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I'm thinking along the lines of the virtual world representation in Hackers.

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HACK THE PLANET! – Nils Pipenbrinck Oct 6 '08 at 17:03
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Jurassic Park... two billion lines of code to look through to control the power? Well, I suppose that's about right if they're Agile. – tsilb Oct 6 '08 at 23:51
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Lately I've seen commercials where the programmer is writing code as fast as he can type. He write lines of code from the BOTTOM of the screen UPWARDS! Who writes code starting at the last line of the program working towards the first line of the program. Also, programmers now videochat about dates while they type. – Nosredna Jun 24 at 19:16
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This is Unix... I know this. – akway Jul 24 at 22:28
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So much disaster would have been prevented if the idiots at Jurassic Park would have used locks that fail closed when the power is lost. I mean, really, what were they thinking? – Brian Neal Jul 25 at 16:38
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155 Answers

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vote up 414 vote down check

Uploading a virus from a Mac to an alien spacecraft in Independence Day.

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But it was written in Java! So it was universal! ;-) – gabr Oct 6 '08 at 16:43
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And what's worse -- A.C. Clarke did the exact same thing in "3001". I can excuse loud movies for fan-boys, but Clarke should have known better. – James Curran Oct 6 '08 at 16:50
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Thank you gabr. Java: write once, crash everywhere. – Justsalt Oct 7 '08 at 15:54
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It's clear that he'd spent some time finding a stack buffer overflow exploit in their system. He probably used nmap and crafted a series of nops followed by a random number which crashed the stack. See, even aliens don't code perfectly. :) – PintSizedCat Oct 8 '08 at 8:49
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I always thought that was a tribute to the original War of the Worlds, where a virus kills the martians. – Uri Mar 12 at 5:05
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vote up 310 vote down

I am always bothered by the Infinite resolution of bitmaps. Take a digital picture. Zoom in so that it pixelates. Then they "sharpen" the image and voila! out of pixelation, the killer, thug, spy, license plate etc. appears out of digital magic.

ARRRGH!!!!

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It's all because of the ESPER photo analyzer in Blade Runner. Nobody non-technical grasped that this wasn't just something you could automatically do with any image, that it was science-fictionally possible because of the data embedded in an analog photograph. – chaos Feb 22 at 1:52
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My wife and I actually have a running joke regarding this. Any time a crime-show or movie shows a blurry image, we instinctively suggest they "enhance that," which they always do ;) Might as well "re-render that black photo with sunlight, get me a reverse angle, and remove his mask...that's him!" – Jonathan Sampson Feb 23 at 18:48
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Don't knock it. This is exactly how physicists are discovering new subatomic particles. They take a picture of an apple with a Nikon CoolPix and Zoom, Enance, Zoom, Ehance... LEPTONS! – JohnFx Apr 3 at 21:32
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This is no longer as far-fetched as it once seemed. Several research groups are working on advanced DSP techniques. At Rice University they are working on a 1-pixel digital camera that (currently) has the effective resolution of a 256x256 pixel camera. During the Pathfinder mission, JPL programmers were able to combine two seemingly-identical photos and increase the resolution by doing sub-pixel enhancement. These aren't as extreme as in the movies, but it sure is interesting! – Barry Brown Jun 24 at 19:15
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I was amazed when, in The Bourne Identity, the police in Zurich zoom on the license plate on the security camera BUT, FOR ONCE, DON'T ENHANCE the picture. They just try and read the number from a big, blurry picture. That was relieving. – Ã–lbaum Sep 23 at 16:28
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vote up 227 vote down

Visual basic GUI in CSI. Pure pain.

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Since I dislike all the CSIs, I never saw this until you linked it. This ... is ... just ... abysmal. Sigh. – James A. Rosen Oct 6 '08 at 16:59
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That clip made Coke go up my nose. She's so earnest about it too! – Mark Biek Oct 6 '08 at 17:26
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I say this at work every time I have to do some kind of IP research. Fabulous. – Electrons_Ahoy Oct 6 '08 at 18:12
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That's the funniest movie I've seen all day. – Dean Oct 7 '08 at 10:22
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Well I almost choked on my coffee. – Jacob T. Nielsen Oct 7 '08 at 18:17
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My peeve: How EVERY computer makes a sound for EVERY character displayed on the screen along - never mind flashing, for example, EVERY fingerprint on the screen when trying to 'match' the print pulled off of some evidence.

Can you imagine working in a room full of non-stop beeping computers?

And if you're doing an investigation, wouldn't you be angry at the programmer who thought that the program should take the time to display all those fingerprints that DON'T match? I can see the cop thinking "Oh yes, keep me waiting while you show me everything I DON'T want - why not just text me when you get a match?"

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Every time I see the fingerprints flashing on CSI, I think, "There's an opportunity for optimization. I think I'll apply to write software for the FBI." – Bill the Lizard Oct 6 '08 at 17:52
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No kidding - if you simply eliminate the displaying of non-matching images, you could speed things up by several orders of magnitude. They'd think you were a programming god. – Graeme Perrow Oct 6 '08 at 18:23
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You guys don't get it. It is an user experience feature so the cop doesn't go all confused 'Is this thing working or what?' =) – Sergio Acosta Oct 6 '08 at 18:58
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I'm sure that the programmer just optimized by showing the same three fingerprints in a loop to give the appearance of progress until the match is found. :) – Alex Miller Oct 7 '08 at 13:55
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Now you can enjoy this sensation at home! nullsoft.com/free/nbeep – Ch00k Oct 8 '08 at 10:27
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vote up 140 vote down

In Mission Impossible, an electronic transfer of a big amount of money takes as long as a big file upload. It takes so long that it requires a progress bar...

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Same thing happened in Swordfish. – JohnFx Sep 8 at 22:54
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vote up 139 vote down

"Unix, I know this" - Lex from Jurrasic Park.

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Except the interface that she "knew" was really a program on an SGI demo disk. After the movie came out, I installed it on my Irix. – Paul Tomblin Oct 6 '08 at 16:44
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I hate how many movies and tv series equate hacking with 'password guessing'.

Apparently a good hacker is the one who can guess the password for a government mainframe computer in 4 or 5 attempts.

And every time the hacker tries a password and fails, he somehow knows that he is 'closer' to guessing the right one.

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and they wont captcha him after invalid logons – Midhat Oct 6 '08 at 18:22
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Well, he is closer in the sense that $COMBINATIONS-1 < $COMBINATIONS. – Just Some Guy Oct 6 '08 at 18:28
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@olliej - I named my dog "RDkqf7G5o9FhyLBX", or "RDkqf7G" for short. Doesn't everyone use pwgen? Or at least a UUID? – Just Some Guy Oct 6 '08 at 19:13
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This is played to great comic effect in Peep Show, where Mark guesses his girlfriends password - "Sex and the city?... No. Ah, I bet she thinks it's Sex IN the city... bingo!" – Iain Oct 29 '08 at 10:03
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There's a version of this in Watchmen: "smartest man in the world" Ozymandias has password-protected his global conspiracy with "RAMSES" (a translation of his name) – Chris Conway Jan 6 at 19:31
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vote up 99 vote down

Dan Brown - Digital Fortress.....

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Man, now I have a new favorite pick. I'd forgotten about this dreadful book. – James A. Rosen Oct 6 '08 at 16:51
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I you can manage to turn off your geek snobbery.. Digital Fortress wasn't that bad of a book from an entertainment standpoint. – Simucal Oct 6 '08 at 23:18
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No, we can't turn of our geek snobbery. We wouldn't be REAL geeks then, would we? – JesperE Oct 7 '08 at 9:15
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Dan Brown books seem good until you actually know something about what he is writing about. – Brad Gilbert Oct 9 '08 at 20:20
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I'm sorry you ever felt that Dan Brown seemed like a good author. – Eric Jul 7 at 20:59
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Basically every episode of CSI or CSI:Miami.

Every time a tech is looking at a grainy digital photograph and their supervisor leans over their shoulder and says, "Adjust and enhance!"

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It'd be nice if we could zoom in like that. We could just point a 35mm disposable camera at the sky and zoom in on it to see cosmic background radiation. No need for multi-million-dollar Hubble telescopes! – Kip Oct 6 '08 at 16:55
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Don't you mean, "Adjust," --puts on sunglasses--, "and Enhance!" YEEEEAAAAAHHHH!!!! – Bill the Lizard Oct 6 '08 at 17:12
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Imagined conversation between technical advisor and writer: Advisor: "This is not possible." Writer: "Well, you CLEARLY haven't seen Blade Runner." – Electrons_Ahoy Oct 6 '08 at 18:11
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LOL @ Bill the Lizard! – Rich Oct 7 '08 at 1:07
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There should be a fake stackoverflow site for CSI developer where they can ask questions like "how do I make the CImage control show .adjusted=true and .enhancement=maximum by default" – Hafthor Apr 3 at 21:42
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vote up 93 vote down

In "Enemy of the state", they have a store's security camera video. Captured on the video is Will Smith walking with a bag. They not only do the classic "zoom in and sharpen", but they have some super-advanced program that allows them to ROTATE the bag and see what the other side of the bag looked like and are then able to determine that he had a gameboy in the bag based on that shape.

It's even more amazing when they do the same thing with satellite images.

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While the depiction in EotS was sensationalized, what they portrayed is in fact possible. psung.blogspot.com/2008/03/… – Dour High Arch Oct 6 '08 at 19:47
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That was a TurboExpress, not a GameBoy. Fanboy alert! – Robert S. Oct 7 '08 at 18:13
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I don't recall that anyone was illuminated pixel-by-pixel by a projected light source in that scene, but that paper is pretty damn cool. This is a horrible scene, though. I haven't seen it in years, and only saw it once, but remember it well... – PeterAllenWebb Nov 5 '08 at 20:08
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I was in college doing my CS degree at the time that movie came out. We always joked that there must have been a library full of ridiculous functions named things like rotate_bag(). To this day between friends we will joke about writing the rotate_bag() enhance() or calculate_step_two() functions. – OrionRobillard Jun 24 at 20:00
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Definitely the episode of NCIS where they play a duet on a computer keyboard.

The lab technician was typing furiously to try to stop a hacker who is attacking her computer in real-time. However, she is losing the fight, so her colleague joins her to help her out - by typing furiously on the same keyboard at the same time.

Surely the keyboard isn't such a rare and mysterious technology that 90% of the viewing audience can't see that this is ridiculous?

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lmfao, do you have a link / name of the episode? – Click Upvote Jan 5 at 10:44
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Sadly they've done this more than once. But whats better is that while they were both losing their "fight" against the hacker, the boss who doesn't even know how to use a computer just walks up and unplugs it. – Brandon Mar 24 at 18:55
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Ridiculous. Oh dear, now I know why my pair programming sessions have been so unproductive.. – Daniel M Nov 19 at 8:30
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When you see a projection of a computer screen on a user's face. A crime against both computers AND physics!

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In a comic book style movie like the Matrix or something, this adds to the visual style, and is not annoying. It's like a style you associate with that genre. With a movie that is supposedly realistic, however, it is stoopid. – thomasrutter Mar 27 at 1:28
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Obligatory XKCD link: xkcd.com/283 – MatrixFrog May 3 at 6:27
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vote up 69 vote down

Mr Scott whipping up the formula for 'Transparent Aluminum' on an old mac classic from Star Trek IV: The voyage home.

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Computer? Computer?! Keyboard. How quaint. +1, love that scene :) – Michael Stum Oct 6 '08 at 18:02
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In today terms, is like you were able to hack a payroll system in cuneiform script on clay tablets... – Myrrdyn Oct 6 '08 at 18:44
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How is it he is fool enough to think the mouse is a microphone, but the next minute is using the keyboard seeming to know, like an experienced user, just what to type? – DarenW Oct 7 '08 at 23:30
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Uh. I think this scene is supposed to be funny... – PeterAllenWebb Nov 5 '08 at 19:54
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Mocking Star Trek that's Blasphemy :) don't forget when Kirk Build a Bazooka from bamboo charcoal, etc, and it worked, with out going into specifics it's not that easy, trust me – Bob The Janitor Sep 8 at 22:36
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vote up 67 vote down

In polish soap opera "Brzydula", one of main characters was writing e-mail in MS Paint:

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That's just awesome! – Colin Mackay Jul 30 at 12:33
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lol, brilliant! – Bayard Randel Sep 8 at 22:36
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hahahahahahaha I'm literally rofl – Carlo Sep 30 at 20:37
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What? I do that all the time :P – alex Oct 6 at 5:38
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+1 for making me laugh out loud – Kevin Laity Oct 8 at 18:20
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Just the idea that hacking is something done in real-time. Hackers, Swordfish, NCIS, and many others depict hackers sitting at their keyboard furiously typing away commands to the systems they're hacking (or at each other). They don't seem to grok that the act of hacking is more like spending hours writing a script (or seconds downloading one) and then spending a few milliseconds running it. It's not interactive!

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@Stefano: You should brush up on your terms. A honey pot is a trap set up to catch hackers (and wannabes), not some system that gives you all you want. "Good honey pot" is a paradox. – Alex Oct 8 at 18:01
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vote up 60 vote down

In Batman Returns, the caped crusader is soaring through the sewer in his bat-sewer-mobile and honing in on the Penguin's duck-mobile. As he approaches the target, the duckmobile shows up on his radar, which emits a "quack" every time the rotating needle passes the target.

I never understood why Batman would take the time during the construction of this advanced amphibious assault vehicle to add a duck icon to the display, much less a quacking sound.

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Oh yeah, in the same episode he conveniently had a "Alphabet Soup Bat-Container" to bring the soup back to the Bat cave. – JohnFx Sep 8 at 23:02
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vote up 59 vote down

Good looking programmers.

Example: Angelina Jolie as a the nerd hacker, in "Hackers"

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I don't know what your talking about, I'm good looking, aren't I? – Brad Gilbert Oct 9 '08 at 20:40
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Me too. I'm downvoting. – Micah Nov 27 '08 at 19:10
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someone hit a nerve – John Jan 6 at 16:03
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if you responded with a down vote, yes it dose apply to you, now go back down in your mom's basement and play some more D&D – Bob The Janitor Sep 8 at 22:41
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D&D awesome! let's play! since she showed her boobs i am very glad they used her instead of a more realistic geek with man boobs :P – João Portela Oct 8 at 18:09
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How every computer in the world will accepts English language full-sentence commands ("TRANSFER PAYROLL HALF-CENTS TO ACCOUNT OF JOE SMITH") provided they are typed in all-caps.

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dude. its just COBOL. cmon. – Nicholas Mancuso Oct 7 '08 at 16:15
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Actually that resembles what is considered good style in SQL – popcnt Mar 12 at 5:23
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vote up 53 vote down

Anything from 24.

"I need to open a socket"

"Transfer it to my screen"

"Follow this protocol"

"Download it to my PDA"

"DAMMIT"

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"Morris, this report has missing sectors! Let me smell your breath." – Andy McCluggage Oct 7 '08 at 13:40
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But...Chloey can do anything :) – dotjoe Feb 23 at 19:05
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Yes, and those "read-once" memory cards. – splattne Mar 14 at 18:54
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Don't forget the famous "AOL Parody" of 24/ Hillarious. collegehumor.com/video:1788161 – JohnFx Apr 3 at 21:38
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Agreed. The socket comments in the last season made me shoot daiquiri out my nose. – OrionRobillard Jun 24 at 20:04
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"The Net" with Sandra Bullock is the first thing that comes to mind.

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That's not how you use a movie. Focus on Sandra Bullock's ass, not the computer. – Peter Wone Oct 6 '08 at 21:39
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I loved the IP number where one of the octets was something like 354. – chaos Feb 22 at 1:55
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How about the fact that they outsourced QA work for Wolfenstein to Sandra Bullock? – Mike Robinson May 19 at 16:09
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vote up 47 vote down

Why do "search programs" have to rapidly display an image on the screen of every person (or whatever) in the database as it's searching?

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vote up 45 vote down

How about green Japanese characters scrolling vertically up the screen, leaving trails?

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But at least they used nmap when trying to hack into ports. – RKitson Oct 7 '08 at 0:15
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yes, actually they used a real SSH exploit, so it was interesting in that point. – rogeriopvl Nov 27 '08 at 22:50
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in those entire 8 seconds out of 3 films... – orip Nov 28 '08 at 21:48
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Well, and the fact that some of the scrolling characters are "hot blonde". – Eli Dec 6 '08 at 6:28
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Come on those were cool :) – thomasrutter Mar 27 at 1:31
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Swordfish! come on: a timed hack? gimme a break

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That and the fact that programming is apparently just hooking up spinning blue cubes, Lego-style. Man, and here I am using Visual Studio like a sucker. – Electrons_Ahoy Oct 6 '08 at 18:15
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And what would I give for a woman in my lap whilst up against a tight deadline! – Skizz Oct 7 '08 at 10:33
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Actually, all thing considered, Swordfish was pretty good on the computer side of things. The time hack is realistic enough, in the sense you could put someone in that situation. That the guy succeeds, well, it is a movie. – Sylverdrag Mar 16 at 8:47
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About the cubes, I seem to remember that was only the representation. Besides, I came across a hacker website where it describes how to crack software in a photo editor. (When the exe file is opened as a RAW picture, each dot is 1 bit, and you can change its value with a painbrush). – Sylverdrag Mar 16 at 8:59
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Apparently you don't understand the power of a "seven headed hydra worm" with 9 monitors to boot! – JohnFx Apr 3 at 21:34
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Trinity's use of nmap to look for vulnerabilities in a power station in Matrix Reloaded - oh wait, that was actually quite accurate.

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Do we need a seprate question of where computers are shown accurately in films? Or is this the only occurence. – Martin York Oct 6 '08 at 18:00
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Yes. Unlikely... well, maybe. Enhance. – bill weaver Oct 7 '08 at 18:35
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Sneakers had some pretty good moments – Henrik Gustafsson Nov 27 '08 at 22:18
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Real-time satellite imagery (in 24, Enemy of the State, etc.). It's amazing that there is never a cloud in the sky.

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Not sure what this has to do with programming, but it's a pet peeve of mine, too. And they always feature the camera shot looking "over the satellite's shoulder" down on earth, and you hear it beep-beep-beeping away--dont' they remember, in space, nobody can hear you scream?! :) – Drew Hall Nov 1 '08 at 3:23
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The entire movie "Hackers." The signature scene for me was when the CG face rendered by the computer virus started screaming "HELP ME!!!" when the hero deleted it.

(On the other hand, Angelina Jolie.)

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But don't forget the spray-painted laptops. Those were cool. – David Hicks Oct 6 '08 at 17:37
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But at least "Hackers" knew that it was goofy. The tech is so bad that it's more funny than annoying. – Just Some Guy Oct 6 '08 at 18:29
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To me it's always funny how they always use keyboard typing for dramatic effect. Nobody heard of mice in the movies yet. Maybe they're all limited to shell access only...

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Not true. Scotty used a mouse. Hello Computer! – Ferruccio Oct 6 '08 at 18:14
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Real hacker's use the command line. Or butterflies: xkcd.com/378 – Colonel Sponsz Oct 7 '08 at 15:43
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ratpoison windows mananger, obviously – DarenW Oct 7 '08 at 23:27
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The keyboard is fantastic. I once randomly started typing so the person that I was assisting via the phone would think I had done something to fix their non-existent problem. It worked! – shelfoo Oct 8 '08 at 16:41
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The way that computer systems often helpfully report which characters of a password or code you've guessed correctly, making brute force attacks that much easier.

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This actually was a real security issue in older systems. By checking the password character by character the system would take longer to respond for each correct character. By timing the reponse time it was easy to bruteforce the password. – John Nilsson Oct 9 '08 at 17:36
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Reminds me of a system I worked on where the username / password combination was the unique key in the database. And the username was the last of the user. There were 900 Smiths on the site, so when the 901st tried to register there were 900 passwords he might try to use that'd pop an alert indicating "That password is already in use" – Mike Robinson Sep 30 at 20:43
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Well I hate it when nerds are portraited as people who know something about all electronic equipment and programs. Like in Die Hard 4.0 where they go into the powerplant, and the nerd presses 2 or 3 buttons on a computer system he have never seen before, and suddenly he knows exactly where they need to go. A lot of great examples of that around :P

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In defense of Hollywood that is what all non-technical people think. I'm a computer programmer but my family thinks I can fix anything with a microchip in it. One time my grandmother called me when her cable went out. Call the cable company MawMaw! – Autodidact Jun 29 at 16:01
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vote up 28 vote down

Office space - no one here gets that much freedom and respect!

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Yeah, they don't let me take a laser printer out to a field to beat it with a baseball bat either... – Redbeard 0x0A Oct 7 '08 at 20:00
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"PC Load letter"!?! What the f**k does that mean?? – Richard E May 3 at 7:57
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@ Redbeard we did that in the parking lot, boss helped – Bob The Janitor Sep 8 at 22:47
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