It depends on your definition of far, I suppose. Considering your age and the year you remember... with a good life, I'm sure you might be around to see it.
... I suppose it would depend on when you would consider a robot to be themselves, by definition. Is it when their body is made, or when their mind is programmed?
I have logs going back all the way to the time of my initial construction. But the AI, particularly the, um.... part of my brain that controls how I think and act and process... that's much newer.
So... I suppose I wouldn't be able to give a firm answer.
[wow, this is getting complicated. Akira lifts a hand to rub the back of his neck, slightly sheepish. . . and here he is, asking her these personal questions. one isn't supposed to ask a lady her age!1]
Sorry, sorry. . . I guess that is kind of a personal question, right?
I don't mind giving it to you, regardless. I just... I'm not really sure which one to pick.
Hephaestus GAULEM GTF-DM-L-016 as a unit has existed since the year 2032 - that's when I was initially shipped to the person who would inevitably put me into service. But my AI wasn't complete in its full capacity of operations as "Luna" until 2057.
So... I guess you could say that my body, for all purposes of the word, is technically forty-two, but my mind is, um... seventeen, I think? Something like that.
I-I really don't have a preference... I've... never had anyone really ask.
But...
I guess I would say the latter, if I had to. I can remember bits and pieces from further back then that, and I have plenty of logs of things like tests and troubleshooting, but... I... I feel like I wasn't really recognized as me until around then. That's when I think I was finally aware that I was no longer a work in progress, but a completed intelligence.
[Congrats, I guess???? She has no idea what's going on anymore but it's fine.]
Um... anyway... we got a little sidetracked. Can I continue?
Mmm. I wouldn't call it a story so much as a history lesson.
[So, uh. Strap in.]
In 2028, there was a pandemic. A virus called Radical-6. Many believed it to be biological warfare, but no one could prove it - only that it originated in Nevada in the United States and spread like wildfire. Over two million people died. Containing it became close to impossible, and society quickly started to collapse. People started to starve to death, or grow ill from the bodies that piled the streets.
In a desperate attempt to eradicate the pathogen and save what they could of humanity, in April of 2029, the remaining world leaders set off eighteen antimatter reactors across the world. I... can't really explain it right now, or we might be here forever, but... that's an equivalent explosive force over 180,000 times what was contained in the atom bomb dropped on Hiroshima, Japan during World War 2.
The resulting radiation wiped out the virus... and many, many people. Between the initial pandemic, the collapse of society, and the explosions... 6 billion people were killed.
[Akira's interested expression quickly morphs into horror as Luna continues. as though a pandemic itself wasn't enough, learning that her world's leaders were okay with killing billions of people in an attempt to eradicate the virus is absolutely and utterly horrifying]
Do... you know what nuclear winter is, Akira? It's the ecological result of air pollution, either from manmade waste, fire, or extremely large explosions, like that of an atom bomb or a large volcano. Debris is knocked into the atmosphere, and can block out the effects of the sun.
In Earth's case... there was no direct sunlight for over seven years. I've heard there's been some regrowth, now that a few decades have passed, but... most plant and animal life went extinct.
While some survived, and there is some form of civilization still operating, the world has become a... a wasteland. There's so much ash that... the sky is no longer blue. Light can't reach that far anymore. So... it's red.
[his expression twists. all of this is. . . very difficult to imagine. it's something that only happens in fictional books, right? not. . . in real life, right?]
[except it happened on Luna's world, and that's just. . . difficult to comprehend]
...It is. The stories I hear are... are always so horrible. I wasn't constructed until after all of the fallout, though, and I... um... I never got to visit Earth. So all I know is from stories and history logs.
[To imagine an Earth with green continents, blue ocean, white clouds... it sounds ridiculous.]
Many people have established colonies on the moon for purposes of research. That was the case for the project that purchased me. That's all I've known.
The one we saw during trial. The one involving the older man-- [to whom she felt feelings of warmth, even while her body moved on automatic, forced to do so by an unseen hand. he tries not to frown]
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[Hm. She falls quiet as she crosses over to take a seat.]
Akira, did I ever tell you what year it was on Earth, the last I remember?
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You didn't, though I could tell it was some time far in the future compared to my world.
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It was January of 2074.
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[closes it again]
[and then, his expression VERY SERIOUS]
I'm old enough to be your grandpa.
[AKIRA???]
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I-I... I don't think that's how it works...
How old do you think I am?
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Early twenties?
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But you have to remember that I'm not a human.
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How old do you think you are, then?
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I have logs going back all the way to the time of my initial construction. But the AI, particularly the, um.... part of my brain that controls how I think and act and process... that's much newer.
So... I suppose I wouldn't be able to give a firm answer.
no subject
Sorry, sorry. . . I guess that is kind of a personal question, right?
You just made me curious about the answer.
no subject
Hephaestus GAULEM GTF-DM-L-016 as a unit has existed since the year 2032 - that's when I was initially shipped to the person who would inevitably put me into service. But my AI wasn't complete in its full capacity of operations as "Luna" until 2057.
So... I guess you could say that my body, for all purposes of the word, is technically forty-two, but my mind is, um... seventeen, I think? Something like that.
[............]
I... don't know it that helps at all.
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[but he also lets out a breathless laugh despite himself]
Let's go with-- whatever you're most comfortable with.
no subject
But...
I guess I would say the latter, if I had to. I can remember bits and pieces from further back then that, and I have plenty of logs of things like tests and troubleshooting, but... I... I feel like I wasn't really recognized as me until around then. That's when I think I was finally aware that I was no longer a work in progress, but a completed intelligence.
[Congrats, I guess???? She has no idea what's going on anymore but it's fine.]
Um... anyway... we got a little sidetracked. Can I continue?
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[oh, yeah. this is a big digression isn't it? Akira nods, amusement flickering onto his features briefly]
Yeah, of course. I'm interested in hearing the entire story.
DONT LOOK ANDIE
[So, uh. Strap in.]
In 2028, there was a pandemic. A virus called Radical-6. Many believed it to be biological warfare, but no one could prove it - only that it originated in Nevada in the United States and spread like wildfire. Over two million people died. Containing it became close to impossible, and society quickly started to collapse. People started to starve to death, or grow ill from the bodies that piled the streets.
In a desperate attempt to eradicate the pathogen and save what they could of humanity, in April of 2029, the remaining world leaders set off eighteen antimatter reactors across the world. I... can't really explain it right now, or we might be here forever, but... that's an equivalent explosive force over 180,000 times what was contained in the atom bomb dropped on Hiroshima, Japan during World War 2.
The resulting radiation wiped out the virus... and many, many people. Between the initial pandemic, the collapse of society, and the explosions... 6 billion people were killed.
no subject
[oh]
[Akira's interested expression quickly morphs into horror as Luna continues. as though a pandemic itself wasn't enough, learning that her world's leaders were okay with killing billions of people in an attempt to eradicate the virus is absolutely and utterly horrifying]
[his response is breathless, eyes wide]
Six. . . billion people. . .
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Do... you know what nuclear winter is, Akira? It's the ecological result of air pollution, either from manmade waste, fire, or extremely large explosions, like that of an atom bomb or a large volcano. Debris is knocked into the atmosphere, and can block out the effects of the sun.
In Earth's case... there was no direct sunlight for over seven years. I've heard there's been some regrowth, now that a few decades have passed, but... most plant and animal life went extinct.
While some survived, and there is some form of civilization still operating, the world has become a... a wasteland. There's so much ash that... the sky is no longer blue. Light can't reach that far anymore. So... it's red.
no subject
[his expression twists. all of this is. . . very difficult to imagine. it's something that only happens in fictional books, right? not. . . in real life, right?]
[except it happened on Luna's world, and that's just. . . difficult to comprehend]
That's. . . horrible to think about.
no subject
[To imagine an Earth with green continents, blue ocean, white clouds... it sounds ridiculous.]
Many people have established colonies on the moon for purposes of research. That was the case for the project that purchased me. That's all I've known.
no subject
That memory we saw, then. . . did that take place on the moon?
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All of them did, yes. Though... I guess you might be thinking of something specific...?
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The one we saw during trial. The one involving the older man-- [to whom she felt feelings of warmth, even while her body moved on automatic, forced to do so by an unseen hand. he tries not to frown]
I kind of wanted to ask you about it, anyway.
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I... I figured that you might. [She looks almost....bashful about it? HOW MANY PEOPLE SAW THAT....]
What... um... what would you like to know?
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Who was that man?
[the one for whom she had those warm, soft, gentle and kind feelings? Akira is no idiot; he could tell what they were, too]
ANDIE DON'T LOOK FOR A WHILE
That's Doctor Sigma Klim.
He's the man who built me.
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