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Halt and Catch Fire (Season 1) available on Netflix

53 points| gjkood | 11 years ago |netflix.com | reply

36 comments

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[+] gregulrajani|11 years ago|reply
The first season start of well with lots of cool dramatised hacking and startup culture scenes. But near the middle of the first season it had turned into a unbelievable soap opera with a bit of tech as a backdrop.
[+] randomnumber53|11 years ago|reply
Silicon Valley, on the other hand, is great.
[+] tiles|11 years ago|reply
As an alternate opinion for this thread, this is my most highly anticipated show this year. The drama, pacing, acting, and technical details in this show are completely unparalleled; its strengths heavily outweigh its faults. No other show comes close to the breadth HACF strives for.
[+] w-ll|11 years ago|reply
In all honesty I didn't really enjoy the series. I keep watching because it felt so alien. All the characters seamed very 1 dimensional, and the writing I felt like it was reaching and not really selling.

If you can, watch it, make up your own mind.

[+] bjwbell|11 years ago|reply
I felt the same. It had the surface qualities of a series about nerdy/geeky computers in the 80s. But missed the essence. I identify much more with Mike Judge's work in Office Space & his Silicon Valley tv series.
[+] mturmon|11 years ago|reply
A soap opera with a technical facade.
[+] fit2rule|11 years ago|reply
I also found it relatively shallow, but I mostly enjoyed watching it because it introduced the whole 80's computer revolution story to my wife, who had previously ignored the subject. She seemed to get along fine with the characters without getting too geeked out by the technology, so I imagine that there is a balancing act going on with the AMC writers behind the show.

That said, we're both looking forward to the next season .. for me, mostly because I love the soundtrack and have a secret crush on Cameron .. for my wife, I guess for the same reasons. ;)

[+] carlesfe|11 years ago|reply
Well, it's a good drama which happens to have a technological background. And it so happens, too, that this technological background is realistic, precise, and even historically accurate.

It's a good advance to make tech dramas approachable to the general public. If the series, as a work of art, is bad, in the end very few people will watch it regardless of its technological accuracy.

That being said, my inner geek agrees with you: too much drama. But again, maybe I'm not exactly the target audience.

[+] sehugg|11 years ago|reply
FWIW a lot of this history is covered in PBS's "Triumph of the Nerds" documentary without the dramatic license. Kudos to the producers for attempting to make BIOS reverse engineering look exciting, though.
[+] sleepychu|11 years ago|reply
Though it's my understanding that they could have just booted into DOS and performed list on the BIOS? (To get the compiled binary)
[+] icpmacdo|11 years ago|reply
It was one of those shows that I was watching and really enjoying then other things got in the way and never finished the last third of the season. I'm going to catchup right after schools done next week.

How accurate is it when they reverse engineer the computer at the beginning of the season?

[+] gjkood|11 years ago|reply
During the reverse engineering scene I would assume that they are reading the BIOS which would have been stored in ROM (Read Only Memory). The ROM chip would have the same address and read control lines like any standard memory chip which could be read by setting the Address lines, the Memory Read, any additional/ancillary signaling and then reading the data lines.

Once you had all the bytes read, you could in principle run this through a Disassembler to get the actual Assembly language instructions (minus any original comments). You would have to figure out the boundaries of code, data etc.

I would assume in those early days, they wouldn't expect the run of the mill hackers to be able to disassemble the stored data in ROM.

[+] nsxwolf|11 years ago|reply
Only drama I've ever seen that discussed technical details of the TI-99/4A.
[+] fit2rule|11 years ago|reply
This show re-kindled my love for 80's music - if you haven't check it out already, and love the soundtrack, there's an AMC playlist for the show on Spotify .. worth using!
[+] jlawer|11 years ago|reply
Not in .au
[+] e12e|11 years ago|reply
Apparently Netflix is cracking down on users circumventing the geolocks on content -- but if you want to try, remember that ssh does socks5 (including DNS) proxying. Spin up a VPS at eg Digital Ocean or some other provider that has US presence, and simply:

    ssh -D 8080 yourvps.example.com #or use putty on windoze
You might want to install FoxyProxy for Firefox -- otherwise just point your browser to localhost:8080 as a socks5 server. Apparently Chrome does some funky bits with DNS over socks5 -- but as far as I can figure out the new default in Firefox is sane (DNS over socks if a socks5 proxy is defined).

Not that you'll probably have to have "a US" Netflix account, unless they just use location data for determining what shows you're "entitled" to.

Same works for Amazon Prime, to eg. watch the free pilot of "Man in the High Castle": http://www.amazon.com/The-Man-High-Castle/dp/B00RSI5EHQ

Same deal -- you'll probably need to sign-out/register a "new" Amazon.com account. FYI.

[+] icpmacdo|11 years ago|reply
I assume it steals every piece of data it can but this chrome extension works for US Netflix

http://hola.org/

[+] ddmf|11 years ago|reply
But not in the UK :(
[+] Zikes|11 years ago|reply
Can we change the link to http://www.netflix.com/WiMovie/70302182?trkid=13752289 so people can read the show information or add it to their queues before deciding whether they want to watch it?
[+] gjkood|11 years ago|reply
I just tried to change the URL but the 'edit' feature is only allowing me to edit the Title and not the URL. Does anyone know how I can edit the URL also?
[+] ableal|11 years ago|reply
"Sorry, Netflix hasn't come to this part of the world yet" on a blank page.

Kind of annoying, not even letting the possible future customers do some harmless window shopping.