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(appeared in Yahoo issue 5, April 29 1995)

ÚÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ¿
³ North American International Demofest              Epeius/Night Vision, etc. ³
ÀÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÙ
 
 Official Sponsor listing:  College Edouard-Montpetit
                            A.G.E.C.E.M
                            COOP Montpetit
                            Advanced Gravis
                            Corel Corp.
                            Tim Horton's
                            Subway
                            Mediatrix
                            Techno-TV
                            Services D'abonnement
                            Canebsco
                            La Piece de musique
                            Monolithe info
 
 
 
 NAID The Apraxia factor report by Epeius of Night Vision
 
 From Saturday April 15th to Sunday April 16th 1995
 
 9:00 the doors open, groups of people and local news crews are
 eager to get inside.  As people begin unloading their cars, the
 party place begins to fill with computer equipment, and demo freaks
 of all sorts.
 
 10:00 was to be the time for the opening ceremonies, but they
 were slightly delayed.  This was apparently done, in order to
 wait for the hall to be a little more full of people.
 
 The ceremonies consisted of the organisers introducing themselves,
 and telling us to have a good time.  Almost immediately afterwards,
 they began showing "historical" or classic demos on the big screen,
 including demos like CD2, Unreal, and 2nd Reality.  We now had until
 15:00, when the music entries deadline was.
 
 
 Suddenly, a massive crowd was formed in front of the huge screen.
 Apparently, White Noise had managed to fetch a copy of the newly released
 demo, Dope by Complex.  Simply put, it was a beautiful sight.
 Unfortunately, all the competitors in the demo competition were now
 severely depressed :)
 
 15:00 Music entry deadline
 15:30 Graphics entry deadline
 
 16:00 The music competition began.  And went on for an excrutiating 7 hours.
 Almost every single one of the 55+ entries were played.  Yes "almost" all
 of them.  The organisers managed to lose a few of the entries, making
 some people a little upset.  During the 7 hour music competition, people
 were hard at work to get their intros and demos ready for the deadlines.
 There were no other major problems, appart from the fact that the
 surround sound system was messing up a few tunes that didn't like
 being played in surround.  And so the organisers had to turn the
 surround off, and replay a couple of songs.
 
 
 The intro deadline was pushed back to 00:00 from 19:00, and the demo
 deadline became extremely elastic, going all the way to 5:00.
 
 The night went on.  The live band Public Enema played from 00:00 until
 4:30.  Their music was quite nice, unfortunately, not too many people
 were around to hear it.  There was a "rave" at 4:30.  I put the word rave
 in quotes, because there was only about 15 people on the floor.
 Everyone else had gone off to their rooms, or were working on stuff
 elsewhere.
 
 A few hours later, the DJ packed up, and the classic demos were back up
 on the screen.
 
 10:00.  The beginning of the Intro compo.  I can't say much about this
 event, since I slept right through it.  Nobody woke me up! :)  Anyhow,
 I heard that it sucked, lacking in participants.  Although, I heard the
 highlight of the event was Pisstro, coded by Daredevil of Renaissance at
 NAID.
 
 
 11:30.  The Graphics compo.  The pictures were announced and displayed
 one by one.  The quality of art was exceptional, making the judges job
 a tough on.  Although a few pictuers were a little too nice.  Thus
 the disqualification of a piccy by an artist of TRS'93.  Apparently, he
 had scanned his entry.
 
 15:00.  The Demo Compo.  Finally, the long awaited demo competition
 was at hand.  11 entries.  50% more then a lot of us had expected.
 The demo competition went by smoothly, except for the fact that the
 projector had trouble switching in between certain screen modes, and
 would lag it's display.  So you could see the demo going on the screen
 in the organisers booth, but you would see nothing on the big screen.
 This wasn't a very big problem, since the judges weren't looking at
 the big screen, but rather at the monitor in the booth.  And they had
 already viewed each demo a few times before the competition.
 Other then that, there were no major problems.  The crowd was very
 supportive, clapping and cheering when something particularly nice
 caught their eye.
 
 
 20:00.  The closing ceremonies took place, consisting of a nice
 speech by Snowman (Chris G. Mann) and the NAID organisers giving
 out the prises of money, and hardware.
 
 In closing, I'd like to say that this party had some good organising
 with no entries being cut off half way through.  Yes, there were some
 minor problems, but they must be expected from a party that's happening
 for the first time.  All in all, it was a great experience for the
 north american demo scene, where everyone finally met each other, and
 was able to put a face to the names they always heard.
 
 Signed, epeius of night vision
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 NAID Results (Not Official yet) (quite unofficial, indeed.. -Ed)
 
 Music competition:
  1. ?                    Necros/Legend Design/FM
  2. HitchHiking          HiQ & ?
  3. Can't Fake The Funk  Basehead/FM/Kosmic
  4. Tears                Mosaic/Renaissance
 
 Graphics competition:
  1. TRS       Bobs/Thunderstorm  (or it's TRS Bobs by Thunderstorm.. :) -Ed)
  2. ?         ?/Pure Resistance
  3. Opticron  Lakee
 
 Intro competition:
  1. Less Is More   Humanoid
  2. ?              Used
  3. High Pressure  ?
 
 
 
 Demo competition:
  1. Opticron          Craw Productions
  2. Electric Gruyere  De Cheezz
  3. Flight            Kosmic