I'm thinking along the lines of the virtual world representation in Hackers.
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I think it was The Net, with Sandra Bullock, where she telnets (!) to a remote server with an IP address of 164.87.51.387 or thereabouts. There were other things wrong with it, but thankfully I have forgotten them. |
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My favorite: fast-scrolling listings with unrelated code which are used to signify virus upload, hack in progress, or something like this. |
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The sentence: "Wait, let me just hack [noun]." |
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Monitors that have a DOS display that is apparently about 15 characters wide and 6 lines high. So the camera can read what is being typed from over the shoulder of the teenage actor. |
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Hacking an ATM with a laptop. "Easy money" |
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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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Searching databases in movies is done in English. "Find brown-haired people living in Los Angeles named Juan" returns either immediately or after 4 hours, depending on what the plot requires. Then it returns 8 hits. |
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Weird Science, the part where the Wyatt "hacks" into DARPAnet using a phone modem, and proceeds through their cleverly designed semi-3D tunnel, along with barred doors closing and chattering skulls and crossbones along the way. All that to make Steven Segal's ex girlfriend. |
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Any movie where the "hacker" types furiously for 30 seconds and then utters the cliched announcement of accomplishment: "I'm In!" |
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Definately Swordfish! 3D hacking? Come on! Programming/hacking is done by spinning 3D blocks around on a display? Come on! And all this while getting a blowjob from a hot chick... |
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Live free or die hard. With a computer you can do almost everything. Control an helicopter remotely, blow up gas pipes in the other side of the city etc etc. Just horrible! |
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Swordfish. I do the double keyboard action everytime someone asks what I do. And people say..."What, you're Beethoven from Bill and Ted's Excellent Adventure?". |
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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 one episode of the TV show Alias the tech guy is working on some kind of computer virus. His monitor is shown briefly while he is working on the "code" which in fact is not code at all but a Makefile.in produced by GNU automake. |
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Not exactly just a programming issue but i find it quite hilarious when in 24 Jack eg. steals a standard phone from a car and some how get live satellite image feed or 3d models for buildings into it in a matter of seconds :) I would'nt even need the ability to show any data on my phone. I would be satisfied with the bandwith alone. |
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Navigation and/or status displays in pretty much all the Sci-Fi movies show assembler code |
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Every time people in a movie or TV show zoom in on a picture of someone's face, and discover important information reflected in the person's eye, I die inside. (This has happened on CSI at least twice.) |
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3D spinning logos -- especially in covert Government departments... |
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X-Files: The Usual Suspects, set in 1989 when the Lone Gunman meet for the first time and dump an encrypted file to a printer, and then scan it back in to decrypt ignoring the hundred or so unprintable characters in the binary file.. Stargate Atlantis: Episode where they show replicator base code scrolling on the screen and it is javascript lifted from a financial site web page.. Although already mentioned earlier I don't think anything can beat the Independence Day virus upload, I think that beats all |
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Good looking programmers. Example: Angelina Jolie as a the nerd hacker, in "Hackers" |
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Jakob Nielsen has a nice overview of Usability in the Movies. There's also a page about Excessive Interoperability in Independence Day - well worth reading. |
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Terminator 3, when skynet is turned on for the first time. It bypasses every firewall in the world within about two seconds. |
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Reboot, the action-adventure television series. |
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I've thought of another! Banks of Flashing lights |
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Bladerunner. Deckard is analyzing a photo of a bedroom. He enhances... he enhances... and then, somehow, TURNS THE PERSPECTIVE OF THE PHOTOGRAPH to to reveal the snake lady around the corner sitting in a bathtub. Ridiculous, even for science fiction. |
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I love that ROBOCOP runs on DOS. In the first movie, where he's being built, they show a boot-up sequence, where he has to load CONFIG.SYS to run. |
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CSI "I'll make a GUI in Visual Basic to track the Killer's IP address" You tube link to the video |
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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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In "The Italian Job" (2003), Lyle/"Napster"/Seth Green hacks into the city's main traffic control system. Not only he easily gets into this system, but he can also immediately control everything, is familiar with the complete system and there are ultra high quality video streams of every traffic light in the whole city. On his notebook. |
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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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