The word "omniscient" characterizes a fictional character in the Devin Townsend album "Ziltoid the Omniscient".
In God, Power and Evil: A Process Theodicy, published in 1976, David Ray Griffin criticised Augustine's reliance on free will and argued that it is incompatible with divine omniscience and omnipotence.
In the episode, Bender is overclocked by Cubert Farnsworth, gradually becoming more powerful in computing ability, until eventually becoming omniscient and able to foresee future events.
Also, the story is told from the point of view of both sides of a traditional good vs. evil conflict providing the reader with an Alfred Hitchcock-like omniscience.