The Matrix

Discussion in 'SciFi & Fantasy' started by Cris, Apr 26, 2000.

  1. Cris In search of Immortality Valued Senior Member

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    If the humans scorched the sky to block out the sun so the machines wouldn't work, how did the humans think that humans were going to survive. The sun is, after all, ultimately the source of all our power.

    I think that was one of the main weaknesses in the plot.

    The business with the phones seemed very confusing as well.
     
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  3. 666 Registered Senior Member

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    But it's not 100% needed. With dietary supliments we can regain the lost vitamins from lack of sun light. The planet doesn't need to have sun light shine directl;y upon the dirt to warm the planet. All it has to do is warm it up. Completly possible would just take a crap load of readjustment in order to live.
     
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  5. Oxygen One Hissy Kitty Registered Senior Member

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    True. I've taken up gardening as a hobby. There are a great number of plants that thrive in indirect sunlight or total shade. Many of them are food and herb plants.
     
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  7. Boris Senior Member Registered Senior Member

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    Actually, the weak point was that humans were supposed to be used as an energy source -- which is ridiculous. The efficiency with which we convert our food into energy is horrible (which is why our excrement is such good food for certain unsavoury organisms.) The machines would have gained way more energy just burning the food in high-temperature furnaces rather than feeding it to humans and then trying to collect "body heat". Besides, if sunlight were illuminating the earth enough to heat it up, the machines wouldn't be stranded in any case; for example, they could build heat collectors or infrared-wavelength solar cells. They could feed off wind or tidal energy. They could use geothermal energy. They could even send powerplants into space to directly capture sunlight and transmit it to ground rectennas as microwaves. Not even mentioning energy sources such as fission or fusion (which will ostensibly be a viable option in a couple of decades, and certainly by 2100.)

    ------------------
    I am; therefore I think.
     
  8. Rambler Senior Member Registered Senior Member

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    Boris,

    I believe the energy being created was somehow "upgraded" by a specialised form of fussion. Which leaves it open to be argued as feaseble. Maybe the AI's didn't want to extinguish there creators but saw that enslaving them would be enough and also render a usable energy.

    Don't dis the Matrix...its a close second to star wars.
     
  9. Oxygen One Hissy Kitty Registered Senior Member

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    I liked Matrix. It was a fun movie. Of course, being an MST3K fan, every time Keanu Reeves would see something that totally bewildered his senses, my brothers and I would add in "Excellent!" or "Bogus...!" depending on his reaction.
     
  10. madanthonywayne Morning in America Registered Senior Member

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    Don't forget, "Whoa!"
     
  11. one_raven God is a Chinese Whisper Valued Senior Member

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    The Matrix (first one only) was stellar (despite its various plot holes).
    Star Wars was a can of shit.
     
  12. madanthonywayne Morning in America Registered Senior Member

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    I agree 100% on the first Matrix, but the first Star Wars was pretty damned good too.
     
  13. one_raven God is a Chinese Whisper Valued Senior Member

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    I didn't see it until I was in my twenties.
    I might have a different opinion if I saw it when I was a kid.
    I think most of the people who love it do so for nostaligia reasons.
     
  14. Fettman #1 Bounty Hunter Registered Senior Member

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    I was never a fan of the matrix to many plot holes and the story wasn't that great but the effects and fights were good
     
  15. Xev Registered Senior Member

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    I saw the series in grade school and was unimpressed. Looking back, I thought that shit was cliched and simplistic before I knew what those words meant. Perhaps Lucas' persistent daddy-issues resound better with men, especially the men-children who grew up in the 80s, when everyone's parents were divorced. Perhaps Yoda's cloying pseudo-Zen knockoffs would seem wise to someone not being raised by a lapsed-Catholic-now-Buddhist. Perhaps someone more attuned to the princess idea would have found Leia to be a female worth imagining, I don't know - I was imagining myself as one of Royo or Howard's sorcerer-babes. But then, I can't put my finger on what the problem with the movies is. The special effects were innovative and state of the art, the dialog doesn't absolutely suck, and for the plot? Fantasy is a simplistic genre: even my beloved Conan, for all of Howard's realism, always ends up choosing the altruistic path and resolving all problems with his machismo or superior uncivilized cunning.

    Still, for all that is great about it, and I do think that Star Wars is great fantasy, it's just bad sci-fi. I'm glad for real classics like Tron, the original Star Trek, Bladerunner, reruns of the 70s Battlestar Galactica and Alien.

    http://www.salon.com/ent/movies/feature/1999/06/15/brin_main/print.html
     
  16. Enterprise-D I'm back! Warp 8 Mr. Worf! Registered Senior Member

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    Actually, I think the energy they were extracting was brain activity. The food tubes were just to keep the human batteries alive. That x 8 billion = lots of energy.

    However, you're still probably right...the Matrix machines would be better off exterminating humans and using (for example) solar energy directly (they won't have the issues of space vacuum, they can zoom up there and build "solar collectors" all the way to Earth. Or whatever

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  17. cosmictraveler Be kind to yourself always. Valued Senior Member

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    It's a Sci-Fi movie so anything is possible. Let your imaginations run free and let the movies alone in trying to figure out how things are done. It only detracts from enjoying the movie.
     
  18. madanthonywayne Morning in America Registered Senior Member

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    That could be part of it. I still remember going to the theature to see Star Wars and the sequels as a kid. A guy I know still has the darth vader lamp he got way back then to this day!

    But nostalgia aside, I still say it's a pretty good movie. Who can forget the scene where Han Solo runs screaming down the hall and chases about twenty storm troopers away, until they suddenly realize they're running from one guy! Or the shocking revelation that the ultra-evil Darth Vader is actually Luke's father.
     
  19. FoolFromHell Photons be Free. Registered Senior Member

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    The original scientists knew how to remove the nanites from the air.
    Too bad the machines killed them.
    Its in the Animatrix.
    The Second Renaissance Part I and II.
    Yeah. That was a huge, gaping, mistake.
     
  20. FoolFromHell Photons be Free. Registered Senior Member

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  21. temur man of no words Registered Senior Member

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    My understanding is that there is the real 'blue' world out there and what we experience here in 'green' is just a simulation inside a huge computer. The 'green' world can be different than the 'blue' world, that is why we do not understand some of the things happening in the 'blue' world since all our experience is in the 'green' world. So for example, in reality humans could be very powerful and efficient energywise, but inside the simulation the human physiology (or laws of physics) is so that the human body is not so efficient.
     
  22. madanthonywayne Morning in America Registered Senior Member

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    So you're saying that our understanding of physics is based upon the fact that we're in the Matrix. If we were in reality, we'd realize that a human being would make an excellent power source. Indeed, perhaps the machines deliberately twisted our understanding so that we would never suspect the truth.

    That's an innovative approach!
     
  23. Xev Registered Senior Member

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    Except that Morpheus, who has been enlightened by taking fun blue pills, explains the concept. If our understanding of physiology was altered by the machines, wouldn't he be immune, since he's not under their control?
     

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