Until now I thought this Whassup?-Sketch refers to that scene in “Scary Movie” from the early 2000s. I never would have guessed that this was a beer commercial for the Superbowl.
Until now I thought this Whassup?-Sketch refers to that scene in “Scary Movie” from the early 2000s. I never would have guessed that this was a beer commercial for the Superbowl.
I always claim to have something planned, too. Also, I do not answer calls or messages from work during my time off. I was given a mobile phone at work, which I leave at my workplace.
You might be right. Take a look at the save icon in Blender.
I think this is because it is pretty boring to film a computer in action, because it does noting - it doesn’t move for example. So beeping sounds were added for every action a computer would do: opening or closing windows, transferring files to a disk, calculating,…
These sounds were added at a time computers were not that common in every household and to emphazise that the computer is doing something. In recent movies, computers are more silent.
Another thing film makers did to show interaction with a computer is the constant usage of the keyboard. Every thing is done with the keyboard. Open a window: type 5 sceonds on the keyboard. Transferring a file onto a disk: type the whole bible on the keyboard. This was done because it would be pretty boring to show someone use the mouse or drag-and-drop files.
It its somehow compareable to the movie trope of constantly reloading a gun. You can see this often in older movies: the protagonist is going inside a building and he is reloading his gun. Then he stops a the corner of a hallway and is reloading the gun again - despite no shot has been fired. This was also done to show the audience that a gun will be involved.
Here’s some insightful view into the topic of gamer aesthetics: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zgOI4908QyY
The video is in German, but you can toggle the subtitles into (auto-generated) English.
I hope this helps, albeit it was tested on a M1 Pro with Safari 16.5.1
Someone in the Fediverse (I don’t know where and who) posted that you have to add the following filters into U-Block Origin. When done you shouldn’t see any anti-adblock-warnings :
youtube.com##+js(set,yt.config_.openPopupConfig.supportedPopups.adBlockMessageViewModel,false)
youtube.com##+js(set,Object.prototype.adBlocksFound,O)
youtube.com##+js(set,ytplayer.config.aras.raw_player_response.adPlacements,[])
youtube.com##+js(set,Object.prototype.hasAllowedlnstreamAd,true)
I might add that I haven’t experienced any anti-adblock-warnings yet, but I added these filters in advance. I might be worth a shot!
This brings back some good memories! Thanks for posting!