We're doing this too, David.
We're 3 sessions into our campaign and still have a few things to iron out. We're starting in 2057, just prior to Big D's election. The bugs have only just recently been exposed.
No technomancers yet; the Otaku are still a weird setting feature rather than a PC option. In my game, the Renraku Arcology hasn't shutdown yet, but it's coming.
We've done just as Fastjack and Irian suggested also:
If you're a decker, get a high-end comlink and that's your cyberdeck. You want a datajack.
If you're not, get the cheapest comlink and that's your pocket secretary.
Back in the 50s, memory and load speed were limitations. Could you download all that juicy pay data before the black IC fried your brain?
The group's decker hasn't hacked incredibly much yet so I haven't really decided how much I wanted to bother tracking it. I might make the Signal rating somehow address that as it is not really that relevant without the global personal wifi wireless network.
Regarding cyberdeck obsolescence relative to our actual information technologies, I'm okay with that. In our take, the world was becoming wireless just as we actually are today. That's where the first Crash comes in. Tackling that brutal virus with human brains wired to the system was the
only solution and even that was deadly for some members of the beleaguered Echo Mirage team. The reason the world has not yet gone globally wireless and even shied away from it by 2057 is because that would perpetuate the conditions that lead to the Crash in the first place. The resulting Matrix, hard-wired as it mostly was (satellite uplinks and rare private broacasts aside), was a
security feature against that fearsome possibility.
I'm not familiar enough with the canon history behind the 2nd Crash so I'm not convinced it is necessary in our unofficial canon. AR and wireless society could "naturally" come to the fore come 2072 once secure upgrades have been developed.
Signal Rating can certainly continue to be a pertinent feature for remote rigging purposes. I'm suspending disbelief to allow that what is deadly for global information management is not deadly for remote control drones/vehicles. In 2050s I don't recall it being suggested that a decker could hack a rigger's drones but you can certainly play it either way.
Admittedly, we're still hashing this out so, yeah, I'll be following this thread. All the best in your game.
