, updaters, etc,
this is the
place to look. If you want to write a Mac screensaver that utilises
Energy Star, Technote
1086: Power Management & The Energy Saver API
is the place to start.
I've found a number of places on the web related to
Mac screensavers, so here's an alphabetical list of them.
Inclusion here does not constitute
an endorsement - as far as I'm concerned these days, you get Sleeper
or play with Underware or Darkside of the Mac.
Nevertheless, here's that information, grouped in alphabetical
order according to saver name.
- After Dark
-
Berkeley Systems produced the After
Dark packages, and their site had lots of
support information
for you. It appears that Berkeley Systems is pretty much dead, having been bought by CUC, who also own Sierra. Here's a
lament of the history of it all.
Search Sierra's Customer Help for
After Dark, or try Begany's After Dark pages.
It appears that Infinisys' After Dark X revives After Dark for OS X. No word on module compatibility.
After
Dark Online 2.0 included internet-enabled screensavers pulling in
pseudo-multicast news. Ugh - and, like Pointcast and other push technologies,
it failed. Still, After Dark was free to download while it lasted.
Since After
Dark 3.0 and later include the Monitor Energy Saver code licensed from Apple,
After Dark can be tolerated as a
screensaver.
The whole point of After Dark is the many modules you can run, both
included and third-party. It set a standard, and many screensavers are
compatible with it; you can download Darkside of the Mac
or Underware to play third-party After Dark modules.
Here's a small After Dark archive.
As After Dark is popular with third-party programmers writing shareware and
freeware modules, we have a small archive of
programming material and modules
available, in addition to BSI's free modules.
Here is some basic After Dark 2.0
programming
information to get you started. The After Dark 3.0 programming
manual is also available online and for download. See also
another
programming archive.
You can always find After Dark-related software, including loads of modules,
in the
Info-Mac
directory devoted to screensavers, or in Rat Loaf's index.
These modules by
Simon Fraser are
very cool. Buzzz! is strongly recommended. Robert Geisler's Clouds module is also good.
Stephen's modules are good
enough to win contests. Cynosure has been rolled into xscreensaver as a module.
I was running Cynosure in beta, way back when.
Barney Blaster
was, in its time, possibly the most overhyped screensaver module in existence.
Ishi's modules cover a wide range of interests.
Here's VCD.
Oh, and if you like Fish!, you will probably enjoy the
fishcam.
- Black Watch
-
A simple screensaver with a password function.
- Bliss Saver
-
from
Imaja. If you're familiar with
After Dark, I can say that Bliss Saver is the Satori module gone wild. The images can
be very good.
CJ Silverio has
rather more
to say about Bliss than I do, and you'll get a good idea of what
Bliss Saver is from looking at what she's created.
Bliss Saver is weak on
multi-monitor support (isn't everything?) and will only look good when running
in 256 colours and setting a palette that makes everything else look odd. It
eats a lot of memory, and I had to give it extra to stop it from falling over.
Technically speaking, it's not quite my cup of tea.
- CineMac
-
Make Macromedia Director-based screensavers for the Macintosh. Yawn.
What does this offer over AutoLaunch?
- Darkside of the Mac
-
Although Tom Dowdy's freeware After-Dark-compatible screensaver won't
run the commercial After Dark 3.0 modules, it will run the many After Dark 2.0
modules as well as the forty or so modules it comes with. It's localised
for a host of different languages, too. No wonder
my FAQ recommends it almost
as strongly as it recommends taking up Energy Star and forgetting about
unnecessary animated screensavers altogether. If you want to see what third-party After
Dark modules look like, download Darkside to play them.
- Desktop Screen Saver
- makes your desktop picture your screen saver picture, but needs JPEGView
and Applescript to do so.
- Eclipse
-
from Ambrosia Software. It
includes Energy Star features. However, it's playing catchup with
Sleeper.
- FlavorSavors
-
Haven't tried this; Energy Star does a perfectly good job of saving the screen
from phosphor burn in.
- Flowfazer
-
Flowfazer is apparently a legendary trip-out-to-these-psychedelic-patterns
screensaver dating from its last incarnation in 1991 (v1.1). The rights
to it are owned by Grokware, who
currently make money from selling the images produced by the software, rather
than the software itself. However, they are considering a commercial release
of a new version.
Apparently Bliss Saver and After
Dark's Satori module are similar enough to satisfy the stoned.
- Focus Comatose
- A similar
feature set to Sleeper, with some
extra frills, but Focus Comatose is an application rather than a control panel.
Focus Comatose is worth looking at as one of the alternatives to the Monitor Energy Saver,
but being an application means that it takes more memory, and it has a
very ugly non-Mac user interface. Personally, I prefer
Sleeper.
- Intermission
-
Intermission was later bought by Delrina, who used it as the engine for
Berkeley Breathed and Dilbert screensavers. Symantec later acquired it;
updates were available from Symantec's ftp server.
- MacDim
- This used to be just a freeware dimmer. Then they added support for graphical modules. Then they
added an After Dark module launcher. MacDim modules are available.
- Monitor Energy Saver
- Look, the
Monitor Energy Saver can
cause more problems than it's worth, even if it is Apple's own
Energy Star
saver - just look at the size of Apple's TIL article on it. You might try taking a look at
Sleeper
instead.
Apple didn't ship the Monitor Energy Saver with System software for quite a long time.
From October 1995, Energy Star regulations
were tightened to force equipment to be immediately capable of Energy Star,
rather than having Energy Star as an option the user had to figure out how to
use by installing software for it.
Apple began including the new Energy Saver 2.0 with new PCI Macs and
with the 7.5.3 upgrade, but version 2.0 was
not backwardly compatible with older Macs. To find
out the current status of the Energy Saver, go to Apple's
Tech Info Library
and search for Energy Saver and Energy Star.
- NOVA
- This
doesn't do Energy Star, but it does do some cute graphics with multi-monitor
support.
- Pyro!
- Pyro!, the original Macintosh fireworks screensaver, is dead, dead, dead, despite
what Symantec might say. Here's their support for it, by
ftp, which is
also dead, dead, dead.
- Setting Sun
-
High-end 3D animation requiring Quicktime and OpenGL. Interesting; there's an SDK, so you can develop your own screensaver plugins.
- Screen Gear
- This plays movies and
shows pictures in a slide show - but prefers 2600K to do so.
- Sleeper
- from St. Clair
Software. This can replace Apple's
Monitor Energy Saver,
and
gives you more control over sleep and energy-saver times, installs the
SAVR gestalt so that applications know that a screensaver is running, and
can spin down your desktop Mac's noisy hard disks, too, saving even more
energy, just like a portable Mac.
Apple's new Energy Saver 2.0 spins down the hard disks on the new PCI
Macs. Until the new Energy Saver is made backwardly-compatible with
older Macs, Sleeper is probably your best bet for the same functionality across
a wider range of Macs and drives.
See the Sleeper FAQ.
- Underware
- from Bit Jugglers (a rather dead website there),
is an After-Dark compatible whose
engine plays screensavers on your desktop while you work. This is very neat,
and has to be seen to be believed. A 'normal' screensaver feature which
blanks the screen after a while (but not, alas, with Energy Star) and
a desktop wallpaper installer are also included.
A demonstration
copy of Underware 2.0,
which includes a fully-functional engine capable of playing all third-party
After Dark modules, and two example Underware modules, can be downloaded.
(Download by ftp.)
In that, the cursor has a tendency to vanish when desktop animations are active
under System 7.5.2 and up; this is fixed in Underware 2.0.1, so you'll
need to download the 2.0.1
updater too. (Download by ftp.)
Unfortunately, I'm told Bit Jugglers have been bought out and have left the
Mac market to concentrate on Windows; these files are the only way to obtain the
while-you-work engine. Strongly recommended.
And that's the list, as far as I know.
I happen to prefer Macs. Macs are at the cutting edge of screensaver technology.
PCs aren't. Macs have more screensavers with more modules and a slightly
more standard
Energy Star
capability than PCs. Handling screensaving in
both DOS and Windows sessions is inelegant. And Windows includes a fairly
poor screensaver as standard anyway.
Having said that,
here are some pointers to Windows screensavers.
and some large index sites:
It's interesting to find out just which music groups are on the cutting edge of
screensaver technology. Producing a video may not be enough anymore. Still,
keeping track is too much like hard work.
And where are the rest?
I really have no idea, but I'm working on the theory that the web has
made the screensaver obsolete, since browsing is what you do when you're
not using your computer to do anything useful. And since you're browsing,
if you find them let me know.
And just in case you missed it, let me mention
my screensaver FAQ
one more time, okay?
Doctor Fun does
screensavers. And again.
And again.
Lloyd Wood
last updated 12 September 2002