Mebber,
Xenomorph,
13 years ago
So what kind of guy is this David, and what's his motivations- is he acting on behest of the company, or is he following his own motivation? I really wonder what his character will be like, he seems to be a pivotal point for the story.
Ash was eager for knowledge but also quite mad and emotionally instable, although he could hide it quite good. Bishop said his instability was common about earlier android models, so David would be probably a weird guy too.
Now that's a purely speculative and half-baked thought, but...
The androids are highly intelligent, but they were created by humans, who are actually inferior. But they have to serve them, because that's the only "purpose" they know- they don't have any family, no real place in society, they don't know how to handle their emotions... sounds like a good base for a real weird identity crisis for me. Maybe that could be connected to this David-steals-from-the-jockeys-thing, if it's actually true at all. Like the this android David is uncertain about the nature of life (well, who isn't), or his purpose and place in it, and so he's trying to steal the "answer" from the jockeys.
Humans played god by creating intelligent life on their own, the androids. Sometimes after, humans stumble across the jockeys, who are creators too, but on a much more advanced level- and then, humans own creation brings doom on us by stealing the secret of life from the jockeys, thus somehow "releasing" the xenomorph threat and punishing the humans for their own hubris.
Anyway, however the story will be like, i hope humans will be displayed as insignificant. By that i mean no Van-Daniken like stuff. I really don't like that idea, it's boosting the importance of humans. I prefer the idea of the humans beeing a stupid, short-living race who stumbles across something far greater by accident- in line with this "humans-don't-know-shit"-thought.