
The Blue Nowhere
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Narrated by:
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Dennis Boutsikaris
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By:
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Jeffery Deaver
Desperate, the head of the California Sate Police Computer Crimes Division frees Wyatt Gillette, imprisoned for hacking, to aid the investigation - against the loud protests of the rest of the division. With an obsession emblematic of hackers, Gillette fervently attempts to trace Phate's insidious computer virus back to its source. Then Phate delivers a huge blow, murdering one of the division's own - a "wizard" who had pioneered the Internet - and the search takes on a zealous intensity.
Gillette and Detective Frank Bishop - an old-school homicide cop who's accustomed to forensic sleuthing - make an uneasy team. But with a merciless and brilliant killer like Phate in their crosshairs, and his twisted game reaching a fever pitch, they must utilize every ounce of their talents to stop him.
©2001 Jeffery Deaver (P)2001 Simon & Schuster Inc., AUDIOWORKS Is an Imprint of Simon & Schuster Audio Division, Simon & Schuster, Inc.Listeners also enjoyed...





















About the Creator
If you have any curiosity about MUDs and cyber crime, get this book.
If you just love a good mystery, thriller with great plot twists and a satisfying ending, get this book.
If you are not that technically savvy, not to worry, you can easily follow the plot regardless.
No MUD slinging here!
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EXCELLENT!!!
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New milieu
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And the narrator is such a good voice actor.
A little outdated tech wise but a great story
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And some of the terminology was pretty lame. Code slinger? Does anybody call themselves that? If so, I'd punch them right in the face for being a bigger dork than I. But you know, there are fans of tech slang. I guess I can't fault the book for that.
What I can fault the book for is for being pretty much movie-tech, rather than reality-tech. By that I mean, the technology was painfully fictitious. What kind of hacker "logs into a c-prompt". Lame. What kind of hacker in the internet age uses dos?
Why is trap-door some kind of internet business killer? We have the kind of stuff all over now-a-days and most end-users don't even care. My aunt puts her credit card into a website knowing she's got a virus installed, but doesn't even think that that virus transmits the keys she enters. She don't care, and neither does anyone else. TRAPDOOR is a joke. I'm going to make fun of it in IRC tonight.
Also, did this book take place during the age of BBS or during the internet revolution? I don't even know. It's somewhere in the middle, in this book.
Anyway, all the negatives aside. I managed to sit through the whole thing, so it's not all bad. It got good about 3/4 of the way through when the author couldn't define any more words because they'd all been defined. Also, Phate was a total jerkhole, so it was fun to find out what happened!
lulz
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OK if you love computers
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