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Displays Windows

The 25-Year Success Story of SereneScreen (pcgamer.com) 18

A recent video from retro tech YouTuber Clint "LGR" Basinger takes a deep dive into the history of the SereneScreen Marine Aquarium, exploring how former Air Force pilot Jim Sachs transformed a lackluster Windows 95 screensaver into a 25-year digital phenomenon. PC Gamer reports: The story centers on Jim Sachs, a man with one of those "they don't make this type of guy anymore" life stories so common to '80s and '90s computing, one Sachs recounted to the website AmigaLove back in 2020. After a six-year career in the US Air Force flying C-141 Starlifters, Sachs taught himself programming and digital art and began creating games for Commodore 64 and Amiga computers. From his first game, Saucer Attack, to later efforts like Defender of the Crown or his large portfolio of promotional and commissioned pieces, Sach's pixel art remains gorgeous and impressive to this day, and he seems to be a bit of a legend among Commodore enthusiasts.

It's with this background in games and digital art that Sachs looked at Microsoft's simple aquarium-themed screensaver for Windows 95 and 98 and thought he could do better. "Microsoft had an aquarium that they gave away with Windows where it was just bitmaps of fish being dragged across the screen," Sachs told the Matt Chat podcast back in 2015. "And they had that for like, three or four years. And I thought, I've given them enough time, I'm taking them to market. I'm gonna do something which will just blow that away."

Using reference photographs of real aquariums -- Sachs thanked a specific pet shop that's still around in an early version of his website" -- Sachs created the 3D art by hand and programmed the screensaver in C++, releasing the initial version in July 2000. Even looking at it all these years later, the first iteration of the SereneScreen Marine Aquarium is pretty gorgeous, and it has the added charm of being such a distinctly Y2K, nostalgic throwback.

The standalone screensaver sold well, but then things came full circle with Microsoft licensing a version of the Marine Aquarium for the Windows XP Plus Pack and later standard releases of the OS. Since that time, the Marine Aquarium has continued to see new releases, and a section on the SereneScreen website keeps track of its various appearances in the background of movies and TV shows like Law and Order. Over on the SereneScreen website, you can purchase a real time, 3D-accelerated version of the Marine Aquarium for Mac, iOS, Android, and the original Windows. Echoing the Windows XP deal, Roku actually licensed this 3.0 version for its TVs, bringing it to a new generation of users.

The 25-Year Success Story of SereneScreen

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  • by bsdetector101 ( 6345122 ) on Saturday February 01, 2025 @05:36AM (#65134507)
    Still pretty cool, just don't really need a screen saver anymore.
  • by aRTeeNLCH ( 6256058 ) on Saturday February 01, 2025 @05:45AM (#65134515)
    I hate to say but then it's still not the year of Linux on the desktop... *ducks*
  • Good for him, but I never really got the point of screensavers, just put the screen to sleep, it will save power and avoid distractions. Or better, put the computer to sleep.
    But then I recently got an AndroidTV projector. When paused it shows pictures it gets off some Google account or something. It's called Ambient Mode. I managed to get it to show my extensive collection of pictures, it wasn't easy to setup, but only worked for a short while, the options indicated here [google.com] are now gone. Anybody knows how do
    • Ambient mode is a feature of the ChromeCast dongle ( which Google may discontinue making, but which will still work for a long long time). It appears there might be some confusion around Ambient Mode and its availability. Here's what I can tell you: Ambient Mode is not discontinued. It's a feature for Google TV devices and Smart Displays that allows the screen to display photos, weather, and other information when not in active use. There have been some reports of issues with Ambient Mode. Some u
    • Some screens take a little bit to wake up from sleep, so it's annoying if they do that when you're nearby and referring to something on the screen.

      I have my screensaver come on a few minutes before the screen sleep. That way if I'm building a model or something with instructions up, I can see it's starting to snooze and hit a key to stop it, without having to wait for the screens to wake up.

      And of course, back in ye olde days, monitors didn't have a sleep function, so screensavers were a lot more important.

    • Power saving features didn’t exist back then. Monitor burn in was a real thing especially on monochrome displays.

  • and I'm glad to see him being mentioned on Slashdot. He, imho, brings a lot of joy to those nostalgia suckers like myself. I wish more content creators would be like him, publishing quality content and being far from bias and drama.
  • The screensaver "After Dark" had a fish aquarium before Windows 95. Saying this because the summary can leave the wrong impression that Windows 95 invented aquarium screensavers.

  • You should here the one about AcidPunk :-)
  • Kinda useless for me. I think you can use wine to run it but I'll stick with my go to blank screen.
  • Back in the late 1980's, I worked on the firmware for the Commodore CDTV [wikipedia.org] -- specifically, the CD audio player. Reichart Von Wolfsheild did the overall design, I wrote the player logic, and Will Ware wrote the UI management code.

    And Jim Sachs did the artwork. I have had the great privilege of working alongside the man, and watching how he works. He's incredibly detail-oriented, polishing every single pixel by hand. Even when Amiga artwork and games were blowing absolutely everything on the Mac and DOS

The reward of a thing well done is to have done it. -- Emerson

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