Alexei Denoia (
fallenambitions) wrote2011-05-13 05:17 am
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Entry tags:
- !action,
- !voice,
- he's back?,
- is clearly bored,
- mikan orchards has a healing factor,
- origami is a puzzle,
- pondering,
- why no he doesn't know someone was mally,
- wtf nature,
- ~bowser,
- ~daisy[spartan-023],
- ~duke pantarei,
- ~dylan pickles,
- ~fujiko mine,
- ~gem,
- ~homura akemi,
- ~ingrid grimmholtz,
- ~noel vermillion,
- ~raven,
- ~robert alexander hastings,
- ~roronoa zoro,
- ~tyria,
- ~yuri lowell
[Voice/Action] 005
[It's been more than a week since the AU experiment had ended and for the most part, Alexei has actively pushed aside most of what had happened. Although, for the last week Alexei had continued to visit the orchard. He'd been a bit sleep deprived since the experiment ended and thanks to those memories that were planted in him, the orchard gave him the false impression that it was helping him. It was not just because he was falsely given memories that admittedly left an impact on him, but because near the end of the experiment he continuously saw himself dead in his dreams.
Since he arrived to Luceti, he had been denying his own death. He simply had the delusion that he may have just been spared in some way. A dead person shouldn't be breathing, feel hungry or pain. Who the hell was he fooling though, it did happen to him. It was over, whether he wanted it to or not. The realization just didn't hit him until now. He didn't have a choice anymore, Luceti was all he had now. He could care less for this world though. It would only be a matter of time before he's sent back to his grave. It's not the first time he was thrown back there from here. Even if he didn't remember, it still happened. So what was the point? Give up? ... No, that isn't like him to do that. He just didn't have a reason to care. He couldn't even confide with someone he once considered a friend. They were years apart now and a lot has happened between those times. She would not understand.
There were still so many things he wanted to do, so many things left unfinished back home... tch, even if he had survived, he would have been screwed. His plan had failed. He would have to answer to the Empire and his penalty may as well have been death for the number of crimes he had committed. All for the good of the world... he wondered if that world was worth saving at this point.
Maybe that was why he couldn't ignore the experiment. A life he could have had. Yes, the him in that still had difficult times... but it gave him a family and a new purpose. It was...somewhat refreshing. ]
------
[Action]
[Today Alexei decided to spend his afternoon time underneath one of the mikan trees in the orchard. He had a few books with him, something, anything to keep his mind off of his own predicament and that previous experiment.
There was a book on machines and another on origami, which no doubt he only picked it up because of another false memory. It turned out to be something he could actively do besides training. It was like a puzzle. He made himself another pinwheel, just to see if he could still actually do it. Now he wanted to try more complicated shapes. Another reason why he had a book on machinery, to give him ideas of what to make. He could always try and make a little origami Murder machine... still, it probably wouldn't hurt to ask for some ideas.]
[Voice]
Tell me about what sort of interesting technology exist in your worlds. Things you commonly use, vehicles of transportation, war machines and the like.
[Action]
[After spending a couple hours relaxing in the orchard, he will start to make his way out and head back to the apartment with a work in progress Murder folded in his book. He comes to a halt as he came closer to where the shed was. There were signs of a struggle. Items were in disarray, barrels turned over and it just looked like a big mess, more so than usual. Now that he thought about it, he hasn't seen Nami the last few times he's been here. She was a regular in the orchard as much as he was, but he didn't think much of her absence. They may have just been lucky at missing one another for all he knew. He leans against the shed and opens his journal. He could just ignore he ever saw this, but...this could actually play to his advantage. He's at least aware of two of her crew mates he can contact.]
[Voice - 100% filtered to Zoro and Sanji]
Have either of you seen Nami?
[Voice]
So nanocomputers are basically an artificially created source of energy in your world. At the same time, they are capable of storing a mass collection of information? And this internet, what sort of network is it?
[Voice]
[Robert nods to himself at the next part.] Yes, all nanocomputers store information in quantum bit states - known as qubits. The capacity to store information varies between nanocomputers, with simpler ones generally having less. It depends moreso on what one wishes to employ the nanocomputer for.
As for the Internet itself... much of it is a wireless network capable of sending and receiving information of many forms; many of the major hubs for it are built into the cities of Terra. Linden - my own city - for example, has a prominent Internet hub in the city's commercial core. But there are smaller hubs scattered throughout the planet, wherever it is not inconvenient for the environment - not that the hub units are particularly large or destructive, and they have been being refined in recent years, but there is still much to be cautious about.
[voice]
So the internet is treated as a database and also a communication network. I see why you would want that to be implemented here. [Hell, what he would give to just have the journal's communication capabilities back home. Certainly a lot quicker than sending a messenger boy]
[Voice]
Electricity is generally delivered as a current to a mechanism that requires it to function; in Luceti, you might be familiar with it existing as mains power, accessible via the electrical sockets in the walls. Terran electrical delivery systems are capable of delivering power wirelessly, but beyond that the principle is must the same. [Robert still isn't sure how the Malnosso distribute the electricity properly, though. He hasn't seen much in the way of cabling systems.]
In the case of solar power, it is a method of using light from a star - in this case, Sol, my planet's star - to produce electricity by means of mimicking photosynthesis artificially, or with photovoltaic materials - that is, materials that produce electrical currents when struck with photons from light. [The actual explanation for all of it isn't Robert's field, but he'll explain as much as he can if he's asked.]
Yes, more or less... There are separate planetary databases as well, that have many redundant backups so that their data will not be lost even in the event of multiple crashes and the like, and their data are accessible through the Internet - but much of the information in the Internet is in transit and not necessarily stored at any one location for very long.
The journal system seems, on some levels, similar to that of the Internet, though I am not certain how much of this similarity is only on the surface.
[Voice]
I asked, because my world is powered by one source of energy, but can be divided for multiple purposes. In the end, they all still come from the same source and can be easily exhausted, if we're not careful. That's why I was curious to know how energy is managed in other worlds.
The journal is already advanced from my perspective. I can only imagine how more efficient the internet is.
[Voice]
[This is interesting to consider. Robert has seen people from many different time frames, and he already knows that the numbers alone aren't significant - the positioning of technology, sociology and other such areas seems to be largely independent of the actual time frame.]
Is your multiverse relatively devoid of the sort of technology that occurs here?
[He can't really imagine a world without this kind of technology, but that won't stop him from trying to, now.]
[Voice]
Although the means to create the same affect is different for some of the technology here, it is not as foreign to me as say this journal.
[Voice]
So Aer is some sort of... omnipresent energy in your multiverse, and it must be accessed by using derivative methods of obtaining it...
... It seems to be that many worlds that have magic, or similar paranormal phenomena, have formulas or structures behind its usage... which leads me to think that it is some manifestation of a fundamental interaction, and some part of particle physics.