Spyke
lemmy.world

The funny thing is that, unlike fake UI in other movies, this was indeed a real demo for silicon graphics computers: http://www.sgistuff.net/funstuff/hollywood/jpark.html

Towards the end of the movie the kids use the computer to lock the doors. This is the great moment of fsn ("fusion") the File System Navigator which is a real demo application and was not written for the movie. A binary was available from the official Silicon Graphics website for a long time.

37
Artyomreply
lemm.ee

It was a real 3D filesystem navigator, which may sound like a bad idea, that's because it was a bad idea.

9

For the time it came out it looked pretty cool at least, which at least all was needed for the movie. I remember reading up years later how it was an actual program which I thought was pretty neat, they spared no expense in their computer visuals heh. After actually working in enterprise systems I do understand how awful that'd be to work with.

10

I actually tried out fsn once or twice when I was in the university in early 2000s. One of the Unix labs had a bunch of SGI O2 workstations. ...by some time in mid 2000s, all of the computer labs were just full of KVM-switched Windows+Linux systems.

7

And the movie portrays it accurately, too. Waiting for the 3D flyover to render feels painfully slow, regardless of how many doorknob mastering dinosaurs are trying to kill you.

7

No it works, you just need to go without https security. You might need to allow your browser to do that though.

1

If movies have taught me anything, the internet is green blocks that you have to fly around. Be sure to avoid big flashing red things - those are computer viruses

13

Hopefully I'll be able to say that in 4 years time when I complete my full stack engineer apprenticeship.

4
PeWureply

I just hope that after finishing college, the NPC will just spawn ahead of me with IT related quests

4

You reached the end