I'm thinking along the lines of the virtual world representation in Hackers.
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locked by Will♦ Mar 16 '12 at 21:02
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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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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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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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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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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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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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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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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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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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I've noticed something funny in how movies show brute force password cracking. The movie Wargames is the most obvious example. When Joshua is trying to guess the password for launching missiles you see his progress on a screen. The way brute force password cracking works in the movies is when you get the password partially right you get a message showing which characters you got right and which ones you need to keep guessing for. Its like playing Hangman! |
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3D spinning logos -- especially in covert Government departments... |
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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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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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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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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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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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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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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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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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"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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A spy satellite can be positioned over a point of interest within seconds. And it's a real-time video. And the video is rock-steady. (In reality, these low-orbit satellites are whizzing by the ground at thousands of mph.) And the video has incredibly high resolution. |
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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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Wargames: The Dead Code. Nothing more needs to be said. |
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4 8 15 16 23 42 |
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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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In Anti-Trust, when the operating system developed by Ryan Fillipe is written in HTML. |
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When a character who is supposedly some kind of super advanced computer programmer says something along the lines of "I speak binary," as if a computer programmer sits at the computer and types 0s and 1s all day. |
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If I hadn't watched the new Knight Rider I would never have learned that "Every good programmer leaves a backdoor into their system." |
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