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The novel, published on July 1, 1984, predicted the World Wide Web and cyberspace and a lot of other things. Which of William Gibson's predictions have come true, and which still seem far off?
A wrong step in the matrix could kill you. Ironically enough, Gibson didn’t even own a computer when he wrote Neuromancer - he typed the whole thing on a regular old clunky manual typewriter.
Apple TV isn't afraid to take risks, and its latest sci-fi venture may be the streamer's most risky endeavor yet.
For Neuromancer, Callum Turner (Apple TV+’s recent Masters Of The Air) will embody hacker/”cowboy” Case, who will ride his console through cyberspace, and a brief series description follows: ...
Several attempts to adapt ’Neuromancer’ failed, but Apple TV+ is going there. Callum Turner’s turn as a console cowboy is shaping up.
“Neuromancer” follows a low-level drug-abusing console cowboy in futuristic Japan, where stealing means hacking into high-powered computer systems (The Matrix), which he is able to do via an ...
Neuromancer is important because of its astounding predictive power. Gibson’s core idea in the novel is the direct integration of man and computer, with all the possibilities (and horrors) that ...