• Dorkyd68@lemmy.world
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    5 hours ago

    Or like on jurassic park. Where the little girl saves the day by playing a video game on the security system

    • marzhall@lemmy.world
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      2 hours ago

      Oh that was just FSN, an actual filesystem browser for IRIX back in the day. You can install the port FSV if you want to browse your files as if they’re 3D objects on Linux today

  • atlien51@lemm.ee
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    6 hours ago

    God that was awesome. The internet felt like something different. Now it’s just…there I guess. It has almost none of the excitement anymore.

    • outhouseperilous@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      4 hours ago

      It got a lot less magical when the fascists and their corpo buddies stole a generation of young men and everyone’s parents and started trying to murder truth, yeah.

      • atlien51@lemm.ee
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        3 hours ago

        Um no. It lost its appeal way before that

        Edit: actually can u be more specific lol cause for me the internet started sucking bad after 2016

        • outhouseperilous@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          2 hours ago

          The push im referring to started going hard in ~2014. Bannon and zuckerberg are the big banes, but someone at google was also involved.

          It was getting shitty and corpo before that, but not as much as it ended up beong. The curve changed.

      • atlien51@lemm.ee
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        3 hours ago

        Nah it’s not exciting anymore sry

        Aside from the odd interesting yootoob video

  • Jimmycrackcrack@lemmy.ml
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    3 hours ago

    It was pretty impressive, I remembered wondering if that was something Americans got to do that we didn’t in Australia. Seems like other than a few localised experiments in some states it was fiction even for the yanks at the time. I must say I actually still think it’s pretty dope doing that. I liked the little remote controlled fireplace screensaver too. Seemed very cosy.

  • WoodScientist@sh.itjust.works
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    14 hours ago

    If nothing else, at least the new Iran war will make all us Millennials feel a bit young again. Time to relisten to American Idiot, at the very least.

    Or maybe I’ll just feel even older, as I can’t believe we’re still doing this shit.

    • Obi@sopuli.xyz
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      13 hours ago

      I’ve never stopped listening to “Cali punk” so I’m good to go (I don’t care if green day is really from California or not, that’s what I call the happy poppy punk that’s not crusty enough to be called punk without a qualifier: NOFX, Offspring, Blink 182, Millencollin, etc etc).

      • Cracks_InTheWalls@sh.itjust.works
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        47 minutes ago

        I mean, call it whatever, it really doesn’t matter that much, but why not pop punk? Seems to be the more common label, and easily extended to non-US bands like Sum41, Gob, etc.

  • Zorsith@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    1 day ago

    Its just bizarre to think about how awful trying to accurately convey an order verbally over shitty audio quality must have been

    • zourn@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      Even better, being a delivery driver trying to find McRando’s house without GPS, map quest, etc. Just a street address and a city street map from the municipal Chamber of Commerce.

      Especially fun when half of your deliveries were out of the city limits and you had to ask for/write down directions, and no cell phone to call if you took a wrong turn or they gave you bad directions.

      I don’t miss those days.

      • maniacalmanicmania@aussie.zone
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        22 hours ago

        By ‘city street map’ do you mean something that folds out into a single sheet of paper or something more detailed?

        We used to do pretty alright in Australia with these thick road map books you could pick up from any petrol station or newsagency shop. Imagine you had google maps in book form where each page was a section of a bigger map (basically a whole city) with a grid reference system, adjoining page references on each side and a vast index.

        • zourn@lemmy.world
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          19 hours ago

          Single sheet of paper, yes.

          But for small out of the way towns (population 2k-10k) you’d want one specific to the town otherwise you’d be looking at a tiny speck on a state sized map. And the big maps might not have all of the small city side streets or not be up to date.

          For reference, the town I did delivery in currently has a population of ~3,000 people and occupies 2.7 square miles out of the 268,596 square miles of the Texas map. Doesn’t make sense to use a map where you’re only looking at about 0.0001% of it.

      • TheLowestStone@lemmy.world
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        22 hours ago

        You forgot the part where your boss yells at you for being out too long because the house you were supposed to go to had a mile long driveway and no numbers on the road.

    • crawancon@lemm.ee
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      1 day ago

      lest we neglect ol Jobe in Lawnmower Man.

      (the one not affiliated with Steven King)

      • Fredselfish@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        Yeah if actually read the Lawnmower Man the two couldn’t even confused as the same story. Crazy they just took the title.

        Always told me how great Stephen King is, sometimes just his titles make great moves. But for real how can they make a movie out of anything he writes? Its amazing.

        Just saw Life of Chuck and it was pretty danm close to the story.

  • KoboldCoterie@pawb.social
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    1 day ago

    Hacking scenes in old movies are ridiculous to look back on. Always some crazy GUI-heavy pseudo-video game with people clattering away madly on keyboards and tense music playing. So unlike hacking scenes of today, which are obviously much more realistic to appeal to a refined modern audience. We’ve truly come a long way.

    • yetAnotherUser@discuss.tchncs.de
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      2 hours ago

      To be fair, any realistic hacking scene would be extremely boring to watch.

      It would be like watching someone solve a jigsaw puzzle. Except there is no light so you just hear them click a piece in place occasionally.

      • Cracks_InTheWalls@sh.itjust.works
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        41 minutes ago

        Obviously still not realistic, but I feel like the super-imposed text thing some TV shows/movies have done more recently works, so long as you create a sense of tension/time crunch.

        Toss in some red text and error messages once and a while in front of a dude sweating with dramatic music in the background, and it gets the point across.

    • rozodru@lemmy.world
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      6 hours ago

      my favourite was the 3D “file system” in Jurassic Park. At the time I was just using DOS and had no clue about Unix and was like “oh that’s bullshit” but it wasn’t. the thing actually exists and I have it on one of my machines right now that I like to use every now and again and in my head I always think “it’s a unix system, I know this.”

      • KoboldCoterie@pawb.social
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        4 hours ago

        I remember when I was in middle school, I saw my older brother working on a Unix system and it looked like he was some elite hacker. Now, it’s the same look I get from my kid any time he sees me doing anything in the terminal.

    • crawancon@lemm.ee
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      1 day ago

      sneakers was in 90s… they had it mostly right vs … the fractal animations in Hackers. that one took some 'splainin.

      • Godort@lemmy.ca
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        1 day ago

        Honestly, Hackers gets a lot of shit for being ridiculous, but it only deserves it sometimes.

        A lot of the actual hacking that is done in that movie is stuff like social engineering and phreaking payphones. It’s exaggerated in the movie to make it watchable, but it’s largely based in reality.

        But then you have scenes like this

      • crawancon@lemm.ee
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        1 day ago

        let’s not forget the vb gui back trace gold mine of multiple hands on the keyboard to uhh hack faster. (CSI)

    • Sergio@slrpnk.net
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      1 day ago

      TIL the term “wardialing” (referring to the technique of automatically dialing numbers) was named after the 80s film WarGames, which showed it at work.

  • underscores@lemmy.zip
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    17 hours ago

    Can you guess the movie ?

    I’ve asked this before online to no avail: Movie set in late 80s maybe early 90s.

    Thriller, tech/hacker focused

    Possibly extremely bad, Btier or worse

    There’s only this line I knew where the bad “entity” gets into a kid’s game and the kid says something to the effect of “there’s a guy in our game” (I watched it in French in like 2006 possibly)

    Any ideas? I don’t think it was a French movie, I think it was dubbed from an originally English movie.

  • some_guy@lemmy.sdf.org
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    1 day ago

    I absolutely hated the way computers were represented during this era. No one knew anything about them, so filmmakers would come up with the stupidest crap depicting hacking. A new era began when the first sequel to The Matrix depicted actual computer software accurately.

    Nmap Featured in The Matrix Reloaded