Perhaps the set designer just searched for "handdrawn map" and filtered to "Large" images. For me, Google is returning that Dungeon map as the 2nd result.
I read this through without having read any reviews or even the cover, and I was pleasantly surprised as to how good a read it was. Not the plot, that was absolutely meh, nor the ticking of pop reference and stereotypes boxes that the author quite clearly wanted to get done. But despite fact that it was an unabashedly predictable and pedestrian plot, it was a pretty awesome book.
It got a 3/5 on my scale, on which 95% of fiction books get 1 star and 4% get 2 stars, which means it's worth reading for almost everybody, is a fun enough read, and while it won't change the world should definitely be in the top 100 popular books of last year. Read it. It got 4.27 on Goodreads, which also testifies as to how good it is.
If you look at Neo's bookshelf at the beginning of the matrix, the books are on cybernetics and skeptical hypothesizes. (At least as far as I could tell the last time I saw it.)
A subtle touch that probably went unnoticed by most of the audience.
Specifically, that's the hollowed-out book Neo keeps his mini-discs of illegal software in. So the title is not just a reference to the movie's themes, it's also literally true: it's not a functional book, since it's hollowed out, it's a simulation of a book.
I forgot how big the minicomputer version was. They ended up splitting the CPM version into several games. Probably couldn't fit the whole thing on a single cassette.
IMHO, this was one of the lost magical things about tapes .. you could just endlessly add lots of them as you needed them, seamlessly even in those days. I recall loading rather large stuff, tape at a time, as an old-school operator in-training and so on ..
I thought the maps were in there as well, but I can't find them ATM. I still have my parchment maps from Zork II and III. I loaned the Zork I map to a girl in HS and never saw it again :/
Isn't it amazing how fast our brains can lock-in and drill-down. For something that might have might only been viewable in a few frames, the author was able to recall a small subset from over 30 years ago.
Will computers ever have the IO bandwidth to compete with the human brain?
For what it's worth, I cut out an image of just the map from the screenshot posted, and gave it to google reverse-image-search, and it did NOT match it to a map of Zork. It just returned a bunch of similarly colored images.
What do you define as a computer? a single cpu, one rack unit, a cluster? What is your definition of "compete"?
Computers already beat humans at math, memory, chess, and many other things. Certainly believe Google's clusters have the IO to compete with humans at searching and filtering.
I was going to suggest the magical spell to summon a person on the internet -- say their name three times in a high pagerank location with your eyes closed, of course -- but it only works for people who haven't yet tired of googling themselves.
In this case, the guy has 50 titles to his credit, some of them quite big blockbusters, so I suspect he's not going to notice. Maybe he'll have a nephew or other connection who'll let him know his input is urgently needed on a matter of great importance.
Oddly enough I've got a 3rd level link to him (a set decorator sharing his name, what are the odds its not him?) on Linkedin, but apparently you can't send such a person an email without paying Linkedin for the privilege. Is it worth $20 (/month) to send Mr DeTitta a message he might not even read? I'm going to say no, sorry HN.
He may have just approved the item, but he might be a start to tracking it down.
The map should have been "cleared" (ie permission from the rights holder obtained), but if they thought it was a real hand drawn image created for the film, they may have missed it.
Side note, imdb lists three additional people in the art department with his surname. The power of having a long career and two oscar noms, I guess.