Back to the main page

Mailing List Logs for ShadowRN

From: George H Metz <wolfstar@****.COM>
Subject: Re: NERPS (stuff)
Date: Mon, 8 Sep 1997 14:38:43 EDT
On Mon, 8 Sep 1997 14:09:42 -0400 "Steven A. Tinner"
<bluewizard@*****.COM> writes:
> Fuchi Holopet/Holoassistant
>(>) OK, I know some of you are wondering why I'd bother to post this
suit -
>drek, but it does one valuable thing for us scroffy runner types - it
gives
>us information! Does Mr. Suit have a holoassistant imaged as a major
>simstarlet? Now you know one of his weaknesses. Does the kid you need to
>extract have a Baby Dragon holopet? Maybe a well placed illusion would
lure
>him away from a crowd to where he can more easily be extracted.
>
>(>) Buddy - "Data is Power"
>
>(>)Slot that. What's really wizzer about this is the "adult
entertainment
>options!" Ever want to see the girl in the cubicle across from your
obeying
>your every whim? One discreet holo of her, and she's yours forever as a
>holoassistant!
>
>(>)Drooler

(>)You're pathetic Drooler. Remind me to get a holo of you for a
holoassistant when I feel like a bitch queen.

(>)Rook

(>) Children, play nice. Something that you all are overlooking is the
tactical advantage of these. A wiz decker should be able to reprogram a
holoassistant - or a holopet for that matter(what happens when Baby
Dragon grows up?) - to present an image of a generic person in combat
gear firing an assault rifle. They're cheap, and you can sprinkle them
liberally about a perimeter for when the drek hits the circulator.

(>)Baron


--
Wolfstar, Fearless Leader of Myself(Too bad my follower isn't fearless!)
http://members.aol.com/w0lfstar (That's a ZERO, not the letter "o" in my
name!)
"WHICH CHEEK?!?!?!?"
-- Me, after getting hit in the butt with a chunk of door during an
explosion.

Disclaimer

These messages were posted a long time ago on a mailing list far, far away. The copyright to their contents probably lies with the original authors of the individual messages, but since they were published in an electronic forum that anyone could subscribe to, and the logs were available to subscribers and most likely non-subscribers as well, it's felt that re-publishing them here is a kind of public service.