Just watched it, I have an idea

Jennifer 2022-04-19 09:01:16

When this electronic age is sweeping the world crazy, some people are obsessed with protocols, routing, and root user permissions, because this is an absolutely free world, and controlling it only requires ingenious logic and a line of code.

In the same era, in a different location, it only advocates the so-called hacker spirit and entangles hackers and red guests.

So it's no wonder that Google and Facebook will grow in America.

When the little American friends were using the program-controlled network to make free calls, the little Chinese friends were singing I love Beijing Tiananmen Square and the great leader Mao Zedong. Even in college, everyone in the circle of friends, many people buy hacker x files, but no one has read tcp/ip

. In the movie, there are two questions that I used to think about all night in school, and I want to spit it out. quick.

1. The idea of ​​twin brothers was sloppily told to the protagonist. There is a reason why the protagonist can hold absolute control until the company goes public, because the core of the website is the code, and this code can be written by almost everyone.

Therefore, the idea is invaluable in the confidential stage, and it is degraded to a blow at the first sight. At that time, we can only see whose website is interviewed first, and who can better capture the market share.

So, I really don't understand,
I really don't understand
why Ivy League students who have always been aggressive are so stupid and turn to school discipline for help.

2. Infighting among founders. I can only sigh that there are no Confucian businessmen in the United States. In other words, neither does China. Confucian merchants exist only in legends. Napster is a legend, but I just don't understand how it got so much equity in the end.

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Extended Reading

The Social Network quotes

  • Amy: You're a zillionaire!

    Sean Parker: Not technically.

    Amy: What are you?

    Sean Parker: Broke. There's not a lot of money in free music, even less when you're being sued by everyone who's ever been to the Grammys.

    Amy: This is blowing my mind.

    Sean Parker: I appreciate that.

    Amy: I gotta hop in the shower and get ready for class.

    Sean Parker: Bio-Chem even though you're a French major who's name is Amy.

    Amy: You passed.

    Sean Parker: I'm a hard worker.

  • Sean Parker: You mind if I check my email?

    Amy: Yeah, go ahead.

    Sean Parker: [logs on and sees The Facebook] Amy? Amy!

    Amy: Yeah?

    Sean Parker: Can you come out here?

    Amy: Just a second.

    Sean Parker: There's a snake in here, Amy.

    Amy: What?

    [runs from shower]

    Amy: Where?

    Sean Parker: Okay, there isn't a snake but I need to ask you something.

    Amy: Are you kidding me? I could have been killed!

    Sean Parker: How?

    Amy: By running too fast! And getting twisted in the curtain. What do you need to ask me?

    Sean Parker: I went to check my email and there's a website open on your computer?

    Amy: Yeah, after you passed out last night I went on The Facebook for a little bit.

    Sean Parker: What's that?

    Amy: The Facebook? Stanford's had it for like, two weeks now. It's really awesome except it's freakishly addicting. Seriously, I'm on the thing like five times a day.

    Sean Parker: Mind if I send myself an email?

    Amy: Yeah, is everything okay?

    Sean Parker: Everything's great. I just need to find you, Mark Zuckerberg.