ZDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDD? IMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMM; ZDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDD? 3 Founded By: 3 : Network Information Access : 3 -Other World BBS 3 3 Guardian Of Time 3D: 23OCT90 :D3 -Txt Files Only! 3 3 Judge Dredd 3 : Judge Dredd : 3 See EOF if any ? 3 @DDDDDDDDBDDDDDDDDDY : File 59 : @DDDDDDDDDBDDDDDDDDY 3 HMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMM< 3 3 IMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMM; 3 @DDD6 Making the NOVA Program by Cliff Stoll GDDY : Service Outage in N. Illinois : HMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMM< Making the Nova program The first that I heard of Nova was May, 1989. The director, Robin Bates, asked if I might be interested in working with him on making a Nova program. I discouraged him: I was busy in astronomy and was also finishing writing a book. He again contacted me in September 1989 ... I agreed to work with him. There were several other productions being made around that time including Connie Chung/CBS and Yorkshire Television from Britain. Nova's intent was not to discuss the ethics of computing. Rather, the show was "a documentary based on a story by Cliff Stoll". It was not a docudrama version of my book, The Cuckoo's Egg. It was written by Robin Bates and although I had some opportunity to review/revise the script, the final show was the responsibility of WGBH TV. I volunteered to play myself in the show, as did everyone else, with the exception of the 4 cia spooks (they were played by some football coaches). It was filmed on location - at my old office in Berkeley, at my house in Oakland, and in Hannover, Germany. A few hours after I testified in Hess's espionage trial, they filmed the Hannover scenes. This was Jan - Feb, 1990. I ad-libbed my parts. Typically, the script would say one thing, but it didn't feel natural, was factually wrong, or made a stupid point. So I'd invent as I went along, without prompts. Sometimes, this led to tension with the director: typically, he wanted me to stay in one place and not move around so much. ("Sit still! Don't move your hands! Don't twist your head!") Other times, he wanted unimportant things (like the shower scene or the cia spook scene) which, to me, conveyed little information. The entire production was shot on 16mm film, which meant that for most scenes, we did exactly one take. With video work, you can do 5 or 10 retakes of each scene. Film's more expensive: I didn't have that liberty. The part I'm most sensitive about is the last scene in the film. They took me to the forest where hacker Hagbard was found dead. I was moved by the solemnity of this place and event. The director suggested that I be more lighthearted, but I couldn't. On the whole, it was fun. All the same, being momentarily famous is much less enjoyable than you might imagine. Indeed, if I had it to do over again, I'd certainly do things very differently. >From Berkeley, my cheers & greetings to all! Cliff Stoll cliff@cfa.harvard.edu --- Massive Service Outage In Northern Illinois (Oct 17, 1990) Michael Glodek must feel like a million dollars today. He's the landscaper who was building a new lawn for a home at 3521 Madison Avenue in Oak Brook, IL on Monday morning when his digging machine uprooted what Illinois Bell termed a 'very major, very important' part of their interoffice network covering northern Illinois. Glodek said, "I didn't do a JULIE beca