It's a shame that Halt and Catch Fire diesn't seem to be on any UK streaming services just at the moment when this Halt and Catch Fire Syllabus has popped up.
This site features a curriculum developed around the television series, Halt and Catch Fire (2014-2017), a fictional narrative about people working in tech during the 1980s-1990s.
The intent is for this website to be used by self-forming small groups that want to create a “watching club” (like a book club) and discuss aspects of technology history that are featured in this series.
I'm not sure their chosen format1 would have worked well for me when I was devouring the show back when we were still in the first lockdown, but the nice thing about the internet is that now it's up there hopefully it'll still be there, waiting for me2 one day when I do a rewatch.
[Via RT by @hondanhon]
- Book clubs imitating a college study group, with syllabuses and reading lists, really aren't how I want to spend my leisure time. I've no doubt that with the right classmates bringing their perspectives on the story to a discussion this could be terrific, but I don't think I move in the right circles to make that work. True, I could buy the four seasons of the show and watch them online whenever I like, but that'd … not be a good use of my funds at this time. ↩
- I find it weird that I don't seem to be able to add the four seasons of the show to my Amazon wishlist. I get that Amazon want me to throw money at them now rather than put off that decision for later, and I suspect that they'd suggest that I add them to my Watchlist in Prime Video, but that's not quite the same thing. To my mind, my Watchlist is for stuff I have yet to watch, while my Wishlist is for stuff I have yet to buy. I don't want to clutter up my Watchlist with stuff I've seen. That just makes my Watchlist less efficient, or requires me to spend more time than I want to organising/filtering it. Just let me chuck a pointer to something I might want to buy one day on my Wishlist and let me be done thinking about it, Amazon… I could rid myself of this problem by adding the show to my Wishlist in what-used-to-be-called-iTunes instead, but I don't think Amazon want that. … And now these footnotes have pretty much doubled the length of the post they're attached to, which is a sign I should do something about that or that I should get an editor. ↩