I'm thinking along the lines of the virtual world representation in Hackers.
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A few people mentioned 24, and rightly so. What really bothered me, though, is early in the current season when they mispronounced "mainframe." I'm pretty sure everyone puts the accent on the "main" part, right? It sounded like "main frameroom" instead of "mainframe room." I realize that I'm slightly neurotic about this kind of thing but it was one of those things that really bothers me about 24. And yet, I keep watching it... |
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When programming a game consists of running round in a sparkly game world shooting things. I have a tutoring job where I teach game programming to genuinely interested high school kids and this stereotype has been an immense roadblock. |
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"The Jackal" with Bruce Willis; how he ridiculously rattled off the specs for his uber sniper rifle to a Packard Bell 386, and the damn thing understood every single word, without Dragon Naturally Speaking or anything. I think he also pushes control or alt on his keyboard to start his guns up... |
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Having just seen Wanted this past weekend (and do I ever wish I could have those two hours back): We learn that the assassins' weaving loom passes the names of targets in binary. All I could think was: Where do the character codes come from? ASCII? EBCDIC? Something else? |
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How in TV- and movie-land, successfully logging in causes a huge modal window to pop up that says ACCESS GRANTEDand hangs there for a couple minutes. Because, y'know, I definitely put that in all my login sequences. |
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I love how software in the movies always seems to have a cool, game-like, 3D interface. sigh Back to work in my boring, two dimensional, windowed world. |
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In Disclosure, Michael Douglas use virtual reality to browse files and folders, trying to find the truth about something. |
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For polish stack readers: "emacsem przez sendmail" |
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Has anyone seen Eagle Eye? I purchased it on a flight... I fell asleep half way through.. but a computer system interfacing with a crane? I'd imagine even in this day and age a crane is not hooked up to the internet.... |
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Test driven development. |
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Much as I love the film Pi, I find the construction of Euclid a bit strange. The room seems to be full of random wires and boards, which all plug into what appears to be a basic microchip, yet this chip is the most powerful processor in the world. |
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The Bank also mentioned below by nickf Where the prediction machine constantly has a Mandelbrot set zooming in and out. It puts me in mind of MYOB or Quicken having a panel than constantly cycles through the functions 1+1=2, 1+2=3, 1+3=4, 1+4=5, 1+5=6 |
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What about Terminator 3. The female terminator instantly interfaces with any vehicle. And as they accelerate, the pedal gets pushed to the floor too.... |
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Clear and Present Danger in which Petey (Greg Germann) guesses Robert Ritter's (Henry Czerny) password in about 3 minutes, based on family information that he already knew... |
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EXPLODING COMPUTERS! (notice the caps) Now wasn't that just ridiculous. Yes I'm talking about Die Hard 4. |
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The fact that my wife believes that if we had a Deflector Dish, we could simultaneously reroute the microwave, garage-opener, wii, dvr, dvd player, and mechanical cat toys through it every time anything broke. |
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Anyone remember Tron? Pretty well every computer term they used in that movie was misused or used in the wrong context. It's hilarious to watch. It's even funnier when you realize that they were trying to be serious. |
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How about using a virus to blow up computers, as done in Transformers? And since when do computers contain material that can explode with such force? |
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When somebody prints something, they click print, reach their hand, and pick the printout immediately. There are startup times, printing times, etc. |
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It's amazing how in most of the movies you can just type: upload virus. To destroy the computer. |
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While I have great respect for the dude who mentioned the preposterous virus upload in "Independence Day", I must say that Bruce Willis actually out-did that one in his recent movie "Live Free or Die Hard". Did you catch that rubbish about a "Fire Sale" attack? According to this cheese-whack screen-writer, the Department of Homeland Security set up a single mainframe where all U.S. Corporations were supposed to download their corporate databases if a catestrophic attack occured on the America. This would be the national safety deposit box for all our business data. So the bad guys intended to trigger this process with a Fire Sale attack, and then have their inside man copy all this data to a portable hard disk and walk out of the building. Walking out of the building with all U.S. Corporate data on a portable hard disk would give the bad guys full mastery over all our national wealth. After doing this, you can sip cocktales in Fiji for the rest of your life. |
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There's a 2001 Australian movie called The Bank where David Wenham plays a programmer hired to do market predictions or some crap. As he's working on his program, he complains that it's not running fast enough, so he calls up his mate from uni who gives him "a program" (on a 3.5" floppy). David takes it back to his work where his program is running: by this I mean thousands of lines of code are flashing by on the screen. When he puts the disk in, the lines of code go double-spaced and then merge together to run at twice the speed! |
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In every Law & Order episode that requires the detectives to talk to a computer operator, the operator is a nerd (which means skinny kid with glasses and rumpled clothing) and he is ALWAYS eating something. I guess he's too young for his metabolism to turn that food into fat yet... |
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An opposite example- The most realistic representation of a computer and programming I've seen yet: The Melancholy of Haruhi Suzumiya
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I'd have to say 24. Jack Bauer can always get a cell phone and no matter what, there's never any device compatibility issues. Chloe can hack into satellites and remote control camera on traffic lights b ut can't control/stop a virus in her own building I loved the first few seasons but then things started to get redundant. |
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I watched Terminator again the other day, and suddenly I noticed the "terminator graphics" overlaid when the terminator is "scanning" the area is just a bunch of assembly code. Quite funny :) |
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Transformers"You need to move past Fourier Transfers and start considering Quantum Mechanics." http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AcuHc8NlwdY The commentary before that about viruses and firewalls is priceless too, but the quantum mechanics quote takes the cake. |
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The core (which is a perversion of physics itself), in the scene where the hacker baby genius plays for a few seconds with a cell phone and the wrapping of a chewing gum and then claims: |
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I can't believe nobody has said it yet. Lawnmower Man and it's view of "virtual reality" or "cyberspace". |
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