I'm thinking along the lines of the virtual world representation in Hackers.
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Uploading a virus from a Mac to an alien spacecraft in Independence Day. |
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One that was almost accurate: In Fifth Element, Bruce Willis' character is searching for someone, and we see a cute bouncing animation (kind of like Windows does when copying files) while Willis puts his feet up and ignores the thing until it comes up with a result. |
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Perhaps not the most egregious but my pet peeve is when movies show something being deleted by removing pixels from the UI while the delete is happening. Of course, the delete is finished when all the pixels are gone. I think this is in The Net among others. |
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Swordfish:
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If you look carefully in most movies, the monitors don't have the power cord plugged in. Presumably it looks too cluttered. |
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The fact that both robocop and terminator have heads up displays even though information could (one would expect) be funneled straight into their brains. Their developers added a layer of indirection by forcing them to read the data! |
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The buzzword-duel in Swordfish was quite gruesome, as was "Axel Torvalds". |
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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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The computer in Echelon Conspiracy... it could guess numbers that came up on casinos roulette, see everything almost everywhere, and basically control a lot of stuff that's... well... implausible for a computer to ever be capable of. |
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In Firewall (2006) Harrison Ford steals bank money by wiring the light from a scanner to an iPod and holding it up to a CRT inside a bank office to retrieve and save an account number list. To be fair, he did have about 8 hours beforehand to build it. Seriously, WTF. |
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When David Lightman (Mathew Broderick) and Stephen Falken (John Wood) raise the DEFCON levels at NORAD to engage in Theaterwide Biotoxic and Chemical Warfare and Global Thermonuclear War with the Soviet Union, in the movie "War Games" (1983). This is absolutely one of my favorite movies, that I can watch over and over and still enjoy today. I mean, seriously...Stephen Falken flies Pterodactyl gliders in the woods of Oregon, while hiding from obscure mainframe code he wrote that is going to destroy planet Earth. It doesnt get any more perverted than that folks! |
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In National Treasure and many other action movies: How easily the "heroes" get into government networking/surveillance. And what about all the expensive hi-tech hardware they have? Who did pay for that? |
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No one has mentioned Red Dwarf's "Uncrop" skit? |
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I'm probably exposing myself to ridicule here for having seen this, but Smallville (aka Superman) has some amazingly bad perversions. Case in point: type type type Always something amazing like that. |
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Jeffrey Deaver in the book "The Blue Nowhere". There's a line that goes something like: You can always recognise a hacker because they've got callouses on their fingertips from typing so furiously on the keyboard !!! WTF !!! |
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When the bad guy wants to destroy all data on a particular computer, he takes his big gun and shoots into the monitor, not the HDD. Seen many times, especially in "secret agents stuff" films. |
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In polish soap opera "Brzydula", one of main characters was writing e-mail in MS Paint:
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I'm suprised that no one has mentioned this yet, but the movie Stealth and all those other movies about AI's getting hit by something and turning evil. |
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Watchmen. Specifically, guessing the password of the smartest man in the world on the first try. Almost ruined an otherwise awesome movie. If Ozymandias was actually the smartest man in the world, wouldn't he at least set up two-factor authentication? |
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In The Dark Knight, when they use cell phones to completely map out every room in every building in all of Gotham City. |
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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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Has no one mentioned how computer programs are written in Star Trek: by telling the computer what you want the program to do? It's not the "telling" part that's strange; it's how the program can be described declaratively in a do-what-I-mean manner. Do we all secretly wish that this is the future of programming? |
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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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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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In Anti-Trust, when the operating system developed by Ryan Fillipe is written in HTML. |
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There was an episode in csi:miami where a file was encrypted using vigeneres algorithm |
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Not sure if this counts, but what about GoldenEye 007 on Nintendo 64? If you shoot a computer terminal, it blows up with fire! Though the same goes for an office chair. Perhaps they're packing explosives in them now too! |
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Die Hard 4.0 (sic). |
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Definitly the Second-Life Ghostwhisperer Crossover. A dead father who returns as a ghost to spend his afterlife time to play with his daughter in a Second Life lookalike. I mean seriously... Second Life? this offends so many beliefs at once. |
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You can find it on youtube, though no link for obvious reasons |
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