Try Google Images Terminal: Back to the 80s
👇 Scroll down to start the experience!
Quick Facts
Search Google Images via a BBS‑style terminal — results render as ASCII art.
N. Landsteiner
2012
Available on elgooG
Try the Easter Egg
How It Was Made
The Core Idea
Google Images Terminal is the picture-search companion to N. Landsteiner's Google BBS Terminal. It keeps the same imaginary question at its heart: what would Google feel like if it had reached you through an old dial-up terminal?
This version turns the question toward images. A search still begins with a prompt and a modem handshake, but the result at the other end is a small picture rebuilt from text instead of an ordinary web result.
Inspiration and Development
The project grows from the same playful 1980s idea that shaped Google Terminal, inspired by Squirrel-Monkey.com's "If Google were invented in the 1980s." It treats image search like something an old computer might try very hard to understand: line by line, character by character, until a picture slowly becomes text.
The Easter Egg Experience
What Stands Out
Open the page and the terminal starts like a small machine waking from sleep. The screen dials in, announces image-search mode, and waits for a query inside a bright old BBS frame.
When results arrive, each preview is drawn as monochrome ASCII art. Beside it, the terminal keeps simple option codes for home, file view, context, next result, and previous result. You can still change the display color, show the virtual keyboard, and add scan lines from the Tools menu.
How It Works
Because the old Google image-search API is gone, this preserved page uses cached examples for its working searches. The current image-terminal cache is built around classic computer terms such as Apple II and Commodore 64.
The fun comes from the conversion itself. The page takes stored image data, reads its light and dark patches, then redraws the preview with letters, dots, and spaces, as if the picture has been rebuilt out of terminal characters.
How to Try It
- Click the button above to open Google Images Terminal.
- Let the modem sound and BBS login finish.
- Type an image query, or choose one of the cached examples when the terminal offers them.
- Use the option codes to move between ASCII previews, open a file, see its context, or return home.
This is an unofficial mass:werk interface piece, not a Google product. It belongs beside Google Terminal as a companion experiment: one page imagines web search through a BBS, and this one asks what image search might look like when pictures have to become text.
The shared controls keep the two pages tied together, from the glowing color themes to the virtual keyboard and scan-line switch.
Final Thoughts
Google Images Terminal keeps the pleasure simple: ask for a picture, wait for the terminal to think, and watch a shape appear from plain characters on the old glowing screen.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
What is Google Images Terminal?
Google Images Terminal is an unofficial 2012 mass:werk companion to Google BBS Terminal.
It imagines Google image search inside a 1980s-style BBS terminal, complete with a dial-up entrance, glowing text, terminal colors, and keyboard-style controls.
Instead of showing normal thumbnails, the page turns cached image results into ASCII art previews, so each picture appears as a little block of text.