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- The demoscene information center, featuring news, information on people and parties, and a search engine.- 256b.com - - An archive of demos of 256 bytes or less.
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- Defacto 2 - - Portal for the underground scene, covering all areas from gaming through emulation to arts. Included is an extensive search engine, a scene portal, international news, a translator and hosted pages.
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- Defence-Force: Demos page - - Description of what demos are, some common effects, who makes demos. Available in English and French.
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- Demoscene Outreach Group - - Builds awareness by presenting at the SIGGRAPH and Game Developers Conferences, as well as other events.
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- dEUS Demogroup - - Official site of dEUS, the Greek demogroup, includes a member list, history, and productions.
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- Naid.net - - Demoscene information source for North America.
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- Pouet - - Multi-platform database of news, groups and productions. Register here and get your own avatar and the chance to appear in a chart table which rewards uploading and commenting others' work. Nice, cute design.
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- Scene.org - - A site dedicated to the demoscene. At the moment it's oriented in demoscene productions, but promises to provide news, articles, interviews with demoscene people and up-to-date information about upcoming demoparties.
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- Scenery - - A guide to groups, parties and releases on the C64/Amiga demoscene.
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- Scenet - - News and articles, mainly about the non-mainstream scene, from the Amiga to the Amstrad CPC. Also provides a large listing of scener's e-mails and homepages.
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- The Story So Far - - An introduction to world of computer demos with pictures and links to further information, albeit partly biased towards the Atari ST scene.
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- Introduction to Demos & The Demo Scene - - Demos are cool. They exist to move you, just as any other art form moves you. But demos are built by programmers, artists, and composers who live and breathe technology. [Gamasutra] (February 16, 2001)
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- The Hacker Demo Scene and its Cultural Artifacts - - A paper that reports on a study undertaken into vernacular forms of multimedia production referred to as "demos" or "intros" and variants of these terms among adherents of a computer oriented subculture identifying itself as "the scene". (January 1, 1996)
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