In my first job,I was a trainee Field Engineer on a Univac 418 system at Bell Canada which ran a store-and-forward message service to hundreds of Model 33 and 35 teletypes across the nation.

Bell wanted to promote it, so they hired a movie producer. I happened to be on duty that day.

The man insisted I push some paper tape into the reader the wrong way.  I explained that I could strip the machine down and show him the ratchet proving the direction but he wouldn't hear it. He said 'he had seen one of those before'.

I have used this as an example to my students why everything you see in a movie is fantasy!

cheers,

Nigel



On 2024-03-18 06:08, Norman Jaffe via cctalk wrote:
I had the same experience while working for a (very) small company called 
Northwest Digital Research.
I was asked to point to a big HP plotter that was running one of our 
programs... and the photograph wound up in our product brochure.
Of course, I had nothing to do with that program...

From: "Mark Linimon via cctalk"<cctalk@classiccmp.org> To: "General Discussion: On-Topic and Off-Topic Posts"<cctalk@classiccmp.org> Cc: "Mark Linimon"<lini...@portsmon.org> Sent: Sunday, March 17, 2024 5:43:13 PM
Subject: [cctalk] Re: DEC Processor Books

were just DEC employees that caught somebody's eye when they were
planning the shots.
"Planning" may assume facts not in evidence :-)

Some photographers wandered around my employer of the time, Recognition
Equipment. (Like my Canadian girlfriend, you haven't heard of it.)
I was near enough to a piece of machinery to be told "point to
that console like you are doing something to it". So somewhere
in some ancient Annual Report you can find a picture of a clean-
shaven me. My 15 seconds of fame.

Well maybe not all 15.

So the "plan" was, we're on deadline, get some shots.

mcl

--
Nigel Johnson, MSc., MIEEE, MCSE VE3ID/G4AJQ/VA3MCU
Amateur Radio, the origin of the open-source concept!
Skype:  TILBURY2591

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