Authors on the Web
Guardian.co.uk, May 17, 2013
...that the fantasy of a de-digitalled world revealing a deeper and richer reality was just that; a fantasy. William Gibson described cyberspace in Neuromancer as "a consensual hallucination experienced daily by billions". Gibson's cyberspace was inspired...
Arts Hub, May 15, 2013
...of our titles, despite them being DRM-free for nearly a year’. Potentially, the move doesn’t only benefit William Gibson fans and would-be cyberpunks who want to share. Now that there is an example resisting the assumption that removing DRM propels...
The Verge, May 13, 2013
...accomplished has been amazing' Jan 25 5 Minutes on The Verge: Jason Kottke Jan 24 An interview with William Gibson Jan 18 5 Minutes on The Verge: Peter Kirn of Create Digital Music Jan 17 The long road to BlackBerry 10 Jan 13 ARM, Inc....
Daily World, May 12, 2013
...or a breakdown in social order. The film “The Matrix” was inspired by the cyberpunk “Sprawl” trilogy by William Gibson. “That hasn’t run its course yet because of all the different ways we’re figuring out of connecting with the brain,”...
Telegraph, May 11, 2013
...learnt to say "the internet" these days. I haven’t seen the word "cyberspace" since I read that William Gibson novel. Still, quite a fun image, isn’t it? Like a comic-book thing. Elizabeth Regina, Crimefighting Queen of Cyberspace! This ermine cloak...
Io9, May 10, 2013
...small screen. Despite the humor, however, Person of Interest is firmly a part of the cyber-noir genre that William Gibson explored in novels like Pattern Recognition and Spook Country, which were set in a kind of blurry present day or near past, but...
TeleRead, May 9, 2013
...Fiction: The 101 Best Novels 1985-2010, Damien Broderick & Paul Di Filippo, eds. (NonStop) • Distrust That Particular Flavor, William Gibson (Putnam) • The Cambridge Companion to Fantasy Literature, Edward James & Farah Mendlesohn, eds....
World News Network, May 11, 2013
...of industrial technology. More recently, modern works of science fiction, such as those by Philip K. Dick and William Gibson, and films (e.g. Blade Runner, Ghost in the Shell) project highly ambivalent or cautionary attitudes toward technology's impact...
MySanAntonio, May 11, 2013
...cards like Leet, which lets a player steal another player's card. It sounds like a twist on William Gibson's cyberpunk short story “Johnny Mnemonic,” with silly smartphone icons and “flavor text” descriptions on the cards. But at its core, App'd...
Lincoln Journal Star, May 11, 2013
...back — and you'll forgive my little semantic parlor trick here — but I fall back on William Gibson's famous quote that "the future is already here — it's just not evenly distributed." To predict the future, you just have to keep your eyes open...
Southend Today, May 10, 2013
...Adelizzi-Hill, Jake Driver, Dennis Sendur, Ryan Tattan, Jayde Abraham, Conor Hales, Emmanuel Kouassi, Darren Phillips, Frankie Naidoo. Thurrock: William Gibson, Jody Meredith, Kieron Gore, Billy Monk, Jamie Orchard, Jack Willis, Brandon Williams,...
PC Gamer Magazine, May 10, 2013
...in 1999, System Shock 2 blended RPG and FPS elements with a cyberpunk flair right out of a William Gibson techno-nightmare. System Shock 2 was already the most requested game on GOG.com when it was released there in February, and will likely see...
Technology Daily News, May 10, 2013
...small screen. Despite the humor, however, Person of Interest is firmly a part of the cyber-noir genre that William Gibson explored in novels like Pattern Recognition and Spook Country, which were set in a kind of blurry present day or near past, but...
Io9, May 10, 2013
...small screen. Despite the humor, however, Person of Interest is firmly a part of the cyber-noir genre that William Gibson explored in novels like Pattern Recognition and Spook Country, which were set in a kind of blurry present day or near past, but...













