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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

vote up 17 vote down

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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Noone's mentioned Tron yet? Apparently, programs are little people that run around in glowing costumes.

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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. – Ölbaum Sep 23 at 16:28
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vote up 15 vote down

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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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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vote up 11 vote down

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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vote up 71 vote down

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 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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Wargames: The Dead Code. Nothing more needs to be said.

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vote up 4 vote down

I would say 'Ocean's Thirteen' earthquake to Reboot the Casino's Security System !

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vote up 0 vote down

Scooby-Doo and the Cyber Chase

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4 8 15 16 23 42

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I am addicted to LOST, so I had to upvote this, even if it's off-topic. So and now for some Dharma snacks, maybe an Apollo. – splattne Nov 7 '08 at 16:36
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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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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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VR.5.

Not strictly programming, but with a 2400bps modem and a PC, you can alter the programming in your neighbor's brain or contact a comatose relative.

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It's a nice way of saying your neighbor is really slow in da head. – Sylverdrag Mar 16 at 9:38
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No ones watching the latest season of Prison Break with the device that sucks up electronic data from other devices? He could stand next to your computer with this device in his pocket and copy your entire hard drive..

Better yet, it could also copy data from portable media (whether or not they're turn on)!

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Ha I saw this... – alex Jan 9 at 5:47
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vote up 7 vote down

OK not programming specifically, but applicable. In the classic 'Office Space', when Peter Gibbons is trying to shut down his computer so that he can get out of the office before the dreaded Lundberg can buttonhole him about working on the weekend, as we see his screen saving to disk the desktop looks like a Mac, but when the file save is complete, we see a DOS prompt!

Now I know Initech is a bad place to work, but what kind of insane boss makes you work on a computer like that?

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They're running MovieOS: tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/… – Dour High Arch Oct 6 '08 at 20:07
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It wasn't too bad a slip, but at one time in Antitrust, either Ryan Philippe or Rachael Leigh Cook is hacking into a competitor's (iirc) computer on a 10.*.*.* network :-)

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I was going to mention the Office Space one too. But there's another one from Office Space that I think is even worse. After they write the virus, and Samir is installing it, you see a progress bar that says "Uploading VIRUS_CDEF"

Who the hell would write a virus and call it "virus"? Was he trying to get caught? For that matter, why the progress bar!?

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vote up 5 vote down

I have to agree with Randall Munroe: Julia Stiles, age 12, in the PBS series Ghostwriter. It is awesome in the depth of its badness. Also: Julia Stiles, age 12.

The sound is terrible, but you can see it here.

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vote up 27 vote down

The database containing convenient 3D models of every room in every house in the whole city

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.. in the whole world. – sthg Mar 12 at 5:25
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The book Prey by Michael Crichton was awful.

The code was just absurd. Assuming even for a moment that developers use Greek symbols for variable names (as much as I'd like to have a lambda and delta symbols, my keyboard somehow lacks them, unlike the devs in the book), the blocks didn't even make sense! How difficult would it have been to have one of his lackeys just ask a programmer for something rational?

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lolcode.

http://lolcode.com/

HAI
CAN HAS STDIO?
VISIBLE "HAI WORLD!"
KTHXBYE
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lolcode is both awesome(TM) and real(TM) - as in it compiles and therefore not an egregious pop-culture perversion. – Rob Allen Oct 6 '08 at 20:45
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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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vote up 26 vote down

I think it's funny when you hear people typing away on the keyboard in crime dramas doing photoshop-type stuff that really requires a mouse.

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Use ImageMagick instead. Then you can use a keyboard instead. – JasonTrue Apr 30 at 19:16
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I HATE THE UIs ON CSI:MIAMI! They're so fake!

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vote up 40 vote down

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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vote up 16 vote down

Viruses that look more like Photoshop filters.

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vote up 12 vote down

lawnmower man. I worked for a VR software company when it came out and I think it killed the whole field off!

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vote up 0 vote down

Assassins - there are examples of pretty much every atrocity mentioned here. Big text appearing character by character with sound effects, rediculous resolution, elusive 3 1/2 in floppy disk that can save the world...

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