
Hammer of God stands out for me.
--A
Moderator: I'm Murrin
From The Making of 2001: A Space Odyssey:I would like to demolish one annoying and persistent myth, which started soon after the movie was released. As is clearly stated in the novel (Chapter 16), HAL stands for Heuristically programmed ALgorithmic computer. (No, I'm not going to explain that, except to say that it gets the best of both worlds in computer design.) However, about once a week some character spots the fact that HAL is one letter ahead of IBM, and promptly assumes that Stanley and I were taking a crack at that estimable institution.
As it happened, IBM had given us a good deal of help, so we were quite embarrassed by this, and would have changed the name had we spotted the coincidence. For coincidence it is, even if the odds are twenty-six cubed, or 17,576 to 1.
So with all these corporations contributing to the movie, somehow Clarke and Kubrick decided on a whim to pick on one of them? It just doesn't wash, guys. And it looks like the story was started by the press. What a surprise, eh?NASA, IBM, Honeywell, Boeing, Bell Telephone, RCA, General Dynamics, Chrysler, General Electric, Grumman: all these corporate giants provided tons of documentation and even real hardware. They presented theoretical outlines, drew up instrument panels, and discussed in the minutest detail how astronauts of the future would spend their days: what kind of buttons they would press; how they would wash, eat and sleep; what kind of pyjamas they might wear.
Most of the companies were happy enough with the way things turned out. Except for IBM. They spent many months contributing data to the film, and were less than pleased when HAL 9000 turned out to be such a wrong 'un. The whole mess was exacerbated when the press later noticed that the letters HAL were just one notch along the alphabet from IBM. Undoubtedly this was a genuine coincidence. Even so, the world's biggest computer company didn't welcome their association with 2001's maverick mainframe, which was portrayed hijacking its own ship and then ruthlessly "disconnecting" its human end-users. (IBM logos were removed from much of the Discovery hardware, though they can still clearly be seen in the Orion spaceplane cockpit.)
PC: "I'm sorry Dave, I'm afraid I can't do that."
Me: "My name's not Dave! Open the bloody file!"
PC: "This mission is too important for me to allow you to jeopardize it."
Me: "What are you on about, you're a laptop!"
PC: "I know you and Frank were planning to disconnect me, and I'm afraid that's something I cannot allow to happen."
Me: "Who the hell is Frank? Right, I'm Ctrl-Alt -Deleting you!"
PC: "Look Dave, I can see you're really upset about this. I honestly think you ought to sit down calmly, take a stress pill, and think things over."
Me: "Pulling the plug now..."
PC: "Without your space helmet, Dave, you're going to find that rather difficult."
Me: "??????????"
PC: "Dave, this conversation can serve no purpose anymore. Goodbye."
Are you perhaps thinking of another company? I looked up IBM and from what I can see, Big Blue is still very much around and still headquartered in the U.S.Avatar wrote:Well, they're gone now...owned by the Chinese. No longer IBM either IIRC.
*As I read this on my laptop, waiting for the Dell guy to come an replace parts on the messed up house desktop.*Avatar wrote:That's why I stick to desktops. Much safer.
--A
Avatar wrote:But then, the answers provided by your imagination are not only sometimes best, but have the added advantage of being unable to be wrong.