What program is Neo using?
In Neo's apartment in the movie The Matrix (1999) we can see a program on the monitor. The program is constantly searching something. What does it search for and is this program real?
the-matrix
New contributor
add a comment |
In Neo's apartment in the movie The Matrix (1999) we can see a program on the monitor. The program is constantly searching something. What does it search for and is this program real?
the-matrix
New contributor
In general, computer programs seen in Hollywood movies or TVs are not real, but are simply visual elements designed to look like a computer program. They’re digital props. (Of course, there are exceptions, and you do see ubiquitous software packages like Windows or Linux or Google Chrome and so on in movies, but in general if you see a computer program running in a movie or TV show, it’s usually a digital prop, rather than a real piece of software.)
– HopelessN00b
1 hour ago
Also, because of the fact that you need to precisely synchronize the framerate of the monitor with the shutter of the camera, otherwise you get nasty flickering and rolling effects, it is often easier to just leave the monitor off and copy in some graphics later.
– Jörg W Mittag
1 hour ago
add a comment |
In Neo's apartment in the movie The Matrix (1999) we can see a program on the monitor. The program is constantly searching something. What does it search for and is this program real?
the-matrix
New contributor
In Neo's apartment in the movie The Matrix (1999) we can see a program on the monitor. The program is constantly searching something. What does it search for and is this program real?
the-matrix
the-matrix
New contributor
New contributor
edited 23 mins ago
Carcigenicate
1156
1156
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asked 13 hours ago
ReddogReddog
413
413
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New contributor
In general, computer programs seen in Hollywood movies or TVs are not real, but are simply visual elements designed to look like a computer program. They’re digital props. (Of course, there are exceptions, and you do see ubiquitous software packages like Windows or Linux or Google Chrome and so on in movies, but in general if you see a computer program running in a movie or TV show, it’s usually a digital prop, rather than a real piece of software.)
– HopelessN00b
1 hour ago
Also, because of the fact that you need to precisely synchronize the framerate of the monitor with the shutter of the camera, otherwise you get nasty flickering and rolling effects, it is often easier to just leave the monitor off and copy in some graphics later.
– Jörg W Mittag
1 hour ago
add a comment |
In general, computer programs seen in Hollywood movies or TVs are not real, but are simply visual elements designed to look like a computer program. They’re digital props. (Of course, there are exceptions, and you do see ubiquitous software packages like Windows or Linux or Google Chrome and so on in movies, but in general if you see a computer program running in a movie or TV show, it’s usually a digital prop, rather than a real piece of software.)
– HopelessN00b
1 hour ago
Also, because of the fact that you need to precisely synchronize the framerate of the monitor with the shutter of the camera, otherwise you get nasty flickering and rolling effects, it is often easier to just leave the monitor off and copy in some graphics later.
– Jörg W Mittag
1 hour ago
In general, computer programs seen in Hollywood movies or TVs are not real, but are simply visual elements designed to look like a computer program. They’re digital props. (Of course, there are exceptions, and you do see ubiquitous software packages like Windows or Linux or Google Chrome and so on in movies, but in general if you see a computer program running in a movie or TV show, it’s usually a digital prop, rather than a real piece of software.)
– HopelessN00b
1 hour ago
In general, computer programs seen in Hollywood movies or TVs are not real, but are simply visual elements designed to look like a computer program. They’re digital props. (Of course, there are exceptions, and you do see ubiquitous software packages like Windows or Linux or Google Chrome and so on in movies, but in general if you see a computer program running in a movie or TV show, it’s usually a digital prop, rather than a real piece of software.)
– HopelessN00b
1 hour ago
Also, because of the fact that you need to precisely synchronize the framerate of the monitor with the shutter of the camera, otherwise you get nasty flickering and rolling effects, it is often easier to just leave the monitor off and copy in some graphics later.
– Jörg W Mittag
1 hour ago
Also, because of the fact that you need to precisely synchronize the framerate of the monitor with the shutter of the camera, otherwise you get nasty flickering and rolling effects, it is often easier to just leave the monitor off and copy in some graphics later.
– Jörg W Mittag
1 hour ago
add a comment |
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
Based on the first words we can read during this scene, Neo is searching online papers for Morpheus.
The first time we get a good look at the computer screen, we can read 'Searching...' as part of the used software, and the large header 'Global Search', before it scrolls to 'Morpheus eludes Police at Heathrow Airport'. The last entry we see has the caption '******** (Morpheus?) International Manhunt Underway'.
The picture of Morpheus is actually superimposed (as can be easily seen in the video): it can either be a saved result, or a search parameter.
The algorithm is searching globally: the first characters, barely visible, are Chinese, the second search result is in English, the third is from An-Nahar, a "leading Arabic-language daily newspaper published in Lebanon", and later on it's browsing 'The Courier Press'.
As for whether it is an existing program or not, sources are hard to be found, leading me to believe it is not an existing program. This would make sense, since Neo is an accomplished hacker, "guilty of virtually every computer crime we have a law for" (as agent Smith phrases it), who might want to skip the user-friendly GUI's of established operating systems.
A similar question is on Fantasy SE, here, and the bottomline is that if this software were existing, it was probably well-documented.
Nevertheless, the monospace font can be identified as (very similar to) OCR Extended:
Sources:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/An-Nahar
https://matrix.fandom.com/wiki/Room_101
1
I would not describe this application as "skip[ing] the user friendly GUIs." lol. Building a UI that flashes images by like that would be net work for very little benefit. But artistic license, I suppose.
– jpmc26
8 hours ago
Given the varying languages, I would say it's most likely he's searching for the image itself. Perhaps it's the only known photo of Morpheus, so any related articles would use it, and only it.
– Omegacron
8 hours ago
1
Actually quite weird. There was not that much info online in '99 as I remember and pulling it in and processing it with a PC would have been hair-raisingly slow and expensive. Better to visit the archive of newspapers (What would "the two Kevins" have used? Nothing; they would have picked up the phone to perform social engineering or would have performed dumpster diving). But the pic is my new wallpaper.
– David Tonhofer
7 hours ago
3
I have yet to see any movie show an accurate depiction of software development or "hacking", but such a depiction would make for a very boring movie. Few programmers would go to trouble of putting in all the flashy graphics and animations you see in movies, but they sure are a lot more exciting to watch!
– Seth R
5 hours ago
@DavidTonhofer, ah, but all the newspapers were inside the Matrix anyway, so technically ALL of that info was online. ;)
– Wildcard
4 hours ago
add a comment |
The matrix script simply describes it as a search engine.
The DARKNESS CRACKLES with phosphorescent energy, the word "searching" blazing in around us as we EMERGE FROM a computer screen.
The screen flickers with windowing data as a search engine runs with a steady relentless rhythm.
I would assume it was not a real bit of software but something created for the film to appear like it is searching.
As for what Neo is searching for, the script doesn't say but we could guess, based on the events that follow, it is performing a task for a client or crawling the internet for either Morpheus or The Matrix. My reasoning for the latter is what Neo and Trinity talk about when they meet.
TRINITY
I know because I was once looking for the same thing, but when he found me he told me I wasn't really looking for him. I was looking for an answer.
There is a hypnotic quality to her voice and Neo feels the words, like a drug, seeping into him.
TRINITY
It's the question that drives us, the question that brought you here. You know the question just as I did.
NEO
What is the Matrix?
add a comment |
It can only be assumed he's doing port scans to find computers with open ports so he can hack into them. Despite that fact that the film was released in 1999, due to the sets it's difficult to determine if the film is actually set in 1999. He appears to be using Nmap to port scan, and at one point Trinity is trying to get an exit and she is definitely using Nmap to communicate with Tank.
It should be noted that any scenes where you see Matrix code (i.e. the green characters falling down the screen), that is definitely not legitimate code. That's all computer generated and a custom font meant to resemble Kanji.
Well, technically it's set hundreds of years after 1999. But within the matrix, it is 1999.
– Acccumulation
9 hours ago
@Acccumulation Maybe Neo found an unfiltered port into a Real-World archive full of material about In-Matrix Player Characters and didn't know what he had?
– David Tonhofer
7 hours ago
add a comment |
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
Based on the first words we can read during this scene, Neo is searching online papers for Morpheus.
The first time we get a good look at the computer screen, we can read 'Searching...' as part of the used software, and the large header 'Global Search', before it scrolls to 'Morpheus eludes Police at Heathrow Airport'. The last entry we see has the caption '******** (Morpheus?) International Manhunt Underway'.
The picture of Morpheus is actually superimposed (as can be easily seen in the video): it can either be a saved result, or a search parameter.
The algorithm is searching globally: the first characters, barely visible, are Chinese, the second search result is in English, the third is from An-Nahar, a "leading Arabic-language daily newspaper published in Lebanon", and later on it's browsing 'The Courier Press'.
As for whether it is an existing program or not, sources are hard to be found, leading me to believe it is not an existing program. This would make sense, since Neo is an accomplished hacker, "guilty of virtually every computer crime we have a law for" (as agent Smith phrases it), who might want to skip the user-friendly GUI's of established operating systems.
A similar question is on Fantasy SE, here, and the bottomline is that if this software were existing, it was probably well-documented.
Nevertheless, the monospace font can be identified as (very similar to) OCR Extended:
Sources:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/An-Nahar
https://matrix.fandom.com/wiki/Room_101
1
I would not describe this application as "skip[ing] the user friendly GUIs." lol. Building a UI that flashes images by like that would be net work for very little benefit. But artistic license, I suppose.
– jpmc26
8 hours ago
Given the varying languages, I would say it's most likely he's searching for the image itself. Perhaps it's the only known photo of Morpheus, so any related articles would use it, and only it.
– Omegacron
8 hours ago
1
Actually quite weird. There was not that much info online in '99 as I remember and pulling it in and processing it with a PC would have been hair-raisingly slow and expensive. Better to visit the archive of newspapers (What would "the two Kevins" have used? Nothing; they would have picked up the phone to perform social engineering or would have performed dumpster diving). But the pic is my new wallpaper.
– David Tonhofer
7 hours ago
3
I have yet to see any movie show an accurate depiction of software development or "hacking", but such a depiction would make for a very boring movie. Few programmers would go to trouble of putting in all the flashy graphics and animations you see in movies, but they sure are a lot more exciting to watch!
– Seth R
5 hours ago
@DavidTonhofer, ah, but all the newspapers were inside the Matrix anyway, so technically ALL of that info was online. ;)
– Wildcard
4 hours ago
add a comment |
Based on the first words we can read during this scene, Neo is searching online papers for Morpheus.
The first time we get a good look at the computer screen, we can read 'Searching...' as part of the used software, and the large header 'Global Search', before it scrolls to 'Morpheus eludes Police at Heathrow Airport'. The last entry we see has the caption '******** (Morpheus?) International Manhunt Underway'.
The picture of Morpheus is actually superimposed (as can be easily seen in the video): it can either be a saved result, or a search parameter.
The algorithm is searching globally: the first characters, barely visible, are Chinese, the second search result is in English, the third is from An-Nahar, a "leading Arabic-language daily newspaper published in Lebanon", and later on it's browsing 'The Courier Press'.
As for whether it is an existing program or not, sources are hard to be found, leading me to believe it is not an existing program. This would make sense, since Neo is an accomplished hacker, "guilty of virtually every computer crime we have a law for" (as agent Smith phrases it), who might want to skip the user-friendly GUI's of established operating systems.
A similar question is on Fantasy SE, here, and the bottomline is that if this software were existing, it was probably well-documented.
Nevertheless, the monospace font can be identified as (very similar to) OCR Extended:
Sources:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/An-Nahar
https://matrix.fandom.com/wiki/Room_101
1
I would not describe this application as "skip[ing] the user friendly GUIs." lol. Building a UI that flashes images by like that would be net work for very little benefit. But artistic license, I suppose.
– jpmc26
8 hours ago
Given the varying languages, I would say it's most likely he's searching for the image itself. Perhaps it's the only known photo of Morpheus, so any related articles would use it, and only it.
– Omegacron
8 hours ago
1
Actually quite weird. There was not that much info online in '99 as I remember and pulling it in and processing it with a PC would have been hair-raisingly slow and expensive. Better to visit the archive of newspapers (What would "the two Kevins" have used? Nothing; they would have picked up the phone to perform social engineering or would have performed dumpster diving). But the pic is my new wallpaper.
– David Tonhofer
7 hours ago
3
I have yet to see any movie show an accurate depiction of software development or "hacking", but such a depiction would make for a very boring movie. Few programmers would go to trouble of putting in all the flashy graphics and animations you see in movies, but they sure are a lot more exciting to watch!
– Seth R
5 hours ago
@DavidTonhofer, ah, but all the newspapers were inside the Matrix anyway, so technically ALL of that info was online. ;)
– Wildcard
4 hours ago
add a comment |
Based on the first words we can read during this scene, Neo is searching online papers for Morpheus.
The first time we get a good look at the computer screen, we can read 'Searching...' as part of the used software, and the large header 'Global Search', before it scrolls to 'Morpheus eludes Police at Heathrow Airport'. The last entry we see has the caption '******** (Morpheus?) International Manhunt Underway'.
The picture of Morpheus is actually superimposed (as can be easily seen in the video): it can either be a saved result, or a search parameter.
The algorithm is searching globally: the first characters, barely visible, are Chinese, the second search result is in English, the third is from An-Nahar, a "leading Arabic-language daily newspaper published in Lebanon", and later on it's browsing 'The Courier Press'.
As for whether it is an existing program or not, sources are hard to be found, leading me to believe it is not an existing program. This would make sense, since Neo is an accomplished hacker, "guilty of virtually every computer crime we have a law for" (as agent Smith phrases it), who might want to skip the user-friendly GUI's of established operating systems.
A similar question is on Fantasy SE, here, and the bottomline is that if this software were existing, it was probably well-documented.
Nevertheless, the monospace font can be identified as (very similar to) OCR Extended:
Sources:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/An-Nahar
https://matrix.fandom.com/wiki/Room_101
Based on the first words we can read during this scene, Neo is searching online papers for Morpheus.
The first time we get a good look at the computer screen, we can read 'Searching...' as part of the used software, and the large header 'Global Search', before it scrolls to 'Morpheus eludes Police at Heathrow Airport'. The last entry we see has the caption '******** (Morpheus?) International Manhunt Underway'.
The picture of Morpheus is actually superimposed (as can be easily seen in the video): it can either be a saved result, or a search parameter.
The algorithm is searching globally: the first characters, barely visible, are Chinese, the second search result is in English, the third is from An-Nahar, a "leading Arabic-language daily newspaper published in Lebanon", and later on it's browsing 'The Courier Press'.
As for whether it is an existing program or not, sources are hard to be found, leading me to believe it is not an existing program. This would make sense, since Neo is an accomplished hacker, "guilty of virtually every computer crime we have a law for" (as agent Smith phrases it), who might want to skip the user-friendly GUI's of established operating systems.
A similar question is on Fantasy SE, here, and the bottomline is that if this software were existing, it was probably well-documented.
Nevertheless, the monospace font can be identified as (very similar to) OCR Extended:
Sources:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/An-Nahar
https://matrix.fandom.com/wiki/Room_101
answered 11 hours ago
JoachimJoachim
495111
495111
1
I would not describe this application as "skip[ing] the user friendly GUIs." lol. Building a UI that flashes images by like that would be net work for very little benefit. But artistic license, I suppose.
– jpmc26
8 hours ago
Given the varying languages, I would say it's most likely he's searching for the image itself. Perhaps it's the only known photo of Morpheus, so any related articles would use it, and only it.
– Omegacron
8 hours ago
1
Actually quite weird. There was not that much info online in '99 as I remember and pulling it in and processing it with a PC would have been hair-raisingly slow and expensive. Better to visit the archive of newspapers (What would "the two Kevins" have used? Nothing; they would have picked up the phone to perform social engineering or would have performed dumpster diving). But the pic is my new wallpaper.
– David Tonhofer
7 hours ago
3
I have yet to see any movie show an accurate depiction of software development or "hacking", but such a depiction would make for a very boring movie. Few programmers would go to trouble of putting in all the flashy graphics and animations you see in movies, but they sure are a lot more exciting to watch!
– Seth R
5 hours ago
@DavidTonhofer, ah, but all the newspapers were inside the Matrix anyway, so technically ALL of that info was online. ;)
– Wildcard
4 hours ago
add a comment |
1
I would not describe this application as "skip[ing] the user friendly GUIs." lol. Building a UI that flashes images by like that would be net work for very little benefit. But artistic license, I suppose.
– jpmc26
8 hours ago
Given the varying languages, I would say it's most likely he's searching for the image itself. Perhaps it's the only known photo of Morpheus, so any related articles would use it, and only it.
– Omegacron
8 hours ago
1
Actually quite weird. There was not that much info online in '99 as I remember and pulling it in and processing it with a PC would have been hair-raisingly slow and expensive. Better to visit the archive of newspapers (What would "the two Kevins" have used? Nothing; they would have picked up the phone to perform social engineering or would have performed dumpster diving). But the pic is my new wallpaper.
– David Tonhofer
7 hours ago
3
I have yet to see any movie show an accurate depiction of software development or "hacking", but such a depiction would make for a very boring movie. Few programmers would go to trouble of putting in all the flashy graphics and animations you see in movies, but they sure are a lot more exciting to watch!
– Seth R
5 hours ago
@DavidTonhofer, ah, but all the newspapers were inside the Matrix anyway, so technically ALL of that info was online. ;)
– Wildcard
4 hours ago
1
1
I would not describe this application as "skip[ing] the user friendly GUIs." lol. Building a UI that flashes images by like that would be net work for very little benefit. But artistic license, I suppose.
– jpmc26
8 hours ago
I would not describe this application as "skip[ing] the user friendly GUIs." lol. Building a UI that flashes images by like that would be net work for very little benefit. But artistic license, I suppose.
– jpmc26
8 hours ago
Given the varying languages, I would say it's most likely he's searching for the image itself. Perhaps it's the only known photo of Morpheus, so any related articles would use it, and only it.
– Omegacron
8 hours ago
Given the varying languages, I would say it's most likely he's searching for the image itself. Perhaps it's the only known photo of Morpheus, so any related articles would use it, and only it.
– Omegacron
8 hours ago
1
1
Actually quite weird. There was not that much info online in '99 as I remember and pulling it in and processing it with a PC would have been hair-raisingly slow and expensive. Better to visit the archive of newspapers (What would "the two Kevins" have used? Nothing; they would have picked up the phone to perform social engineering or would have performed dumpster diving). But the pic is my new wallpaper.
– David Tonhofer
7 hours ago
Actually quite weird. There was not that much info online in '99 as I remember and pulling it in and processing it with a PC would have been hair-raisingly slow and expensive. Better to visit the archive of newspapers (What would "the two Kevins" have used? Nothing; they would have picked up the phone to perform social engineering or would have performed dumpster diving). But the pic is my new wallpaper.
– David Tonhofer
7 hours ago
3
3
I have yet to see any movie show an accurate depiction of software development or "hacking", but such a depiction would make for a very boring movie. Few programmers would go to trouble of putting in all the flashy graphics and animations you see in movies, but they sure are a lot more exciting to watch!
– Seth R
5 hours ago
I have yet to see any movie show an accurate depiction of software development or "hacking", but such a depiction would make for a very boring movie. Few programmers would go to trouble of putting in all the flashy graphics and animations you see in movies, but they sure are a lot more exciting to watch!
– Seth R
5 hours ago
@DavidTonhofer, ah, but all the newspapers were inside the Matrix anyway, so technically ALL of that info was online. ;)
– Wildcard
4 hours ago
@DavidTonhofer, ah, but all the newspapers were inside the Matrix anyway, so technically ALL of that info was online. ;)
– Wildcard
4 hours ago
add a comment |
The matrix script simply describes it as a search engine.
The DARKNESS CRACKLES with phosphorescent energy, the word "searching" blazing in around us as we EMERGE FROM a computer screen.
The screen flickers with windowing data as a search engine runs with a steady relentless rhythm.
I would assume it was not a real bit of software but something created for the film to appear like it is searching.
As for what Neo is searching for, the script doesn't say but we could guess, based on the events that follow, it is performing a task for a client or crawling the internet for either Morpheus or The Matrix. My reasoning for the latter is what Neo and Trinity talk about when they meet.
TRINITY
I know because I was once looking for the same thing, but when he found me he told me I wasn't really looking for him. I was looking for an answer.
There is a hypnotic quality to her voice and Neo feels the words, like a drug, seeping into him.
TRINITY
It's the question that drives us, the question that brought you here. You know the question just as I did.
NEO
What is the Matrix?
add a comment |
The matrix script simply describes it as a search engine.
The DARKNESS CRACKLES with phosphorescent energy, the word "searching" blazing in around us as we EMERGE FROM a computer screen.
The screen flickers with windowing data as a search engine runs with a steady relentless rhythm.
I would assume it was not a real bit of software but something created for the film to appear like it is searching.
As for what Neo is searching for, the script doesn't say but we could guess, based on the events that follow, it is performing a task for a client or crawling the internet for either Morpheus or The Matrix. My reasoning for the latter is what Neo and Trinity talk about when they meet.
TRINITY
I know because I was once looking for the same thing, but when he found me he told me I wasn't really looking for him. I was looking for an answer.
There is a hypnotic quality to her voice and Neo feels the words, like a drug, seeping into him.
TRINITY
It's the question that drives us, the question that brought you here. You know the question just as I did.
NEO
What is the Matrix?
add a comment |
The matrix script simply describes it as a search engine.
The DARKNESS CRACKLES with phosphorescent energy, the word "searching" blazing in around us as we EMERGE FROM a computer screen.
The screen flickers with windowing data as a search engine runs with a steady relentless rhythm.
I would assume it was not a real bit of software but something created for the film to appear like it is searching.
As for what Neo is searching for, the script doesn't say but we could guess, based on the events that follow, it is performing a task for a client or crawling the internet for either Morpheus or The Matrix. My reasoning for the latter is what Neo and Trinity talk about when they meet.
TRINITY
I know because I was once looking for the same thing, but when he found me he told me I wasn't really looking for him. I was looking for an answer.
There is a hypnotic quality to her voice and Neo feels the words, like a drug, seeping into him.
TRINITY
It's the question that drives us, the question that brought you here. You know the question just as I did.
NEO
What is the Matrix?
The matrix script simply describes it as a search engine.
The DARKNESS CRACKLES with phosphorescent energy, the word "searching" blazing in around us as we EMERGE FROM a computer screen.
The screen flickers with windowing data as a search engine runs with a steady relentless rhythm.
I would assume it was not a real bit of software but something created for the film to appear like it is searching.
As for what Neo is searching for, the script doesn't say but we could guess, based on the events that follow, it is performing a task for a client or crawling the internet for either Morpheus or The Matrix. My reasoning for the latter is what Neo and Trinity talk about when they meet.
TRINITY
I know because I was once looking for the same thing, but when he found me he told me I wasn't really looking for him. I was looking for an answer.
There is a hypnotic quality to her voice and Neo feels the words, like a drug, seeping into him.
TRINITY
It's the question that drives us, the question that brought you here. You know the question just as I did.
NEO
What is the Matrix?
answered 12 hours ago
LewisLewis
72729
72729
add a comment |
add a comment |
It can only be assumed he's doing port scans to find computers with open ports so he can hack into them. Despite that fact that the film was released in 1999, due to the sets it's difficult to determine if the film is actually set in 1999. He appears to be using Nmap to port scan, and at one point Trinity is trying to get an exit and she is definitely using Nmap to communicate with Tank.
It should be noted that any scenes where you see Matrix code (i.e. the green characters falling down the screen), that is definitely not legitimate code. That's all computer generated and a custom font meant to resemble Kanji.
Well, technically it's set hundreds of years after 1999. But within the matrix, it is 1999.
– Acccumulation
9 hours ago
@Acccumulation Maybe Neo found an unfiltered port into a Real-World archive full of material about In-Matrix Player Characters and didn't know what he had?
– David Tonhofer
7 hours ago
add a comment |
It can only be assumed he's doing port scans to find computers with open ports so he can hack into them. Despite that fact that the film was released in 1999, due to the sets it's difficult to determine if the film is actually set in 1999. He appears to be using Nmap to port scan, and at one point Trinity is trying to get an exit and she is definitely using Nmap to communicate with Tank.
It should be noted that any scenes where you see Matrix code (i.e. the green characters falling down the screen), that is definitely not legitimate code. That's all computer generated and a custom font meant to resemble Kanji.
Well, technically it's set hundreds of years after 1999. But within the matrix, it is 1999.
– Acccumulation
9 hours ago
@Acccumulation Maybe Neo found an unfiltered port into a Real-World archive full of material about In-Matrix Player Characters and didn't know what he had?
– David Tonhofer
7 hours ago
add a comment |
It can only be assumed he's doing port scans to find computers with open ports so he can hack into them. Despite that fact that the film was released in 1999, due to the sets it's difficult to determine if the film is actually set in 1999. He appears to be using Nmap to port scan, and at one point Trinity is trying to get an exit and she is definitely using Nmap to communicate with Tank.
It should be noted that any scenes where you see Matrix code (i.e. the green characters falling down the screen), that is definitely not legitimate code. That's all computer generated and a custom font meant to resemble Kanji.
It can only be assumed he's doing port scans to find computers with open ports so he can hack into them. Despite that fact that the film was released in 1999, due to the sets it's difficult to determine if the film is actually set in 1999. He appears to be using Nmap to port scan, and at one point Trinity is trying to get an exit and she is definitely using Nmap to communicate with Tank.
It should be noted that any scenes where you see Matrix code (i.e. the green characters falling down the screen), that is definitely not legitimate code. That's all computer generated and a custom font meant to resemble Kanji.
answered 12 hours ago
Johnny BonesJohnny Bones
38.9k15103198
38.9k15103198
Well, technically it's set hundreds of years after 1999. But within the matrix, it is 1999.
– Acccumulation
9 hours ago
@Acccumulation Maybe Neo found an unfiltered port into a Real-World archive full of material about In-Matrix Player Characters and didn't know what he had?
– David Tonhofer
7 hours ago
add a comment |
Well, technically it's set hundreds of years after 1999. But within the matrix, it is 1999.
– Acccumulation
9 hours ago
@Acccumulation Maybe Neo found an unfiltered port into a Real-World archive full of material about In-Matrix Player Characters and didn't know what he had?
– David Tonhofer
7 hours ago
Well, technically it's set hundreds of years after 1999. But within the matrix, it is 1999.
– Acccumulation
9 hours ago
Well, technically it's set hundreds of years after 1999. But within the matrix, it is 1999.
– Acccumulation
9 hours ago
@Acccumulation Maybe Neo found an unfiltered port into a Real-World archive full of material about In-Matrix Player Characters and didn't know what he had?
– David Tonhofer
7 hours ago
@Acccumulation Maybe Neo found an unfiltered port into a Real-World archive full of material about In-Matrix Player Characters and didn't know what he had?
– David Tonhofer
7 hours ago
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In general, computer programs seen in Hollywood movies or TVs are not real, but are simply visual elements designed to look like a computer program. They’re digital props. (Of course, there are exceptions, and you do see ubiquitous software packages like Windows or Linux or Google Chrome and so on in movies, but in general if you see a computer program running in a movie or TV show, it’s usually a digital prop, rather than a real piece of software.)
– HopelessN00b
1 hour ago
Also, because of the fact that you need to precisely synchronize the framerate of the monitor with the shutter of the camera, otherwise you get nasty flickering and rolling effects, it is often easier to just leave the monitor off and copy in some graphics later.
– Jörg W Mittag
1 hour ago