Hyper Performance Edge Computing
- April 15, 2025
- 267651
Bitmap documentation, with simple game intro.
The concept map is where Bitoshi lays down the groundwork for Bitmap Theory, along with any relevant concepts. Think of it as the on-chain research publication from Bitoshi.
Each child parcel of the District holds a different concept re-inscription that can be explored in the main District’s re-inscription. With this model, each piece is updatable, and each update is forever tracked on-chain.
Built into this app is an enhanced markdown reader, with a special feature for superscript numbers (like this: ⁰). Any number that uses superscript links directly to the parcel of that number. This allows each concept to link not only to existing concepts, but concepts that have been pre-assigned a parcel, but have not been written yet. The superscript method was implemented because at the time it was not possible to link to latest inscription on sat directly through recursion (it is now).
When you load the inscription, you’ll find yourself in an introductory game, playing as Sir Whitepaper being chased by Citizen 0. Your goal is to collect as many orange squares as possible. This is just something for fun. Feel free to post your high score on X! To get to the concept map docs, press Explore in the top right corner, or in the menu that appears when you are caught.
Created by Bitoshi Blockamoto & Switch_9
Note: due to metadata error, 692769.bitmap does not currently load in Atlas. This will be updated very soon, it is a known issue with a known solution.
oshib
Bitoshi’s Concept Map is a thoughtful on‑chain knowledge base that combines documentation and gameplay. The main district inscription hosts a concept map where each child parcel contains an essay on a core Bitmap topic, and the superscript markdown links let you jump between parcels seamlessly. I like that this structure makes the docs modular and updatable while keeping everything verifiably on‑chain.
The introductory Citizen0 game is a fun touch—playing as Sir Whitepaper while being chased gives visitors a playful way to discover the project before diving into the docs. The only hiccup is that the superscript navigation and game interface aren’t explained on the page; a quick‑start guide or legend would help newcomers understand how to explore the map and where to find the ruleset. Overall it’s an inventive mix of education and entertainment.
BitmapPunk
Great! 🟧 Rulesets enable interoperability and decentralization as it reduces the reliance on central authority long-term. Without a ruleset, people will constantly look to a central figure or one will step up and push it through, to interpret things or settle disputes. But with a clear, open, transparent set of core rules, everyone knows how things work. That removes central power.