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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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There was this episode of The X-Files (S01E07) called Ghost in the Machine. It was all about a AI computer that killed people to prevent shutting it down. The computer was able to put electricity on a door lock in a building when it detected people with the security camera. It was also able to crush a car by lowering the parking garage gate at the right moment. Oh yeah, it could also talk :)

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You're supposed to Want to Believe. – Peter Wone Oct 6 '08 at 21:44
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The idea that when you do a text search and no results come up, you can 'search again' and get the result you were looking for

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The idea that somehow 'coding' involves strange symbols not usually found on a keyboard

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it's just that all hackers use APL (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/APL_(programming_language/…) ) – James Curran Oct 6 '08 at 18:42
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@James Curran: +1 for APL – Jared Updike Oct 29 '08 at 19:13
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or they use PERL....;-) – DoxaLogos Jun 13 at 19:36
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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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Noone's mentioned Tron yet? Apparently, programs are little people that run around in glowing costumes.

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It's gotta be every episode of Stargate or Stargate: Atlantis that deals with the Replicators. McKay is always reprogramming an entire hive of replicators in 30 minutes using a Dell laptop or some such crap.

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thedailywtf.com/Articles/… Replicators run on Javascript. Figures. – pookleblinky Oct 6 '08 at 18:25
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Does the dell protection extend to the pegasus galaxy? – Uri Nov 27 '08 at 19:11
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I hate how most movies and TV shows continually display scrolling text that occasionally bleep and click.

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There was a terrible episode of NCIS where two "hackers" were hacking each other, consisting of fast camera swipes as they moved each other's windows back and forth.

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The fact that no matter how many characters a password is, you can apparently always type it with just 3 presses on the keyboard.

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Maybe the login code is taken from Lotus Notes. – Rytmis May 12 at 7:25
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Stick with me: In the end of "The Departed" Matt Damon's character deletes DiCaprio's police records from the database.

Oh Noes! now there's no record that DiCaprio was ever working for the good guys! Not anywhere on backups or logfiles! Nowhere!

Ah! think of all the bloodshed that could have been avoided by a subpoena for the backup tapes.

Ruined an otherwise great movie for me.

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  • IP Addresses in the form of 192.384.262.481
  • That Superman 3 Exploit where they funnel the fractions of cents of every transaction into an account. But in a positive sense, because that's now geek culture.
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But this is intentional. It's like starting a phone number with 555. It looks good to casual glances, but it won't result in some real world computer becoming a cracking target. – Matthew Scouten Oct 8 '08 at 14:40
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True, but they could use a valid IP address for that. 192.168.14.83 or 10.28.115.210 also look good. – Michael Stum Oct 8 '08 at 17:42
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And then we'd be on here complaining about how they're using LAN addresses pretending they're live internet addresses (the horror!) – MDCore Oct 17 '08 at 14:14
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I am surprised that the IP addresses in US movies don't start with 555 – Patrick Klug Feb 2 at 12:54
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The superman 3/Office Space exploit was originally from real life. – Darron Feb 5 at 23:41
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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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Displaying text on the side of a rotating polyhedron.

Why would anyone ever want to read or enter text this way?

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compiz-fusion comes to mind – SpoonMeiser Oct 6 '08 at 21:51
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Mr Scott whipping up the formula for 'Transparent Aluminum' on an old mac classic from Star Trek IV: The voyage home.

alt text

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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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How about every line that Cloe spouts in 24? I think they invented a language of technical gibberish similar to Klingon for that show. Not downing on anything else about 24, but please.

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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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The "live video" from Jurassic Park - it was a quicktime movie; you can see the progress bar advancing.

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I remember this! lol – Lucas Oct 8 '08 at 1:34
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I remember seeing that! – Fry Oct 10 '08 at 3:33
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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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Well, if you want "virtual world representation", we gotta talk TRON: Let's see...

  • it has a physical matter transport device (which we won't touch here, since it's out of scope of the question), but
  • The "data" being transfer passes through a computer, where it retains its consciousness.
  • Conscious data and programs (which are also conscious) are interchangeable.
  • "Good" data fights "Evil" data in hand-to-hand combat.
  • When "good" data wins the brawl, a teletype spits out evidence -- proof of the real-life person wrong doing.
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I don't see the problem here. I mean, I'm constantly fixing bugs by throwing glowing frisbees at them. :) – Dave DuPlantis Oct 6 '08 at 18:16
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Tron isn't egregious. I mean, it's not like they're TRYING to portray computers realistically... shows like CSI are dead serious however. :P – Ace Oct 8 '08 at 9:38
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The Matrix has it own problems... If "there is no spoon" why do they duck bullets? – James Curran Mar 11 at 14:34
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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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I love in "Weird Science" when they hack into the Pentagon network through the 3D vector graphics GUI. And they have a choice of 3 doors - one of which has a skull and cross bones behind it.

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Dude, they create a woman by shoving magazine clippings into the diskette drive! – itsadok Oct 7 '08 at 10:07
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... While wearing bras on their heads. – Brad Gilbert Oct 9 '08 at 20:33
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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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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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Again, in Hackers, when they show the terminal, they show this 3D rendering of some weird space. But then, they go and speak out loud a unix command character by character ...

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vote up 58 vote down

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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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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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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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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Well, back when we all had modems to AOL instead of broadband to the Internet, there was the old "I can hack into your computer, just by calling your home".

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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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