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Computer Chronicles (1983 - 2002) Triumph of the Nerds: The Rise of Accidental Empires (1996) Nerds 2.0.1: A Brief History of the Internet (1998) Halt and Catch Fire (2014 - 2017) Commodore 64; Macintosh 128K; NeXT Computer; Silicon Valley (2014 - 2019) Valley of the Boom (2019) The IT Crowd (2006-2013)
Computer hacker breaks into military intelligence computer to play games, which almost starts a thermonuclear war. Joysticks (1983) – Directed by Greydon Clark. When a top local businessman and his two bumbling nephews try to shut down the town's only video arcade, arcade employees and patrons fight back.
Liquid Sky is a 1982 film. Liquid Sky may also refer to: LiquidSky, a cloud gaming service This page was last edited on 26 November 2023, at 14:08 (UTC). Text is ...
Liquid Sky is a 1982 American independent science fiction film directed by Slava Tsukerman and starring Anne Carlisle and Paula E. Sheppard. [1] It debuted at the Montreal Film festival in August 1982 and was well received at several film festivals thereafter. [ 2 ]
MU-TH-R 182 model 2.1 terabyte AI Mainframe/"Mother" (more commonly seen now as "MU/TH/UR 6000"), the onboard computer on the commercial spacecraft Nostromo, known by the crew as "Mother", in the 1979 movie Alien (cf. Dark Star, above, which used a similar name and was co-written by Dan O'Bannon, the primary writer of Alien)
Ghost in the Shell: The New Movie (2016 film) Spicy City (1997) Virus Buster Serge (1997) Twilight of the Dark Master (1997) Cowboy Bebop. Cowboy Bebop (1998) Cowboy Bebop: The Movie (2001) Serial Experiments Lain (1998) [139] Gundress (1999) Beast Machines: Transformers (1999–2000) Batman Beyond (1999–2001) Metropolis (2001) [140] The ...
LiquidSky was a New York City–based provider of cloud visualization, acquired by Walmart in 2018.The company's flagship product was a cloud gaming service [1] of the same name, launched on March 24, 2017, and shut down in 2018.
A list of science fiction films released in the 1980s. These films include core elements of science fiction, but can cross into other genres.They have been released to a cinema audience by the commercial film industry and are widely distributed with reviews by reputable critics.