I’ve told this story before but I’ll tell it again - Jurassic Park got me into programming!
I was 7 when it came out, and when I saw that one scene with the 3D fly over of the clouds in the approaching storm, I was hooked. Hooked like “I MUST build this”
I started learning C, I downloaded NOAA weather satellite images from school and took them home on floppy disk. I started learning OpenGL (this was a few years later) over the course of many years I learned how to read a JPEG in C, how to denoise it, how to convert it to a height map, and how to animate a fly-over of it.
I think I saw “segmentation fault (core dumped)” about 50,000 times over the 8ish years it took me to build from ages 8-15 or so. It was funny because I had to learn the basics of trigonometry before they taught it to me in school, when it got to that I was like “ohhhhhhh i wish you had shown me this sooner this is really useful!!!” While the other kids were still complaining “when will we ever use this?!”
There’s a quote from the game civilisation that I love “instruct the children not to dream of toys or sweets, instruct them to dream of infrastructure” - I wish we had more scifi like Jurassic park that inspires our young <3
The scene where the girl goes "It's a UNIX system, I know this" was one of the most realistic computer scenes in movies during a time when computer output on screen was mostly fake mockups.
I was a kid back then but I'd seen otherworldly expensive SiliconGraphics workstations at PC fairs (my dad could only afford an XT clone), and seeing one in a movie was so cool.
It would be cool if there was some data to back this up, but it's impossible to get. It's really about young people being impressionable and having the mindset to be inspired by something such that they'll dedicate their mind to it.
Imagine that if you want people to be consumed into solving some problem put there (like protein folding), you create scifi movie about it. And tada! More people dedicated to doing that.
The US military spends a lot of cash funding Hollywood blockbusters for the exact reason. However when it comes to things that actually benefits society like science, they don't even have enough funding to just do the thing, let alone PR
Lots of finance people from an earlier era ended up there from the movie Wall Street which is hilarious since it was not intended as something glorifying the sector
> Jurassic Park inspired more people to go into biotech than any academic paper. The Matrix inspired more people to go into computer science than any GitHub repo. The Martian inspired more people to go into aerospace engineering than any industry trend report.
> Science fiction doesn’t predict the future, it does something much more interesting: tell stories about technology so compelling that people dedicate their lives to advancing the frontier.
"Jurassic Park inspired more people to go into biotech than any academic paper. The Matrix inspired more people to go into computer science than any GitHub repo. The Martian inspired more people to go into aerospace engineering than any industry trend report.
Science fiction doesn’t predict the future, it does something much more interesting: tell stories about technology so compelling that people dedicate their lives to advancing the frontier"
> got into computer science because of The Matrix?
Looking at at least one. It put me into the cringe habit of customizing my desktop the way I wanted it, and realising that Windows just would not do for customization, and thus began my lifelong Linux affliction.
Sure. I chose mechanical engineering because I liked car movies. Heck, I thought fast and furious was cool and I wanted to go to college to learn to design and make car tuning parts.
Don't underestimate how foolishly 17 year olds fill out their college applications based on random crazy thoughts occuring to them that month.
I was 7 when it came out, and when I saw that one scene with the 3D fly over of the clouds in the approaching storm, I was hooked. Hooked like “I MUST build this”
I started learning C, I downloaded NOAA weather satellite images from school and took them home on floppy disk. I started learning OpenGL (this was a few years later) over the course of many years I learned how to read a JPEG in C, how to denoise it, how to convert it to a height map, and how to animate a fly-over of it.
I think I saw “segmentation fault (core dumped)” about 50,000 times over the 8ish years it took me to build from ages 8-15 or so. It was funny because I had to learn the basics of trigonometry before they taught it to me in school, when it got to that I was like “ohhhhhhh i wish you had shown me this sooner this is really useful!!!” While the other kids were still complaining “when will we ever use this?!”
There’s a quote from the game civilisation that I love “instruct the children not to dream of toys or sweets, instruct them to dream of infrastructure” - I wish we had more scifi like Jurassic park that inspires our young <3
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