[1876] in Humor

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HUMOR: Choosing your portable the Hollywood Way

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (abennett@MIT.EDU)
Thu Feb 6 12:44:02 1997

From: <abennett@MIT.EDU>
To: humor@MIT.EDU
Date: Thu, 06 Feb 1997 12:16:48 EST


From: Espacionaute Spiff domine! <MATOSSIAN@aries.colorado.edu>
From: Richard Johnson <rjj@medialab.com>
From: Mark Hall <crunch@spimageworks.com>
Date: Mon, 27 Jan 1997 14:15:06 -0800
Subject: (FWD) Laptops go to the movies



 	Four of the biggest films of 1996 -- Twister, Eraser, Mission
Impossible and Independence Day -- have one thing in common besides
box-office success: in each film, portable computers played a
prominent role.  We decided to put the portable computers in these
flims to the test and asnwer once and for all the question, "Hey, if I
happen to find myself in a big-budget Hollywood movie, which portable
computer will give me the best performance?

TWISTER

 	Twister featured a Silicon Graphics laptop, which is intesting
since Silicon Graphics doens't make laptops. Nevertheless, a label
reading "Silicon Graphics" was placed conspicuously on the computer,
because you just never know when you might forget the brand name of
your computer. Overall, this computer performed more than
adequately. For one thing, it was robust. While seemingly everything
else in the movie was sucked into the tornado, the Silicon Graphics
laptop was unharmed. This is incredible when you think about
it. Houses, cows and even an 18-wheeler were blown away by tornadoes,
but this computer remained undamaged, even when it was used at one
point as an umbrella.

 	Aside from personal bad-weather protection, another important
feature of the Silicon Graphics laptop was its ability not to
self-destruct due to the complete inanity of the script. My sources
tell me that many lesser computers were unable to make it through the
first third of the film without a system error. One computer actually
exploded in the first 20 mintues after a particularly silly scene
involving the fiancee of Bill Paxton's character. But not the Silicon
Graphics laptop. It kept on performing at a high level. If the
big-budget film you're in happens to have a script with all the
subtlety of a bad Baywatch episode, then the Silicon Graphics laptop
is definitely the computer for you, even if it doesn't exist.

ERASER

 	Eraser also featured a portable computer.  Unfortunately, I do
not know which portable computer it was. Neither does anyone at Warner
Brothers, including Steve in Product Placement, who informed me, "I'm
sorry, this office cannot comment on that."

 	It really doesn't matter, though, because the Unknown Laptop
is a real disappointment. About all that can be said in its favor is
that it didn't blow up. Admittedly, that's an accomplishment. After
all, practically everything else in the movie exploded, sometimes more
than once. If you do find yourself in a flick with lots of exploding
buildings and houses, you might want to find out what computer this
one is. Just don't ask Steve in Product Placement, because he can't
comment.

 	Where the Unknown Laptop comes up really short is in
performance. For example, early in the film Vanessa William's
character copies important files onto a CD-ROM(!). When she arrives
home and attempts to open the files with her laptop, she finds that
the CD-ROM will not run, thus making the computer completely useless
for the film. Because of this defect, Williams and Arnold
Schwarzenegger must break into CIA headquarters and open the
classified files from within the high-security building.

 	Admittedly, this may be more of a software problem than a
hardware problem. Microsoft is now working on a plug-in for Windows 95
that will allow users to open classified documents stolen from the
CIA, but the original release date was set for November 1995. After
countless delays, Microsoft now refuses to set a new date for the
release.  The truth is that it might be several years before an
operating system is available that will reliably open classified
documents stolen from the CIA.

 	Furthermore, Herbert Naylor, an imaginary spokesman for
Microsoft, claims that this defect is really not a problem. "The
movie," he rightly says, "was starting to drag at that point, and if
not for the computer failing, the screenwriters might never have come
up with a reason for the characters to break into the CIA."  This is a
salient point, and one the serious computer user must consider. Among
the computers reviewed here, the Unkonwn Laptop was clearly the best
at moving the plot along.

MISSION IMPOSSIBLE

 	One of the stars of Mission Impossible was a Macintosh
PowerBook 540C.  I know this because I called Apple Computer, and they
were positively giddy to tell me about all the Apple computers used in
films this summer. They'd probably still be talking to me right now,
if I hadn't come up with an excuse to end the conversation.

 	In this film, the Macintosh advantage is clear. Whereas the
Unknown Laptop was unable to open classified files, Tom Cruise's
PowerBook did not have the same problem. It easily handled classified
information. Nevertheless, the PowerBook 540C did display some
flaws. For example, many of the most popular lists of classified
information take several months longer to be released for the
Macintosh platform, but the PowerBook 540C's superior ability in
opening classified files makes it well worth the wait. One can only
hope this will persuade developers to release more lists of classified
information for the Macintosh.

 	Another interesting feature of this PowerBook is its superior
acting ability. For example, in several scenes the PowerBook managed
to outact Cruise. True, this is not that difficult an
accomplishment. (In one scene, the leg of a table in the corner of the
screen outacted Cruise for several seconds). Nevertheless, it is
always impressive when a portable computer manges to outperform the
lead actor.

 	You may have mixed feelings about this. If you're the type of
actor who likes to be surrounded by superior actors in the hopes that
this will make the movie that much more successful, then the PowerBook
540C is for you. However, if you're at all worried about being
upstaged, you might want to consider another model.

 INDEPENDENCE DAY

 	Independence Day (or: How I Saved the World From Destruction
With a PowerBook) featured a Macintosh PowerBook 5300. This movie is
where the Macintosh really shines. While the other computers performed
adequately in their films, no other portable computer was able to save
the world from alien desruction. Therefore, the PowerBook 5300 is our
selection as the best portable computer of the group.

 	Remember the old days when connecting to alien spaceships by
modem took hours of confusing configuration, and was sometimes
impossible because you lacked the proper drivers? With the PowerBook
5300, that era has come to an end. Everything on it is
preinstalled. Just point and click, and you are all set. Thanks to
Apple's new technology, you can even use your modem to play Doom
against alien lifeforms.

 	Equally impressive is the fact that Apple seems to have
eliminated the problem of screen freezes. Not once in the entire film
did the computer freeze, forcing Jeff Goldblum to reboot. For me, this
was even more unbelievable than the concept of aliens from another
planet coming down to Earth and trying to destroy the human race.

 	If Goldblum had had to use my Macintosh, instead, the scene near
 the end in which he and Will Smith fly to the alien mothership to
upload a computer virus may have turned out entirely different:

 	GOLDBLUM: Okay, all we have to do is wait for it to upload the
	virus into the alien mothership. Oh, damn! It's stopped! The
	screen froze!
 	SMITH: Don't be giving me none of that freeze stuff! I told
	you we should have used a PC!
 	GOLDBLUM: It'll be okay. We just have to restart the computer.
 	SMITH: We got three minutes.
 	GOLDBLUM: Three minutes! I can't restart a Mac in three minutes?
	Aaaargh! We're all gonna die!

 	At this point, the human race would have been destroyed, the
movie would have ended, and audiences across the nation wouldn't have
been as pleased. But the PowerBook 5300 in Independence Day saved the
day, proving that Apple has again become a serious player. If you find
yourself in a big-budget film in which the existence of the human race
is in your hands, you have no choice but to buy the PowerBook 5300.

 		By Joe Lavin


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