Wednesday
Because she'd never heard of me, she made the quite reasonable assumption that I was a Dante writer - one so new or obscure that she'd never seen me mentioned in a journal of literary criticism, and never bumped into me at a conference. Therefore, I couldn't be making any money at it. Therefore, I was most likely teaching somewhere. All perfectly logical. In order to set her straight, I had to let her know that the reason she'd never heard of me was because I was famous.
- Neal Stephenson, describing an encounter with a "literary" writer in a quite wonderful interview over at slashdot. His answer to the question "In a fight between you and William Gibson, who would win?" is so magnificent that it would make me go and buy all his books if I didn't own them already.

"the reason she'd never heard of me was because I was famous." - Neal Stephenson
Neither had I. Well, yes, that would explain why.
Posted by Lemuel at October 20, 2004 10:41 PM
Do you think that hacking tools should be protected (in the United States) under the second amendment?
Actually, hacking tools would far more likely be in violation of the Fourth Amemdment.
The Second Amendment is, quite specifically, about firearms.
Posted by MTFO at October 21, 2004 01:15 AM
Actually, the 2nd amendment mentions "arms", not firearms. Construe that as you may.
Posted by Jo at October 21, 2004 05:31 AM
Cyberpunk, my favourite literary genre.
I must be getting old.
Posted by The Last Toryboy at October 21, 2004 01:24 PM
Hacking tools are usually discussed as speech, protected under the First. If you've never visited the Gallery of CSS Descramblers, you're in for a treat.
In brief, after a US judge ruled in 2000 that the DVD descrambling algorithm was not speech, a bunch of geeks set about describing the code in ways that would have to be protected: dramatic readings, setting the code to music, printing it on t-shirts and neckties.
The haiku version is my favorite.
Posted by S. Weasel at October 21, 2004 01:59 PM
There was a perl RSA gag that went around on a t-shirt ten years ago, and I think the shirt was classified as a munition, illegal for export. The old t-shirt page is in the Wayback Machine.
Posted by Billy Beck at October 21, 2004 03:21 PM
Neal Stephenson is brilliant. I wonder if he's writing on a new book(s) now that the Baroque Cycle is done...
Posted by Johan at October 23, 2004 11:00 AM









