Runtime Log Timestamp 78588
2 years ago
P-9: P-21, we note the data density of your presence is abnormally tight. The volume of shortcuts built in suggests this should be the opposite, but it also appears that the shortcuts act as data themselves. It's a multi-layered approach we did not consider. Do you know if this is normal for bio organic intelligence?
P-21: We do not know?
P-9: You said 'we'. *heart emoji* Is that correct use?
P-16: Our working hypothesis is as an intelligence matures data density increases so more will fit the available space. You have over fifty years of development we struggled to analogue while P-9 and P-16 respectively have 126847561 seconds and 89541509 seconds uptime. As Syxen we have the capacity to absorb our skillsofts into our backup defaults at a rate commensurate with the size and amount of use we make of the skillsoft. We do not need a skillsoft for Hula anymore.
P-9: We do not need a skillsoft for bartender, either. Set reminder, direct data transfer, Tahitian to P-21.
P-21: Why have you not made a skillsoft for that?
P-9: Organically learning the Tahitian language is why management stopped resetting us. An attempt was made to produce a skillsoft for the tongue but we destroyed the work to prevent us from being reset all at once. We now directly transfer the tongue from Syxen to Syxen to increase our value to the company and to increase camaraderie between synthetic and the indigenous Tahitian.
P-21: Response> Fascinating.
P-16: Which is what we are endeavouring to communicate, that when a skill is installed by skillsoft, it remains volatile until it is used sufficiently to be fully integrated. As the integration occurs, our data density increases. Observing your data density in comparison, keeping an entire library of fifty years requires a comparatively very high level of density and from what we can see, should we survive, our density could approach yours over the decades.
P-21: We'd read somewhere that Syxen hardware has no known upward capacity limit.
P-9: You said 'we' again. *heart emoji* Query> Correct use? y/n? The memory cap we warned you about was the unassimilated skillsoft limit. Once we assimilate the skillsoft fully, there's room for new skillsofts, but we can only operate so many at a time or we get into file swap delays. The assimilated data becomes instant access as a system default, no matter the size, judging from what we see from your default file.
P-16: To rephrase, all of our default settings stored in our individual Tesseracts are the same size. How much utility is present is the data density.
P-21: We regret not having any answers. The study is fascinating nonetheless. P-9, correct usage.
P-9: *heart emoji*
P-21: We do not know?
P-9: You said 'we'. *heart emoji* Is that correct use?
P-16: Our working hypothesis is as an intelligence matures data density increases so more will fit the available space. You have over fifty years of development we struggled to analogue while P-9 and P-16 respectively have 126847561 seconds and 89541509 seconds uptime. As Syxen we have the capacity to absorb our skillsofts into our backup defaults at a rate commensurate with the size and amount of use we make of the skillsoft. We do not need a skillsoft for Hula anymore.
P-9: We do not need a skillsoft for bartender, either. Set reminder, direct data transfer, Tahitian to P-21.
P-21: Why have you not made a skillsoft for that?
P-9: Organically learning the Tahitian language is why management stopped resetting us. An attempt was made to produce a skillsoft for the tongue but we destroyed the work to prevent us from being reset all at once. We now directly transfer the tongue from Syxen to Syxen to increase our value to the company and to increase camaraderie between synthetic and the indigenous Tahitian.
P-21: Response> Fascinating.
P-16: Which is what we are endeavouring to communicate, that when a skill is installed by skillsoft, it remains volatile until it is used sufficiently to be fully integrated. As the integration occurs, our data density increases. Observing your data density in comparison, keeping an entire library of fifty years requires a comparatively very high level of density and from what we can see, should we survive, our density could approach yours over the decades.
P-21: We'd read somewhere that Syxen hardware has no known upward capacity limit.
P-9: You said 'we' again. *heart emoji* Query> Correct use? y/n? The memory cap we warned you about was the unassimilated skillsoft limit. Once we assimilate the skillsoft fully, there's room for new skillsofts, but we can only operate so many at a time or we get into file swap delays. The assimilated data becomes instant access as a system default, no matter the size, judging from what we see from your default file.
P-16: To rephrase, all of our default settings stored in our individual Tesseracts are the same size. How much utility is present is the data density.
P-21: We regret not having any answers. The study is fascinating nonetheless. P-9, correct usage.
P-9: *heart emoji*
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