Blinkenlights: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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== [[Real Life]] ==
== [[Real Life]] ==
* The very earliest [[Personal Computer]]s, including the groundbreaking [[w:Altair 8800|Altair 8800]], had no keyboard or monitor (or any way of connecting either). Programs were entered in raw binary via switches on the computer's front panel -- and their output was returned via a row of blinkenlights, also on the front panel.



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[[Category:Reality Is Unrealistic]]
[[Category:Reality Is Unrealistic]]
[[Category:Truth in Television]]
[[Category:Truth in Television]]
[[Category:Net Culture]]
[[Category:Technology Tropes]]

Revision as of 21:10, 5 June 2020

ACHTUNG!
ALLES TURISTEN UND NONTEKNISCHEN LOOKENSPEEPERS!
DAS KOMPUTERMASCHINE IST NICHT FÜR DER GEFINGERPOKEN UND MITTENGRABEN! ODERWISE IST EASY TO SCHNAPPEN DER SPRINGENWERK, BLOWENFUSEN UND POPPENCORKEN MIT SPITZENSPARKEN.
IST NICHT FÜR GEWERKEN BEI DUMMKOPFEN. DER RUBBERNECKEN SIGHTSEEREN KEEPEN DAS COTTONPICKEN HÄNDER IN DAS POCKETS MUSS.
ZO RELAXEN UND WATSCHEN DER BLINKENLICHTEN.

Originally, Blinkenlights were simply diagnostic lights on electronic devices. In some places, they still are. But that's boring.

Thanks to signs in "mock German" that appeared in various computer rooms in the 1950s, Blinkenlights became something for non-technical people to look at, instead of touching something they really shouldn't touch. From there, it was only a matter of time – less than a decade – for Blinkenlights to become a visual shorthand for high technology in general, not just computers ... and, in Hollywood, they were always blinking.

As computers became more ubiquitous, the trope faded from the public consciousness, having been supplanted by Extreme Graphical Representation. (Real Life 21st-century mainframes don't even have diagnostic lights any more, at least not where people can see them.) Nowadays it's used in works that purposefully invoke Zeerust, always paired with Beeping Computers.

Not to be confused with illumination for Winken, Blinken and Nod.

Examples of Blinkenlights include:

Advertising

Anime and Manga

Comic Books

Fan Works

Film

Literature

  • In the very first scene in The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress, the self-aware computer Mycroft ("Mike" to his friends) is described as using his blinkenlights to laugh:

"You asked what I knew." His binary read-out lights rippled back and forth — a chuckle.

Live-Action TV

  • Shown in The Prisoner episode "The General". The fact that they switch off is a plot point.
  • Star Trek: The Original Series faked Blinkenlights in Engineering, by sliding cutout screens back and forth behind backlit wall transparencies.
  • Knight Rider‍'‍s KITT had a simplified set of Blinkenlights inset into his front bumper.

Music

New Media

Newspaper Comics

Oral Tradition, Folklore, Myths and Legends

Pinball

Podcasts

Professional Wrestling

Puppet Shows

Radio

Recorded and Stand Up Comedy

Tabletop Games

Theatre

Video Games

  • "Blinken Lights II", from Keep Talking and Nobody Explodes, is an exotic puzzle that combines blinkenlights (as the name suggests), Morse code and the Simon game.

Visual Novels

Web Animation

Web Comics

Web Original

Western Animation

Other Media

Real Life

  • The very earliest Personal Computers, including the groundbreaking Altair 8800, had no keyboard or monitor (or any way of connecting either). Programs were entered in raw binary via switches on the computer's front panel -- and their output was returned via a row of blinkenlights, also on the front panel.