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Eyrie Productions, Unlimited
Gryphon
Charter Member
21705 posts |
Apr-01-11, 11:19 PM (EST) |
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"CR6: a vignette"
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Elsewhere in Iacon, Stinger sat in a diagnostic chair and tried his best not to fidget while Wheeljack tinkered with something inside his right arm. Physically, he felt nothing, as the arm's sensory trunks were all interdicted at the shoulder, but it would have taken a much more phlegmatic Autobot than Stinger not to be at least slightly nervous at the notion of Wheeljack messing with his weapons systems. After the set-to the previous day in Little Iacon, in which his software-limited weapons had been of no particular use against the larger geth combat forms, it had been represented to Stinger that he should go and have that limit removed. It was slightly ahead of the prescribed time for that step - he wouldn't log his 568th full petacycle of operation for another six months or so - but both of his parents had agreed that, times being what they were on Cybertron just now, it was probably best not to stand absolutely firm on that point. "But don't feel you need to tell your mother about it," Bumblebee had remarked with a conspiratorial grin before discomming. "But your father doesn't need to know I told you that," Scarlett O'Hara had told him with a wink before taking her leave of him and returning to the Command Center. Ratchet wasn't available - he was in Aravex with the rest of the First Guards - but Wheeljack had begged off the expedition with the perfectly reasonable excuse that he was needed back at Headquarters to carry on with the repairs to the ACROSS Getter Team's equipment. So it was with mild trepidation that Stinger had sought him out and made his request. Disabling the software block in Stinger's status computer that had limited his weapons to 30% of their rated output was simple enough, but he should have known that Wheeljack couldn't leave the matter there. "I tell you what," the engineer had said, "wait right there, I got just the thing." Now it was two hours later and there Stinger sat, strapped into a diagnostic chair ("it's for your safety") with his right arm half dismantled and Wheeljack installing something into his reconfigurable weapon module that had come out of an armored case marked HAZARDOUS! DO NOT OPEN! Stinger was beginning to wonder if it would be insupportably rude, or more or less what Wheeljack was used to, if he were to gnaw his own arm off and flee, when from out in the corridor he heard a familiar voice call his name: "Stinger! Are you down here? Bulkhead wants to show Miko the Stellar Galleries." Perking up - rescued at last! - Stinger leaned toward the door as much as his restraints would allow him and called, "Sari!" A moment later, the door opened and Sari Sumdac entered - just in time to see Stinger's partially stripped arm transform into a wide-bore beam cannon, not unlike Bulkhead's, and blow a hole clean through the far wall of Wheeljack's workshop. Wheeljack's only reaction was to look up from his work, glance at the damage, say, "Whoops," and go back to what he was doing. Sari stood in the doorway, her eyebrows raised, as Stinger gave her a sheepish grin and the damaged wall partially collapsed. "My name is a -killing word!-" she declared, impressed. |
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The Traitor
Member since Feb-24-09
1165 posts |
Apr-02-11, 06:59 AM (EST) |
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2. "RE: CR6: a vignette"
In response to message #0
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*more uncontrollable giggling* This just makes me want to find out about the non-Bay Transformers stuff. As Sagan and his young padawan Cox both tell us and show us, learning is fun! --- "Together we will build an empire of a million shining suns." -- Dave, Dictator of Utopia. Hold on a tick. Cox is young, pretty, incredibly intelligent, popular with Gryphon, in a band and awesome, so he certainly fits the basic criteria for an Action Scientist. Perhaps we have found a new lab gofer for that nice Mr. Tesla... |
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Gryphon
Charter Member
21705 posts |
Apr-02-11, 10:27 AM (EST) |
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3. "RE: CR6: a vignette"
In response to message #2
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>Hold on a tick. Cox is young, pretty, incredibly >intelligent, popular with Gryphon, in a band and awesome, so he >certainly fits the basic criteria for an Action Scientist. Perhaps we >have found a new lab gofer for that nice Mr. Tesla...Or one of the Hong Kong Cavaliers. --G. "Do you sing?" "I play keyboards..." "That works." -><- Benjamin D. Hutchins, Co-Founder, Editor-in-Chief, & Forum Admin Eyrie Productions, Unlimited http://www.eyrie-productions.com/ Ceterum censeo Carthaginem esse delendam. |
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Prince Charon
Member since Jan-11-09
309 posts |
Apr-05-11, 09:49 PM (EST) |
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6. "RE: CR6: a vignette"
In response to message #0
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*cackles joyfully* BTW, how long is a 'cycle', in this continuity? They have different lengths, depending on the source, and its difficult to work out how long 568,000,000,000,000,000 of them is, without knowing what to multiply by. Seems to be much shorter than a second, though, as that would make him over 18 billion years old. “They planned their campaigns just as you might make a splendid piece of harness. It looks very well; and answers very well; until it gets broken; and then you are done for. Now I made my campaigns of ropes. If anything went wrong, I tied a knot; and went on.” -- Arthur Wellesley, First Duke of Wellington |
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Gryphon
Charter Member
21705 posts |
Apr-05-11, 09:53 PM (EST) |
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7. "RE: CR6: a vignette"
In response to message #6
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>*cackles joyfully* > >BTW, how long is a 'cycle', in this continuity? They have different >lengths, depending on the source, and its difficult to work out how >long 568,000,000,000,000,000 of them is, without knowing what to >multiply by. Seems to be much shorter than a second, though, as that >would make him over 18 billion years old. 568 petacycles, at least in the context of Stinger's central processor, is approximately 18 Standard years. In this usage, the "cycle" is not necessarily a universal unit of time. --G. -><- Benjamin D. Hutchins, Co-Founder, Editor-in-Chief, & Forum Admin Eyrie Productions, Unlimited http://www.eyrie-productions.com/ Ceterum censeo Carthaginem esse delendam. |
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Offsides
Charter Member
1256 posts |
Apr-05-11, 10:55 PM (EST) |
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8. "RE: CR6: a vignette"
In response to message #7
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Based on the numbers, it looks like a cycle is approximately 1ns, making a Transformer's internal "time clock" run at ~1GHz. Which is a perfectly reasonable time interval for dealing with the real world :) Offsides [...] in order to be a realist you must believe in miracles. -- David Ben Gurion EPU RCW #π #include <stdsig.h> |
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trigger
Charter Member
1500 posts |
Apr-07-11, 06:48 PM (EST) |
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9. "RE: CR6: a vignette"
In response to message #0
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> "But don't feel you need to tell your mother about it," >Bumblebee had remarked with a conspiratorial grin before discomming. > "But your father doesn't need to know I told you that," >Scarlett >O'Hara had told him with a wink before taking her leave of him and >returning to the Command Center. I really shouldn't ask but...how do transformers replicate? And what does this mean about OP's time as Peterson? I've been trying to avoid the question for a long, long time now, but sorry, I've to ask. Reloaded is full of transformers that aren't entirely the children of Primus and its messing with my vague understanding of bio/magic/tech in UF. t. Trigger Argee trigger_argee@hotmail.com Manon, Maccadon, Orado, etc. Denton, never leave home without it. "I hate to advocate drugs, alcohol, violence, or insanity to anyone, but they've always worked for me." - HST |
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Gryphon
Charter Member
21705 posts |
Apr-07-11, 09:56 PM (EST) |
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12. "RE: CR6: a vignette"
In response to message #9
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> >> "But don't feel you need to tell your mother about it," >>Bumblebee had remarked with a conspiratorial grin before discomming. >> "But your father doesn't need to know I told you that," >>Scarlett >>O'Hara had told him with a wink before taking her leave of him and >>returning to the Command Center. > >I really shouldn't ask but...how do transformers replicate?Several different ways, by this point in history. If you're a Transformer, and you want to generate a posterity, you can:
- Build a new robot body the old-fashioned way, take it to Vector Sigma, and make a speech. If you have the activation key and Vector Sigma likes your speech, it may infuse a spark of life into that new body for you. Then again, it may not, and you probably won't get exactly what you asked for in that speech, personality-wise. Vector Sigma is inscrutable, not to say unreliable.
- Acquire a protoform and [SEE ABOVE]. Protoforms are a fairly new innovation on UF's Cybertron, having been derived from technologies brought to this universe by the crew of the Axalon, but they're much more convenient than constructing a whole complete shell by hand. They also tend to take on unique characteristics based on the spark and/or the datatracks inhabiting them. The Einherjar Autobot sparks returning after Twilight were infused into protoforms, because that was a hell of a lot easier on Ratchet than building a couple of hundred custom shells would have been.
(In the old days, it was also possible to turn to the Well of All Sparks to spark up a new Transformer, but it's been sealed for aeons and some legends say there's nothing in it any more anyway. And as far as anybody's aware, the "Allspark" thing is a myth, as is the notion that the Matrix can create new sparks. Hold existing ones, yes, we've seen it do that, but not make whole new ones out of thin air.) - Acquire a protoform and generate a new spark for it through binary resonance. This requires two existing sparks with a binary bond (temporary or permanent) between them, and doesn't always work, but when it does, you get the closest thing to the way water-based lifeforms reproduce, in that the offspring tends to take on characteristics of both parents. In a way, this is similar to the way the asari in Mass Effect get it done, except that the resonance configures the cyber/nano algorithms in a newly formed Transformer spark rather than nucleic acids in a parthenogenic asari embryo. And, as in the asari way, only one partner needs to be a Transformer to make the attempt. Non-Transformers don't have "sparks" in the proper sense of a distinct energy construct, but if you were to somehow extract and concentrate the Spengler flux of a living human, as Skuld does to Gally in Scrapheap City Shuffle, that's what you'd end up with.
It's also theoretically possible to spark a protoform without activating it right away; this would allow for datatracks - knowledge, training, even theoretically the memory tracks of another individual, although that would be considered creepy - to be uploaded before the spark is brought fully online and the protoform is "set", as it were. This method has only been posited in the abstract. Most modern Transformers agree it'd be unsettlingly open to abuse if it were put into practice, since you could theoretically "program" the new generation to be whatever you wanted them to be rather than letting them discover themselves, as is traditional with the newly sparked. Freedom is the right of all sentient beings, after all. Anyway, Stinger (as is noted in his BPGD file) is the product of a binary resonance. Shana isn't literally his mother, in a chemical or biological sense, but patterns inherent in her Spengler flux can pretty easily be identified in parts of his CNA, and he definitely got that hotshot "I make this look good" thing from her, not Bumblebee. :) >And what >does this mean about OP's time as Peterson? It's never been established, to the best of my knowledge, just how complete the whole "beast mode" thing is. On the original Beast Wars TV series, Tigatron had a tiger ladyfriend, but no offspring, as far as I know. On the whole, I wouldn't worry about it too much. >Reloaded is full of transformers that aren't entirely the >children of Primus and its messing with my vague understanding of >bio/magic/tech in UF. Well, it depends on how broad your definition of "children of Primus" is. If referring to his direct creations, there are indeed very few (perhaps none) of those left. That's a pretty constraining definition, though. Broaden it out to include the lineage of successive generations, and you've encompassed pretty much all currently extant Transformers - even the ones from other dimensions are children of a Primus, at least. (The exception, of course, being that Unicron's creations are by definition not children of Primus, though they are very similar lifeforms.) --G. -><- Benjamin D. Hutchins, Co-Founder, Editor-in-Chief, & Forum Admin Eyrie Productions, Unlimited http://www.eyrie-productions.com/ Ceterum censeo Carthaginem esse delendam. |
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E_M_Lurker
Charter Member
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Apr-07-11, 10:20 PM (EST) |
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14. "RE: CR6: a vignette"
In response to message #12
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>you've encompassed pretty much all >currently extant Transformers - even the ones from other dimensions >are children of a Primus, at least. (The exception, of course, >being that Unicron's creations are by definition not children of >Primus, though they are very similar lifeforms.) >I believe current official Transformers metacanon holds that Primus is coexistent across all TF universes and timelines -- inhabiting every Cybertron at once -- while Unicron is limited to existing in a single universe at a time but can retreat to another and build a new body if his current form is destroyed. --The Evil Midnight Lurker what Lurks at Midnight "An object at rest--CANNOT BE STOPPED!!!" |
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Peter Eng
Charter Member
1942 posts |
Nov-28-22, 11:26 AM (EST) |
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20. "RE: CR6: a vignette"
In response to message #0
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>So it was with mild trepidation that Stinger had sought him out >and made his request.For no particular reason, I was reviewing this vignette in my head as I showered, and I imagined Wheeljack interrupting Stinger's request with a comment on the rest of Task Force Megadeth having noticed that the software limitations were holding Stinger back, and hey, I can totally remove those, but don't tell your parents. Peter Eng -- Insert humorous comment here. |
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version 3.3 © 2001
Eyrie Productions,
Unlimited
Benjamin
D. Hutchins
E P U (Colour)
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