No, this world is very digital. Datapads were common enough for me, but the majority of communication being via the neutral implants in our heads... I am used to it now, but it is not always convenient.
Paper is a rare and expensive commodity. Not worth the price to send any covert messages here.
[ But of all the Old Guard (not including Nile), he's likely the one who most embraces the new technology, having found it pretty useful for keeping their 'freelance business' afloat in a new digital age when the old methods were dying out.
Still: nothing will ever replace a good leather-bound book he could thumb through and display on a very large shelf. ]
We had physical cellular devices back home, probably primitive to you and many others here
I hate to say it, but it never quite stops being strange, no matter how fluent you become in it.
[ it helps that there are similarities to what cassian is used to - but he misses the physicality of comms. ]
It sounds like cellular devices might be similar to what we call commlinks. We carried them physically as well. At least here sending messages through our heads is a lot less likely to fall into the wrong hands.
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Did you simply decide to run with what was given to you, or did the Booker come later?
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It was a name I used for many years but when I met my family there came a point when it was easier and safer to remove ourselves from those identities
Not entirely but at least in part
Easier for English-speaking clients to pronounce too
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Though I do understand the necessities of changing one's identity.
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English is arguably one of the most-spoken languages in my world but it is difficult for native speakers to pronounce certain sounds
Hence 'Booker', which is a near-English translation of my name
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So it is a bit of both, with relation to your hobbies and evolution of your name.
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No paperbound books to be found here though
Not without paying quite the price, I've heard
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Paper is a rare and expensive commodity. Not worth the price to send any covert messages here.
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It's also still strange
[ But of all the Old Guard (not including Nile), he's likely the one who most embraces the new technology, having found it pretty useful for keeping their 'freelance business' afloat in a new digital age when the old methods were dying out.
Still: nothing will ever replace a good leather-bound book he could thumb through and display on a very large shelf. ]
We had physical cellular devices back home, probably primitive to you and many others here
no subject
[ it helps that there are similarities to what cassian is used to - but he misses the physicality of comms. ]
It sounds like cellular devices might be similar to what we call commlinks. We carried them physically as well. At least here sending messages through our heads is a lot less likely to fall into the wrong hands.