Slashdot Mirror


Linux Screenshots on Level 9

bradipo writes "I was watching Level 9 for the first time and I thought I saw a glimpse of a linux desktop, so I kept watching. Sure enough, they were using Linux as the computer that a couple of kids were using to view NASA documents, etc... I captured as many as I could with my nifty tv capture card. It looks to me like they were using Enlightenment or WindowMaker or possibly both together."

7 of 247 comments (clear)

  1. [OT] Re:Slashdot ISN'T the same as it was by fwr · · Score: 5

    If you feel that way, then leave. Just because more people that have different views start to go to the site and look at the pages does not mean that Rob, or anyone for that matter, has to modify their likes and dislikes or beliefs and dis-beliefs (hmm, what's the opposite of beliefs, whatever).

    That was the whole premis of the "sale" of Slashdot.org to Andover.net, and now VA*Linux. Rob would never have sold it if he didn't keep complete editorial and content control over the site, or so he says. Now you are expecting him to change the types of stories that are posted just because more people that don't happen to understand the whole "thing" behind Linux are coming to the site? Unbelievable. If he came out when the deal was done and said "Well, everything is pretty much going to stay the same now, but when our userbase starts including more non-Linux finatics we are going to start changing the types of stories we post and such. I hope you understand and will continue to come to Slashdot.org in the future, but that's the financial reality of the situation." He would have been slaughtered!

    Again, unbelievable. I was going to post this anonymously, because I know it's way off-topic, but this is truely how I feel. If I get mod'd down to nothingness then so be it, but this is just rediculous. I just wish that those people who don't like these stories either learn to live with the wide range of content management choices available in your preferences or find some other place to go and stop making offensive comments and/or demands that we should change just because there are more of you. And, as it might be construed from the complainer's post, if you were one of us and you have this attitude then I'd have to think hard to determine whether you really were one of us or were just following the trendy thing while it was new and never really supported the position. If so, go away!

  2. Linux huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5

    Just because it uses a window manager DOES NOT MEAN IT'S LINUX!

  3. As if YOU remember the old slashdot by Anne+Marie · · Score: 5

    This place has really gone downhill recently.

    Maybe you don't remember the old slashdot. Let me remind you. It looked something like this:

    Contributed by CmdrTaco
    on Wednesday October 21, [1997] @10:10

    from the movin-on-up dept.
    ascott@pacbell.net
    sent me a link to This article.
    It's another excellent example of the kind of
    amazingly cool press that Linux is getting from
    the media. We're approaching critical mass
    people. I'm still waiting for that PC Magazine
    cover story though.

    Maybe you don't remember what slashdot used to be. Let me remind you. It looked something like this :

    Contributed by CmdrTaco
    on Wednesday January 07, [1998] @02:50AM

    from the preaching-the-truth dept.
    Another cameo appearance of Linux in a mainstream mag comes to us from
    Amos Shapira. He sent in an article at inforworld about NT 5.0's hefty system requirements, and how Linux will
    "beat the living daylights out of it" on a system with less than 64 megs of RAM. Flattery
    like that is just the kinda publicity we like to hear.

    Slashdot has always posted little stories glorifying Linux, because THAT'S WHAT ROB LIKES!!! In the old days, if it mentioned Linux, then the story RAN and we (ACs) liked it that way. With stories like these, Rob is being truer to his roots than a thousand napster/cuecat stories could ever be.

    It's his damn site, and you're being ungrateful.

    --
    -- Anne Marie
  4. Ding ding ding! Mod parent up! by isaac · · Score: 5
    This guy's got it. In a past career I worked in Hollywood, and this is exactly how it's done - simple Director program where a keypress or mouseclick triggers the next motion/action. No studio is going to let the actor actually use the box - they might screw up and whoops, there goes a take, $5,000 or more in wasted time.

    -Isaac

    --
    I am not a lawyer, and this is not legal advice. For Entertainment Purposes Only.
  5. Yes, but how does the GPL apply? by Dr.+Awktagon · · Score: 5

    Does this mean we can freely redistribute copies of the show? Shouldn't they be distributing source for the theme they used? Hmm, I smell a GPL violation, let's get 'em! We must demand the source code for every actor!

  6. Why it matters.. by iamsure · · Score: 5

    Alot of people are going to ask why this matters. Let me explain.

    Apple has a LONG history of dominating every single media-portrayed computer. Look in any wide-release movie in the last 10 years that has computers as a central or interesting part of the movie, and I guarantee its a mac.

    From IndependenceDay (ID4) to The Net, it was an endless barrage of Apple making it seem like "everyone is using them."

    Bullshit.

    Enough is enough. Its time that when I turn on a show about a group of elite (and I *DONT* mean 1337) old-school-definition-hackers, by god, they should be using something realistic.

    I dont see many security analysts busting out mac's to probe networks, and I dont see many mac root-kits.

    In short, linux just made a prime-time appearance. Its mad cool. It SCREAMS, yeah, it rocks, yeah, it matters, and YEAH, intelligent uber-hacker type people use it.

    Rock on..

  7. Director more likely by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5

    Chances are pretty good that someone created that desktop in Macromedia Director. Computer screens are done this way all the time for film and television.

    Some images were probably captured from Window Maker and sprites were created from them. Its really simple.

    It may well have been a Mac or Windows machine.