Article
Rewatching Jurassic Park, the post inventories nearly every visible machine, software interface, and prop, from Alan Grant’s PowerBook 100 to the control-room stations used by Dennis Nedry and Ray Arnold. It argues most screens were driven by real hardware and uses quoted production figures to show how much was invested in SGI and Apple systems for authenticity. The inventory covers SGI Indigo and Crimson workstations, Quadra 700s, a Motorola Envoy PDA, PLI backup devices, and large period monitors, while also noting passive-matrix limits, tiny RAM, and the practical implications of 1990s storage costs versus today. It also tracks the method used to fake life on set: a nearby room of SGI and Macintosh machines generated animations over months and fed selected monitors by radio cue, though some interface elements, such as QuickTime playback and specific directory views, were also staged. Several screen details are treated as technical set dressing, including the white-rabbit lockdown UI, Unix/IRIX command usage, and the “Nedryland” naming in a few scenes. The post highlights consistency issues and oddities like blank PLI LEDs, orientation shifts, limited visibility of key hardware, and occasional continuity mismatches. It links to manuals, making-of material, and period ads to justify specs and also discusses the CM-5-like supercomputer façade and why those design choices still impressed. Commenters corroborate and refine claims, including the Macintosh code provenance and Envoy origin, while also debating whether a mixed SGI/Mac platform was operationally practical for a park-scale system.
Commenters corroborate the software sleuthing by tracing the visible Macintosh code windows to Apple’s Macintosh Programmers Workshop examples, with links to MPW 3.1 source files and conversion notes for modern viewing. A separate thread supports the Motorola Envoy mockup story tied to Hartmut Esslinger and a Spielberg encounter, complete with external forum references. Several participants praise the article’s depth and ask for similar film-focused breakdowns, plus behind-the-scenes branding and location coverage. One reader connects the discussion to the source novel, noting the scale of the fictional data systems and other technical concepts while adding a more sympathetic view of Nedry’s workload in the book. A correction is posted that Indigo-era SGI keyboards used proprietary mini-DIN connectors rather than ADB, refining the interface details. Other comments praise the realism-driven production and also question the operational realism of SGI plus old Macs, while one broader note reflects that SGI’s workstation strengths were overtaken by commodity graphics-acceleration ecosystems.