Page 5 of 18
Posted: 28 May 2014, 21:11
by mr_a500
By the way, the Wargames IMSAI was for sale a couple years ago for the low price of only $25,000 US - and it included the keyboard.
http://imsai.net/movies/wargames.htm
Posted: 30 May 2014, 23:32
by Grond
A Model M and a portable computer from David Cronenberg's Dead Ringers (1988).

Posted: 31 May 2014, 00:02
by webwit
Seems to be a Toshiba T1200.

Posted: 31 May 2014, 00:27
by Muirium
Ooh: nice layout, too. HHKB style Fn candidate right there, and 3 mods a side. Plus an ANSI Shift instead of big ass for a change! As was the style of the time.
Posted: 02 Jun 2014, 15:22
by jdcarpe
From last night's premiere of AMC's
Halt and Catch Fire:
Was being used by the sales consultants (engineers) at the fictional Cardiff Electric. I'll look again to see if I can identify any clear shots of the front of the terminal.
Looks to be a Zenith terminal of some sort. Maybe a Z-100?
Posted: 08 Jun 2014, 22:56
by Grond
Posted: 09 Jun 2014, 00:00
by Muirium
Nice! The first keyboard is one of Apple's worst (with custom video editing caps installed) but the Da Vinci keyboard is straight out of tall sphericals science fiction! I like the camera angle on the second last picture too. Every computer scene needs some of that.
Posted: 09 Jun 2014, 00:02
by mr_a500
I like the three trackballs. I need something like that. I think with three trackballs and three pointers I could be a lot more efficient.
Posted: 09 Jun 2014, 01:55
by Muirium
From what video editing I have seen, those guys probably are more efficient with several. I haven't watched the movie (but I intend to, thanks Grond!) but I suspect those trackballs are actually scrubbers, with maybe variable velocity between the X and Y axis, for coarse and fine movement through the time line. Put a hand on each, and you probably could trim things faster than with context switching, as cuts are naturally an A goes to B kind of event. The third one, though, well, hmm. Something about going to 11?
Posted: 09 Jun 2014, 13:04
by Grond
The Da Vinci is a machine for color correction, as far as I know the trackballs are for regulating RGB values (one for each dominant).
Posted: 14 Jun 2014, 22:08
by nathanscribe
mr_a500 wrote:Holy crap - my ideal computer setup! (yes, including the cows):
sweet dreams.jpg
(just kidding - I'd rather have that Demon Seed thing)
That's a Movement Drum Computer:
The Mk II looked a little different, but equally funky:
There's a Flickr set with a gut-shot showing a NASCOM board:
MCDU1 opened by
Waveterm, on Flickr
Gotta love the Zilog fraternity

Posted: 21 Jun 2014, 23:15
by Grond
Pret-à-porter (1994) by Robert Altman. Quite a lousy movie if you ask me, but I spotted a keyboard at least. That may be from some french computer as the film is set in Paris. The laptop seems to be an Apple Powerbook 170.

Posted: 22 Jun 2014, 01:36
by IvanIvanovich
jdcarpe wrote:From last night's premiere of AMC's
Halt and Catch Fire:
Was being used by the sales consultants (engineers) at the fictional Cardiff Electric. I'll look again to see if I can identify any clear shots of the front of the terminal.
Looks to be a Zenith terminal of some sort. Maybe a Z-100?
According to an article I read about the shows props, all the computers in the office are Zenith Z120. They mostly sourced real period appropriate complete vintage computers from ebay and etc with some stuff Frankenstein'd up by art department from various parts in a few cases like the 'Symphonic'. Kind of cool they went that way really as it makes it seem more realistic for those of us that know anything about that era of computing.
Posted: 22 Jun 2014, 23:07
by Grond
Posted: 23 Jun 2014, 21:37
by JBert
Grond wrote: "The Raid - Redemption" (2011) is a solid indonesian action/martial arts film, which I would recommend if you like the genre. There's an interesting looking keyboard here, but I could not identify. Also, a video control panel with Cherry legends.
Looks like the
Mac M0110 keyboard?
Posted: 23 Jun 2014, 22:28
by Grond
I don't think so, the one in the film has two tones of keycaps and the layout is not the same if you look closely. Also, the keyboard seems to be connected to a TV, so my guess it's some kind of Commodore or stuff.
Posted: 23 Jun 2014, 23:02
by Findecanor
Commodore or Atari did not have two-tone keys. Based on the layout, I think a MSX variant would be more probable.
Posted: 24 Jun 2014, 01:44
by Dubsgalore
Grond wrote: "The Raid - Redemption" (2011) is a solid indonesian action/martial arts film, which I would recommend if you like the genre. There's an interesting looking keyboard here, but I could not identify. Also, a video control panel with Cherry legends.
That's oddly satisfying to see
Posted: 28 Jun 2014, 18:21
by Grond
Batman - Mask of the Phantasm (1993). Apparently Batman uses some kind of customized matrix Tipro with double, backlit, blank keycaps and some odd spacebar. F row looks unusual as well.

Posted: 03 Jul 2014, 19:01
by Grond
And of course Mad Men is loaded with Selectrics. Don't be overwhelmed!

Posted: 03 Jul 2014, 19:03
by Muirium
Nice one! But a screen cap from Mad Men without serious skirts is, well, unexpected…
Posted: 03 Jul 2014, 19:58
by Findecanor
Grond wrote: Apparently Batman uses some kind of customized matrix Tipro with double, backlit, blank keycaps and some odd spacebar.
Ack pfft.. Most computer keyboards in cartoons are drawn as simple grids.
Posted: 03 Jul 2014, 20:07
by Muirium
NOT a cartoon!
I don't think we're supposed to be looking at the BAT COMPUTER…
Posted: 03 Jul 2014, 21:16
by mr_a500
Grond wrote: And of course Mad Men is loaded with Selectrics. Don't be overwhelmed!

Coincidentally, my desk looks almost exactly like that - with beige Selectric and black rotary phone - but original Selectric, not Selectric II.
The Selectric II didn't come out until 1971 and the show starts in the early 60's. Apparently, the set people knew this, but couldn't locate enough original Selectrics. They probably assumed nobody would notice. (or care... except for a few weirdo keyboard freaks)
I thought I would like Mad Men, but I hated it. It's a modern fake interpretation of the time period.
Posted: 03 Jul 2014, 21:17
by Grond
Of course my comment on the Batman cartoon keyboard was intented as a joke, but turns out Batman preferes non-staggered layouts even in the 1989 movie (still my favourite Batman by the way). The truth is, that thing doesn't even look like a keyboard, but something between a vintage POS and some pre-war airplane cockpit.

Posted: 05 Jul 2014, 23:25
by Grond
Pc Xt from "Velvet Goldmine" (1998). This scene is set in New York, but the movie was actually shot in the UK, and it shows: the keyboard is ISO!

Posted: 07 Jul 2014, 10:59
by Ozric
From last night's Halt & Catch Fire:

Posted: 07 Jul 2014, 11:30
by Grond
Looks good, what's that?
Posted: 07 Jul 2014, 11:35
by Ozric
Grond wrote: Looks good, what's that?
First image is a Zenith Z-120, the second one I don't know.
Posted: 07 Jul 2014, 15:47
by Halvar
Grond wrote: Pc Xt from "Velvet Goldmine" (1998). This scene is set in New York, but the movie was actually shot in the UK, and it shows: the keyboard is ISO!

An IBM XT, a Cherry keyboard, and some no name monochrome monitor ... The 80s from the view of 1998 obviously.