Winter wrote:
Yes, but I still imagine them to have a number of 'consultants' on a for-hire basis, operating individually or together in black ops.
That adds an extra layer of intrigue to corporate espionage and low intensity warfare, but these "consultants" would perhaps not be 100% trusted by their employees and some of the megacorps (by definition almost nation states in themselves) would have their "in-house" operatives being cautious of mercenary spies or military specialists (this was a central plot element in cyberpunk spy thriller
Cypher).
Yeah, the AI's called Lazarus. I was just getting confused about what you meant -- if you thought that Jock being able to hack in at all was unrealistic, or if you liked it the way it's written.
I just find it Mary Sue-ish that Jock could break into practically everything early on in the story, but then again he had the blessings of a powerful crime lord and a giant bank of supercomputers at that Triad lair. When he was cracking into the Federal compound, he perhaps only had a few laptops and a makeshift mainframe (which would fare badly against a fortified computer core that houses a AI).
Well, I'm skint and unemployed at the moment (day job fell through), so it may be a while before I can buy anything.
That's bad news and typical of Britain in 2007, but don't fret: just join JobCentre Plus and LearnDirect (which I've done in recent months).
Unfortunately I've not read either of those, but I'm very interested in seeing those Street sketches.
Sadly I don't yet know how to transfer my pencil sketches of the characters, objects and locations related to
Street onto this talk forum, but for a consolation prize I'll show you this
Neuromancer related concept art from
YouTube (link not guaranteed; just log on
YouTube and type "Neuromancer" if there are any problems) - its pretty good, but some of the characters and locations are not as I evisioned it to be (by the way I can do
Neuromancer related art as well; I've already done the corporate logo for Tessier-Ashpool SA).