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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Disk 413
Directed byRichard Pottier
Written byHans Rehfisch (short story)
André-Paul Antoine
Produced byClaude Heymann
Starring
CinematographyAndré Dantan
Edited byPierre Méguérian
Music byNicholas Brodszky
Production
company
Franco London Films
Distributed byÉclair-Journal
Release date
  • 24 July 1936 (1936-07-24)
Running time
82 minutes
CountryFrance
LanguageFrench

Disk 413 (French: Le disque 413) is a 1936 French spy film directed by Richard Pottier and starring Gitta Alpar, Constant Rémy and Jules Berry. It was shot at Ealing Studios in London. It was the French version of the British film Guilty Melody.[1]

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  • KIDS REACT TO OLD COMPUTERS
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  • What's My Line? - Sir Ralph Richardson (1963, TV Show)

Transcription

Kids react to technology! This episode: Old Computers! - (Finebros) Today you are reacting to this! - What is this? What is that? Uh, a computer? Ooh, it's an old computer. It looks cool! I like pressing buttons. It's...huge. It's very huge. If you don't a desk, where do you put this? It looks very hipster. Question time! - (Finebros) So it's an computer-- - Yes. (Finebros) From the late 1970s or early 80s. What do you think of it just from looking at it? Kinda like those old televisions that are very boxy. (Finebros) Go ahead! Turn it on. Um... Nothing's happening. (Finebros) So you turn the monitor on, where else might an on switch be? Uhhhh... Oh! Wait... Hello! (tapping glass) How do I do this? - (Finebros) It's in the back. - Oh, pfff. Oh! I see where it is. (computer beeps and whirs) Why does it have to make so much noise? And there's nothing on the screen. Doesn't look anything like what we have now. Apps! Games! Websites! Everything. But THIS thing right here has nothing! (Finebros) Go ahead and try to do something on the computer. Nothing's happening. Um... Uh... How do I do this? (Finebros) You can't do anything or even type until you hit - a reset button that's on the computer-- - Ugggggh! Reset! (computer boops) It's very tedious. It's like pre-flight checks kind of. That is too many steps! (Finebros) How do you do anything? Maybe press SHIFT. Okay, that didn't do anything. Where's the mouse? Where's the mouse? (Finebros) Everything is just done with the keyboard. What?! - (Finebros) Okay, now-- - Nah, no, no, no. (Finebros) Okay, okay, okay! I'm gonna write my name. (giggling) Wait, it doesn't matter. Blah blah blah. Are there any programs on it? (Finebros) You had to type into the keyboard to get it to do anything. So if I type in GAMES... hit return. Error?! Ah! Error. This computer is an error. (Finebros) How do you go on the internet? You, um... Um... - (computer boops) - What? Pretty sure Timothy Berners Lee didn't create it yet. (Finebros) There was no internet back then! What?! Then how do you look up homework? (Finebros) You gotta go to the library! Who wants to do that? (Finebros) So computers back then could only do limited things. For example, you can do math, type documents and code... - but that's about it. - Are you serious? That's mind blowing. That was the peak of technology. Now it seems kinda worthless. Well, it's kinda good because it was kinda the first technology, but... computers today are kind of better. (Finebros) Let's do some math. Go ahead, type in a math problem. Two...plus...two... Return. I don't see anything. (Finebros) When you just type numbers out, the computer doesn't know what you want it do. It just sees the numbers. You need to give it a command to let it know, "Hey! I'm about to give you numbers!" Answer the math problem! That doesn't make any sense! You have to give some sort of command and then type in what you want it to do? This would be the hardest thing in the world! (Finebros) So what you need to do is you have to type the world PRINT first. Oh. Math has nothing to do with PRINT! I don't get how you have to put PRINT when nothing prints out. Now just press print... Oh... Return. Oh! It did it! I feel so proud of myself. Finally! Take a thousand years. I don't get it. And I also don't get the 1970s. The person that was using this a long time ago must have a lot of codes right next to them. I don't want to do this anymore! (Finebros) So besides the computer, there is something else next to it. These things. (Finebros) Do you have any idea what those things are? Oh, it's a paper printer? Power source? External disk drives? - (Finebros) They're actually used for this. - Hey! A CD! It's a CD case. A floppy disk. Oh, floppy disk! It was like a flash drive. (Finebros) They actually call that a floppy disk. Waaaah! (laughs) Oh yeah, it is floppy. (Finebros) That big computer has no hard drive on it. That's horrible! Then why is it so big? (Finebros) So floppy disks were used to store data. Floppy disks could also come with programs on them. So the one you're holding has a version of DOS. Dots? - (Finebros) You know what DOS is? - No. No. No. I think it it can be somebody's last name. (Finebros) Do you want to play a game on the computer? Uh, yeah! Yes! Could you grab the floppy disk, please? (Finebros) Go ahead, put it in. How do I put this in? (Finebros) Oh, it might...is the lid shut? (Finebros) Alright, turn it around. No, other way. Now turn it around. It doesn't suck it in? (Finebros) Shut it. This isn't working. Do I just press something? - PRINT...? - (Finebros) Try it! Disk...RETURN. It said zero. I don't like this computer. Really don't. (Finebros) If the computer was already on and you put in the disk, you gotta turn the computer off and turn it back on. Ooh my gosh! You guys are crazy. - (computer whirring) - Yes! It worked. (Finebros) Okay, let me help you. No, no, no! Don't touch it. Uh, I don't like it. It works at least! (Finebros) No...I think the game broke. I think it messed up. Do I have to pay for it? Too much pixellation. Game over! It's green, which makes it look ugly. I like this better than Flappy Bird! (Finebros) So every computer, even today, has something called a processor inside of it and depending on how good your processor is is how powerful the machine is. You would need at least 850 of those computers to equal - the single power of this one small phone. - What? How can they do that? Technology is awesome! Look at how humanity has used their intellect. Pretty awesome! Truth! (Finebros) So, finally, would you want one of these today? Sorta. It's pretty cool. No. It can do really nothing. I have better things, so why would I want this? Three decades ago I would love to have this, but now this is just a foot stool. No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no! (Finebros) You wouldn't use it? No! The games are boring, the stuff is boring and the whole thing is boring. Thanks for watching this technological episode of Kids React! Leave a comment of which technology we should react to next. B-Y-E. - RETURN. - (computer boops) Error?! What?!

Synopsis

In London the singer Marguerite Salvini falls in love with Captain Richard Maury, who is working for the British intelligence services. Soon afterwards her husband, who she believed was dead, returns. He is spying for an enemy power and plans to steal a document, framing his wife and her love for the theft.

Cast

References

  1. ^ Fawkes p. 211

Bibliography

  • Fawkes, Richard (2000). Opera on Film. London: Duckworth. ISBN 978-0-7156-2943-7.

External links

This page was last edited on 8 September 2023, at 00:29
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