@@kenudice9841 He wanted to torpedo the whole thing because he did not like Joe's connection to and history with Cam (and keep in mind this was before he found out that Joe and Cam slept together at the previous Comdex).
It’s fun watching this show, as a Silicon Valley kid during the 80s who toured fab rooms and watched my father, much an amalgam of the main characters.
Like magnets, despite Joe pretty much being the disdain of all their existence, they still all agree at this crossroads to meet. Seasons 1 and 2 could stand alone as the arc of the plot. But still there were moments in later episodes that still had meaning.
if you read interviews with Steve Jobs in the 80s he was exactly like that - it's not about what we have now but will have tomorrow. People like Joe are there stopped by those who are too smart to be a genius.
Pseudocode: “Pseudocode is a detailed yet readable description of what a computer program or algorithm should do. It is written in a formal yet readable style that uses a natural syntax and formatting so it can be easily understood by programmers and others involved in the development process”
All of season 4 makes it abundantly clear that the results are, and have never been the primary focus. The project gets us to the people. _The thing that gets us to the thing._ First and foremost, this show is about human connection more than it is about creation or how much you're willing to destroy in order to create. Oddly enough, we see it perhaps best through the lens of Gordon Clark, whose final season sees him, above all else, relishing in the pleasure of being surrounded by the people he loves. His work, though satisfying, is a means to spend time with his favorite people, results be damned. He says it outright to Joe: "What are you most excited about?" " _This._ Working with you again."
Yes and no. I think because AMC indicated to the writers that they only had 4 seasons they rushed their story arc with time jumps to give their characters the endings they wanted. But for results, this show is about failure. I kind of loved that about the show because normally in shows or movies characters struggle & struggle to pull off a miracle in the end and have a nice tidy conclusion by the finale of each episode or season. HCF they strive for whatever they're chasing only to get kicked in the nuts with disappointment at the end, the stuff where they succeeded at is a side thing.
the best show that i never heard anyone talk about.
yeah i found it randomly on pluto and they dont show the full series only certain episodes and am hooked
This was my show I cancelled so many things to watch every episode
@@uziXwraithI ended up pirating it on Vimeo
Tom is that guy who walks in the room and sucks all the air out of it. Buzz Killington.
Jason He’s the “I don’t get it guy” from the movie BIG.
@@kenudice9841 He wanted to torpedo the whole thing because he did not like Joe's connection to and history with Cam (and keep in mind this was before he found out that Joe and Cam slept together at the previous Comdex).
so hyped for S4. Love his speeches
Gotta love when it the idea clicks for the other three.
It’s fun watching this show, as a Silicon Valley kid during the 80s who toured fab rooms and watched my father, much an amalgam of the main characters.
You want to learn basics of computer super deeply?
Watch Halt and Catch Fire.
Web 2.0, social media era totally eroded this vision, I am so pissed!
Joe is the GOAT
Anyone know the title of the song playing in the background from 1:59 ?
Brandon Bernardo I want to say it’s “Mosaic”?
HACF is the forrest gump of tech
Like magnets, despite Joe pretty much being the disdain of all their existence, they still all agree at this crossroads to meet. Seasons 1 and 2 could stand alone as the arc of the plot. But still there were moments in later episodes that still had meaning.
Joe created Google in season 4; Mcaffee virus scan in Season 3; Amazon web services in season 2 and the notebook computer in season 1
OMG DUDE
He was too ahead of his time lmao
3:30 Cameron's Face lol
perfection.
And the next moments, the boys fight 😅.
if you read interviews with Steve Jobs in the 80s he was exactly like that - it's not about what we have now but will have tomorrow. People like Joe are there stopped by those who are too smart to be a genius.
What show is this from?
Halt and Catch Fire, it's on Netflix
It's an utterly great show.
Silicon Bally
so, there in the board is some C code and he is interpreting a sort of Rasmus Lerdorf when he wrote the scripting language to feed up the web?
Pseudocode:
“Pseudocode is a detailed yet readable description of what a computer program or algorithm should do. It is written in a formal yet readable style that uses a natural syntax and formatting so it can be easily understood by programmers and others involved in the development process”
Tom was just jealous his chick loved Sigma Joe
So? Is he not entitled to it? What's with this "just" shit?
0:42 let's take a step back, all we have to do is build a door.
Anyone else think this show is a little too results-oriented?
Sarcasm?
How so?
All of season 4 makes it abundantly clear that the results are, and have never been the primary focus. The project gets us to the people. _The thing that gets us to the thing._ First and foremost, this show is about human connection more than it is about creation or how much you're willing to destroy in order to create. Oddly enough, we see it perhaps best through the lens of Gordon Clark, whose final season sees him, above all else, relishing in the pleasure of being surrounded by the people he loves. His work, though satisfying, is a means to spend time with his favorite people, results be damned. He says it outright to Joe:
"What are you most excited about?"
" _This._ Working with you again."
Yes, and HACF is still the greatest piece of longform storytelling presented on television.
Yes and no. I think because AMC indicated to the writers that they only had 4 seasons they rushed their story arc with time jumps to give their characters the endings they wanted.
But for results, this show is about failure. I kind of loved that about the show because normally in shows or movies characters struggle & struggle to pull off a miracle in the end and have a nice tidy conclusion by the finale of each episode or season. HCF they strive for whatever they're chasing only to get kicked in the nuts with disappointment at the end, the stuff where they succeeded at is a side thing.