I wrote a quick program that takes one argument, how many `A` characters to print to standard output per second (negative argument means no rate limiting). Hope this helps! :-) (On GNU libc, you will need to link your program with `-lrt`.)

Edit: revised to print dot by default, unless a second argument is specified, in which case the first character of that is used. (And that means, if you want to print the NUL character, just specify an empty string as the second argument. :-))

    #include <math.h>
    #include <stdio.h>
    #include <stdlib.h>
    #include <time.h>
    #include <unistd.h>
    
    int
    sleeptill(const struct timespec *when)
    {
        struct timespec now, diff;
    
        clock_gettime(CLOCK_REALTIME, &now);
        diff.tv_sec = when->tv_sec - now.tv_sec;
        diff.tv_nsec = when->tv_nsec - now.tv_nsec;
        while (diff.tv_nsec < 0) {
            diff.tv_nsec += 1000000000;
            --diff.tv_sec;
        }
        if (diff.tv_sec < 0)
            return 0;
        return nanosleep(&diff, 0);
    }
    
    int
    main(int argc, char **argv)
    {
        double rate = 0.0;
        char *endp;
        struct timespec start;
        double offset;
    
        if (argc >= 2) {
            rate = strtod(argv[1], &endp);
            if (endp == argv[1] || *endp)
                rate = 0.0;
            else
                rate = 1 / rate;
    
            if (!argv[2])
                argv[2] = ".";
        }
    
        if (!rate) {
            fprintf(stderr, "usage: %s rate [char]\n", argv[0]);
            return 1;
        }
    
        clock_gettime(CLOCK_REALTIME, &start);
        offset = start.tv_nsec / 1000000000.0;
    
        while (1) {
            struct timespec till = start;
            double frac;
            double whole;
    
            frac = modf(offset += rate, &whole);
            till.tv_sec += whole;
            till.tv_nsec = frac * 1000000000.0;
            sleeptill(&till);
            write(STDOUT_FILENO, argv[2], 1);
        }
    }