william-gibson
'Exapunks' Is a Cyberpunk Hacking Game That Asks You to Print Your Own Zines
This new PC game tells you to code for your life, avoid the phage, print the instructions, and hack the planet.
These Photos of an Amsterdam Data Center Look Like a Cyberpunk Dream
Photographer Kas van Vliet wanted to know what the windowless Atom86 data center looked like on the inside.
William Gibson: 'I Never Expected to Be Living in an American Retro-Future'
In his latest work, the spawner of cyberpunk has become unstuck in time and has come face to face with nuclear apocalypse.
When Did 'Neuromancer' Actually Take Place?
William Gibson says his novel takes place around 2035. I’m not convinced.
Modder Brings William Gibson's 'Cyberdecks' to Life
The homemade cyberdeck was made from a Commodore 64c, a Raspberry Pi 3 computer, and other assorted parts.
William Gibson Talks Cyberpunk, Cyberspace, and His Experiences in Hollywood
We spoke to the legendary science fiction writer about his legacy as tech "noir prophet," his new book, and writing the Hollywood flop "Johnny Mnemonic."
William Gibson's 'The Peripheral': Sifting Through the Ruins of the Present
For those interested in how today becomes tomorrow, his new novel, "The Peripheral," is necessary reading.
William Gibson Has No Idea How the Future Will See Us
But he knows it won't be anything like how we see ourselves.
Tessier-Ashpool Recordings is the Sci-Fi Label for Our Techno Future
Corporate warfare, industrial espionage, and the novels of William Gibson all play into this singular new label from the Romanian producer Liar.
When MIT Publishes Science Fiction, You Should Pay Attention
'Twelve Tomorrows' is like MIT's Swimsuit Issue.
Piper at the Gates of Hell: An Interview with Cyberpunk Legend John Shirley
Chronicler of "street" and assembler of mechanisms to go beyond, John Shirley breathes forth a smoggy twilight that is the end of the American Dream.
'Neuromancer' and I Are the Same Age
For 30 years, 'Neuromancer' and I have lived in the same world, under the same sky—the color of television, if you will, tuned to a dead channel.