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OK Computer is an Indian absurdist science fiction comedy television series on Disney+ Hotstar created and directed by Pooja Shetty and Neil Pagedar, who also wrote the script along with Anand Gandhi. Gandhi and his team also produced the series through the studio Memesys Culture Lab.
4 88 Milky Cartoon Japan 1999–2001 TV Asahi: Insektors: 2 26: France 1994–1995 Canal+ (France) YTV (Canada) Channel 4 (United Kingdom) Nickelodeon (United Kingdom; 2000) Jay Jay the Jet Plane: 4 62: PorchLight Entertainment Modern Cartoons Wonderwings.com Entertainment Knightscove Family Films United States 1998–2006 TLC and PBS Kids ...
Cyberchase is an animated science fantasy children's television series that airs on PBS Kids.The series centers around three children from Earth: Jackie, Matt and Inez, who are brought into Cyberspace, a digital universe, in order to protect it from the villainous Hacker (Christopher Lloyd). [4]
The Computer Academy Bits and Bytes was the name of two Canadian educational television series produced by TVOntario that taught the basics of how to use a personal computer . The first series, made in 1983, starred Luba Goy as the Instructor and Billy Van as the Student. [ 1 ]
Dennou Keisatsu Cybercop (電脳警察サイバーコップ, Dennō Keisatsu Saibākoppu, Computer Police Cybercop) is a Japanese tokusatsu television series.Created by Toho in 1988 as an attempt to emulate Toei's Super Sentai motif, the idea was dropped after the unaired pilot, although the show still slightly resembles a sentai show and uses certain tropes of the genre to an extent (such as ...
On 21 January 2010, Colors became available on Dish Network in the United States, Canada, and Mexico, where it is called Aapka Colors (Your Colors) that gives English subtitles on every show and to avoid confusion with now-defunct Colours TV.
The pre-history of such machines is examined in the first episode ("Giant Brains"), and includes a discussion of the contributions of Charles Babbage, Ada Lovelace, Alan Turing, and others. The fourth episode ("The Thinking Machine") explores the topic of artificial intelligence. The fifth episode ("The World at Your Fingertips") explores the ...
Beavis and Butt-Head walk to an abandoned drive-in to find out that it has been replaced with a computer technical support office, where Butt-Head asks one of the office workers what has happened to the abandoned drive-in. Thinking that they're new employees, the technical support worker named Hamid (a Middle Eastern man with a thick accent) gets Beavis and Butt-Head to sit down and work at ...