Unrelated comment on the GitHub username: that was the name of my favorite dish at one of my favorite restaurants. Said diner had a charmingly stoner atmosphere: https://honeypot.net/2008/02/09/you-want-how.html
(To this day, in my house we call garlic bread “6BR”, as in, “hey Dad, could you pass the 6BR?”)
Neat! I noticed it seems to crash when I open telnet in a fullscreen terminal (alacritty on 2560x1440), but if I make terminal half-width, it works. I didn't realize you could pass mouse control over telnet - need to read some code now! Good hack.
Mouse movement is signaled in the terminal via ANSI escape sequences, which are just in-band character sequences which your terminal is smart enough not to display, so Telnet itself doesn’t actually have anything to do with it. As far as Telnet knows, they aren’t different from any other characters.
There are some oddities in the telnet version, such as it conflating XTerm and PuTTY, and it presenting a bizarre timeout message when presented with a blank TERM environment variable. I wouldn't be surprised if it somehow thinks that NVTs cannot have more than 256 columns.
Alas, that's the part that has no source available. (The TELNET server class library has published source, buried in a hyperlink in a comment to a closed issue from 2019, but the actual program built to use that library has not.)
But for me it works properly only in a terminal emulator, proper GNU/Linux terminal (Ctrl+Shift+F1) can't display most of used symbols, it supports only ASCII.
It's great that this can be accessed via Telnet, instead of SSH, which opens it up to the machines that need it most: Vintage computers that can't do SSH.
My personal server delivers content via HTTP/S, or Telnet, so this will be a good way to display maps for people who connect via Telnet.
kstrauser|5 months ago
(To this day, in my house we call garlic bread “6BR”, as in, “hey Dad, could you pass the 6BR?”)
jeffwass|5 months ago
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rznYifPHxDg
aftbit|5 months ago
justusthane|5 months ago
JdeBP|5 months ago
Alas, that's the part that has no source available. (The TELNET server class library has published source, buried in a hyperlink in a comment to a closed issue from 2019, but the actual program built to use that library has not.)
JdeBP|5 months ago
It has been over 4 years and the redirect is still there. That bet would have been lost. (-:
dang|5 months ago
Telnet Mapscii.me - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=44572328 - July 2025 (1 comment)
MapSCII – A Braille and ASCII world map renderer for the console - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=39975887 - April 2024 (23 comments)
MapSCII – The Whole World in Your Console - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=27042629 - May 2021 (43 comments)
MapSCII: World map renderer for your console - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=20375881 - July 2019 (24 comments)
MapSCII – Braille and ASCII map renderer for the console - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=14254165 - May 2017 (65 comments)
rastapasta|5 months ago
Panzerschrek|5 months ago
But for me it works properly only in a terminal emulator, proper GNU/Linux terminal (Ctrl+Shift+F1) can't display most of used symbols, it supports only ASCII.
veddox|5 months ago
tweakimp|5 months ago
ktpsns|5 months ago
reaperducer|5 months ago
My personal server delivers content via HTTP/S, or Telnet, so this will be a good way to display maps for people who connect via Telnet.
junon|5 months ago
meken|5 months ago
Would be fun to use this with that - thanks!
dgrin91|5 months ago
hollowonepl|5 months ago
ddawson|5 months ago
theflyestpilot|5 months ago
noufalibrahim|5 months ago
curtisszmania|5 months ago
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denis_dolya|5 months ago
britmap|5 months ago
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nextrastapasta|5 months ago
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