35 interesting things
that you learn about computers in the movies...
- High tech equipment is often driven by a computer with a DOS prompt.
(re: RoboCop)
High tech companies don't do offsite backups of the data
(re: Terminator 2)
All media devices are readily available - i.e. If someone
hands you a DAT tape with important data on it your PC will have a DAT
drive.
No matter what you ask a computer to do it will respond with a
percentage complete bar graph - especially when searching for data. It
can accurately give you the time remaining until it finds that data.
Data searching will always involve displaying all the searched data on
the screen until a match is found - this is true of text and graphics such
as fingerprints.
Telephone calls can be easily redirected through places all over the
world, and upon a trace a globe will be displayed complete with lines
traveling between each place.
Deleting of data always takes just a little less time than it takes the
bad guys to knock down the door.
All technology is plug and play - every computer can have any piece of
technology attached.
High tech graphical interfaces are often driven by hundreds of
keystrokes which do not appear anywhere on the screen.
IP addresses automatically supply the feds with the physical address
(i.e. log on and they know where you are!)
Word processors never display a cursor.
You never have to use the spacebar when typing long sentences. Just keep
hitting the keys without stopping
All monitors display 2 inch high letters.
High-tech computers, such as those used by NASA, the CIA, or some such
governmental institution, have easy-to-understand graphical interfaces.
Those that don't will have incredibly powerful text-based command shells
that can correctly understand and execute commands typed in plain English.
Corollary: You can gain access to any information you want by simply
typing "ACCESS ALL OF THE SECRET FILES" on any keyboard.
Likewise, you can infect a computer with a destructive virus by simply
typing "UPLOAD VIRUS". Viruses cause temperatures in computers, just
like they do in humans. After a while, smoke billows out of disk drives and
monitors.
All computers are connected. You can access the information on the
villain's desktop computer, even if it's turned off.
Powerful computers beep whenever you press a key or whenever the screen
changes. Some computers also slow down the output on the screen so that it
doesn't go faster than you can read. The *really* advanced ones also emulate
the sound of a dot-matrix printer as the characters come across the screen.
All computer panels have thousands of volts and flash pots just
underneath the surface. Malfunctions are indicated by a bright flash, a puff
of smoke, a shower of sparks, and an explosion that forces you backward.
(See #7, above)
People typing away on a computer will turn it off without saving the
data.
A hacker can get into the most sensitive computer in the world before
intermission and guess the secret password in two tries.
Any PERMISSION DENIED has an OVERRIDE function.
Complex calculations and loading of huge amounts of data will be
accomplished in under three seconds. In the movies, modems transmit data at
two gigabytes per second.
When the power plant/missile site/whatever overheats, all the control
panels will explode, as will the entire building.
If you display a file on the screen and someone deletes the file, it
also disappears from the screen. There are no ways to copy a backup file --
and there are no undelete utilities.
If a disk has encrypted files, you are automatically asked for a
password when you try to access it.
No matter what kind of computer disk it is, it'll be readable by any
system you put it into. All application software is usable by all computer
platforms.
The more high-tech the equipment, the more buttons it has. However,
everyone must have been highly trained, because the buttons aren't labeled.
Most computers, no matter how small, have reality-defying
three-dimensional, real-time, photo-realistic animated graphics capability.
Laptops, for some strange reason, always seem to have amazing real-time
video phone capabilities and the performance of a CRAY-MP.
Whenever a character looks at a VDU, the image is so bright that it
projects itself onto his/her face.
Computers never crash during key, high-intensity activities. Humans
operating computers never make mistakes under stress.
Programs are fiendishly perfect and never have bugs that slow down
users.
Any photograph can have minute details pulled out of it. You can zoom
into any picture as far as you want to.
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