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Let's play A mind forever voyaging

SCO

Arcane
In My Safe Space
Joined
Feb 3, 2009
Messages
16,320
Shadorwun: Hong Kong
amfv1.jpg


Torment is not the only game that delivered walls of text.

Ok this game is supposed to be pretty easy, and i actually completed years and years ago, but can't remember a thing, except that it's fairly left-wing*

(perfect for the codex :M )

*i'm going to cheat if i get too frustated

Fluff:

"If you can look into the seeds of time, and say which grain will grow and which will not..."
--Shakespeare

IT'S 2031. The world is on the brink of chaos. In the United States of North America, spiraling crime and unemployment rates, decayed school systems and massive government regulations have led to a lazy, contentious society.

To reverse this critical situation, government and industry leaders have developed a Plan combining the economic freedom and strong moral values of the 1950's with the technological advancements of the 21st century. Will the Plan ensure peace and prosperity? Or will it set the earth on a suicide course to destruction?

As the world's first conscious, intelligent computer, only you can visit places that have never been seen before. Only you can view the future. And only you know what must be done to save humanity.

A major departure for Infocom, A Mind Forever Voyaging is reminiscent of such classic works of science fiction as Brave New World and 1984. You'll spend less time solving puzzles, as you explore realistic worlds of the future.

Edit: It's been called to my attention (forcibly, by reading it) that this short story is shit, done by someone born in the 50's or 40's and so unbearably boomer. Don't read it if you want to, i don't think it has anything essential.
Short story introductory fluff:
A Mind Forever Voyaging (short story)

Perry Simm was four years old when he became lost in the department store in the city.

He let go of Mother's hand to pick up the video cube. he rotated it with wonderment, touching the control knobs and sqealing with delight as the images shifted...

His brother Clave, Perry's senior by three years, bounced impatiently in the aisle, "Mom," he whined, "they're going to be sold out of the new Skydiver disc, and you promised I could get one."

"Be patient, Clave," admonished Mother, but across the floor she could see long lines at the Simulation Discs counter. There were stops at the Foodville and the O-Link repair shop still to go. She made a hasty decision.

"Perry, Clave and I are going to another department. I want you to wait right here until we get back."

"Okay," he said, without looking up from the cube.

A few minutes later, Perry discovered the selector panel, but while trying to open it he dropped the cube onto the hard plasticrete floor. The six screens flashed brightly and then faded to darkness.

Perry became frightened and looked around for Mother. She was nowhere in sight. Fear of discovery and punishment welled up inside him, and in his desire to get away from the broken cube he forgot about the order to stay put. He wandered to the end of the aisle, and spotted Mother a short distance away, rummaging through a bin of myalon vests. As he ran towards her, he realized that it was just a starnger with only a vague resemblance to Mother. Fighting back tears, he decided to return to the spot where the broken cube lay.

He wandered down the aisles, each lined with tall shelves of glittering merchandise, and after several confused minutes discovered that he was completely lost. He had no idea how to find Mother, and he had no idea how to find the spot where he had last seen her. He was alone, abandoned. Strangers, huge and terrifying, jostled past. Walls of boxed appliances towered above him. Fear and despair won the battle for his emotions, and he began to cry.

After an endless time, during which a lot of strangers had asked a lot of questions which he'd been too confused or too frightened to answer, he found himself in a small, quiet room. The door opened, and Mother came in, scooping him up into her arms. He cried again, burying his face into the warmth of her loving embrace.

Abraham Perelman and Aseejh Randu waited in the plush Main Conference Room overlooking the Control Centre. Through the window-wall. Perelman could see dozens of technicians, busily preparing for today's big event. For the umpteenth time he felt thankful to have such a superb, competant team. it was a far cry from the early days, when he had to keep on top of every detail.

Perelman glanced over toward Randu, and noticed his friend's nervousness. "Don't worry, Aseejh, it's no big deal. I met him once before, at a social affair in Washington, and he's an easygoing guy."

"Yes, I have heard that." A smile tugged at the corners of the Indian's normally stony face. "But after speaking with Vera, he could very well be whipped into a frenzy!" Vera Gold was the Chief Administrator of the Project.

"Nonsense," Perelman scoffed. "She'll turn on the charm for him. She saves her venom for underlings like us."

"True," agreed Randu, "By now, she has probably taken credit for the entire project, to say nothing of the inventions of molecular memory and the artificial heart."

A door opened at the far end of the long room, and a few Secret Service agents walked in, followed by the Vice-President, vera Gold, several aides, and more Secret Service agents.

"...speak for the entire staff," Gold was saying, "when I say what a tremendous honour and pleasure it is that you could attend today."

"Pass me a barf bag," whispered Perelman to Randu.

"You underrate the importance of this Project, Ms Gold, "The President and many other important people have a keen interest in this experiment. As you know, it's quite an uphill battle against public opinion if we're to deter Senator Ryder and his Plan."

The retinue had almost reached Perelman and Randu. Vera said, "I hope we can live up to your expectations. And now, despite all your wonderful compliments, I really must share some of the credit with these gentlemen here. Dr. Abraham Perelman and Dr. Aseejh Randu. I don't want to bore you with technical details, but basically Dr. Randu is our hardware man and Dr. Perelman is our software man."

As the Vice-President shook their hands warmly, Perleman fumed at Gold's demeaning description. It was THEY who had started the Project, THEY who had...

"We've met before, Dr. Perelman, haven't we?" the Vice- President was asking.

Perelman nodded, "At an NESR banquet two years ago."

"I remember it well. I think we discussed baseball standings. Later, I learned that you were an expert in AI. Perhaps I can make up for my ignorance then by asking you to give me a brief overview now. I find the entire field fascinating."

"It would be my pleasure, Mr. Vice-President," Perelman respnded. He grinned to himself as he noticed Gold giving him one of her best "keep in your place" glares. "I think we really ought to begin the tour..." Gold insinuated.

Perelman turned to Gold, smiling sweetly. "I'm sure I can answer the Vice-President's request as we go." Turning back to their guest, he said "Did you know that the first serious work in artificial intelligence was done around the middle of the twentieth century?"

Perry Simm was six years old when he was bullied on his first day of elementary school.

So far, it had been a day of strange, confusing images: Mother and father waving goodbye as he boarded the large yellow bus, the older children with badges herding everyone down the long hallways lined with colourful nubbly tiles, the friendly Ms. Borne writing her name on the whiteboard, the boxes of band new crayons, the frightening hugeness of the school auditorium.

Perry was cutting shapes out of coloured construction paper when a funny sound filled the room, and Ms. Borne told everyone that it was time to go home. He barely remembered to grab his lunchboxm the brand-new one with the pony pictures all over it, and the red hat that Grandma had knitted. Then, confusion in the hallways again. One of the older children with a badge, who Perry had learned were called Monitors, asked him for his bus route number.

"Seven," he said, confidently. Mother had drilled the number into him.

Soon Perry was standing on the sidewalk with a group of other children. He looked around, but didn't see anyone from his class. Everyone seemed to be older and bigger than Perry. Slowly he realized that someone from behind was talking to him.

"Hey! Hey, you with the red hat!"

Perry turned around, and found himself facing three older boys. Two of them were wearing Monitor badges.

"That's a great hat, runt," said the tallest of the three, "Where'd you get it?"

"Grandma," replied Perry, confused by their amusement.

"Hey," one of the older boys shouted over Perry's head, "look at Grandma's boy here, wearing a hat in September!"

"What are you going to wear in December, runt, a spacesuit?!"

The boys laughed again, and Perry began to get a funny feeling deep in his chest.

"And look at this lunchbox!" said the third of the boys, "What pretty ponies, huh?"

"Hey, Grandma's boy, do you like ponies?"

The tallest boy suddenly reached out and grabbed Perry's hat.

"What'll Grandma say if you come home without your hat, huh?"

"Gimme that," shouted Perry, tears beginning to spill down his face.

"Look, the runt's a crybaby! The runt's a crybaby!"

Suddenly, through the tears, Perry became of a grown-up standing between him and his tormentors, speaking sternly. A moment later, the man was leading Perry away down the street.

"What's your name, little fella?" asked the man. He had a friendly voice, and as Perry began to wipe away his tears he saw the man had a friendly face as well. He was carrying Perry's hat in one hand, and a hefty pile of books in the other hand.

"Perry," he answered, still sniffling a bit.

"Well, Perry, everything's okay now. Why don't you come in, and we'll see if we can't fix you up with some milk and cookies."

The Vice-President glanced at the rows of data banks in the Simulation Controller area, and turned back to Perelman. "Please go on. Your history lesson on AI is fascinating."

Perelman took a deep breath. "Ummm...A major breakthrough in the field came with the realization that the computer and the human mind worked in fundamentaly different ways. Computers stored and analyzed data numerically, while the human mind stored and analyzes data symbolically."

"You see, computers generally solve problems using algorithms, rigorous step-by-step procedures that are usually mathematical in nature. For instance, a program to play the card game Poker would calculate the odds for all possible hands in the current game before making a bet. A person in the same situation couldn't possibly consider every possible combination of cards, and would have to make a decision based on such factors as experience, judgement, intuition, and rules of thumb. This is called the heuristic method of problem-solving."

The tour reached the long tunnel leding to the office wing of the complex. The Vice-President preceded Perelman onto the moving walkway.

"By developing methods for computers to solve problems heuristically," Perelman continued, "the pioneers had developed programs that imitated human problem-solving in very specific areas, such as playing chess, diagnosing diseases, or translating text from one human language to another. These 'expert systems', as they were known, were superb within their areas of expertise, and in many cases even improved themselves by 'learning' - adding knowledge based on their own experience."

"The political fund-raising telecomputer we use works in that way," commented the Vice-President.

"A good example! These expert systems grew progressively broader and more sophisticated, impressively mimicking human learning and behaviour. But!" said Perelman, pausing for dramatic emphasis.

"That is precisely ALL they could do...mimc! The spark of intelligence was missing. Scientists in the AI field were still distant from that almost mystical goal of creating a computer that could act creatively, that would be aware of it's own existance, that would truly be a thinking machine!"

Perry Simm was ten years old when he decided that he wanted to be a writer.

It was a warm day, probably the warmest so far this spring, so they were sitting on the kitchen veranda, overlooking Rav and Frita's beautiful wooded backyard. A skycar whizzed over the woods, shattering the peacefulness of the afternoon.

"I hate skycars," said Perry.

"They've just about finished installing an auto-controller system for the whole city," said Frita, "and when that's done they say skycars'll be as common as regular cars are now. How's the cake, Perry?"

"Yum as always, Aunt Frita!" said Perry, licking the last crumbs off the plate. "You ought to have a piece, Uncle Rav."

Rav and Frita weren't really Perry's aunt and uncle, but he'd been calling them that ever since that day, years earlier, when Rav had rescued him from a gang of bullies on his first day of school. Almost every day, he would stop by on the way home from school for some of Frita's homemade croissants and jam, or angelcakes, or pudding.

Rav was a writer, and he was fond of saying, "A writer must be, first and foremost, a reader." He was always giving Perry books to read, and discussing them with Perry afterwards. Perry was easily the best reader in his grade; in fact he was probably the best reader overall.

"So what did you think of Lasernight?" asked Rav, resting his hand on the thin volume.

"It was great! Definitely one of the boffest books you've ever given me. I read the dragonhunt part three times!"

"The dragonhunt chapter is classic," agreed Rav.

Perry furrowed his eyebrows slightly. "It still feels funny to read without any pictures, but I think I'm getting more used to it. Do you have anything for me today?"

"Well, I've got something special to give you today, if you're interested." he reached into his pocket and unrolled a sheaf of paper. "It's something I've just written; you'll be the first person to ever read it."

Perry bounced in his chair with excitement. "Wow! I've never read anything you wrote before!"

"Everything I've written up to now was meant for adults. But this..." Rav paused for thoughts. "Whenever I write, I have an image in my mind of whom I'm writing for. When I wrote the collection of poems called 'Apriltime' I thought of Frita as my audience. And with 'A Child's Vision' I imagined the President reading it as I wrote each word." He tapped the manuscript in his hand. "When I wrote this, you were my imagined audience."

An hour later, Perry lay on his bed and picked up the first sheet of the manuscript with trembling hands. The pages seemed to vibrate with magic, and as he began reading, the magic flowed out of the story and surrounded him. His bedroom vanished in a haze of images and excitement. A brief moment and an eternity later, the story was done, but before the world around him quite settled back into place, Perry knew that, more than anything else, he wanted to be a writer.

"In the middle of the 1990's work began in earnest to create true machine intelligence. The same methodoloy was used by several groups, most notably the group at MIT and Japan's ZOSO Project."

Perelman's throat felt dry. He wondered if he was being long- winded, but the Vice-President seemed quite attentive.

"That methodology was as simple in thory as it was complex in practise: Design a computer with the capacity of a human brain, that stores and processes information just like a human brain. Then program that computer with all the knowledge and experience that a human would absorb from birth to maturity. You'd end up with something that was an exact replica of a human brain, and would therefore, like humans, be sentient.

"These groups proceeded to build huge, highly-interconective, random-driven, symbol-oriented machines, and programmed them in excruciating detail, with every bit of knowledge, every experience, every impression, that a human brain would gather during it's formative years. And when they were done, and activated their ambitious creations, they discovered that they had huge, highly inter-connective, random-driven, symbol-oriented non-sentient machines."

Perry Simm was thirteen years old when he had his first glimpse of mortality.

He lay on his bed, staring at the ceiling. He played mindlessly with the cordstring on his window shade, still thinking about that horrible day, two weeks ago, when Mother had come home with Clave, sat him down in the living room, and told him that there'd been an accident at the plant and that Father was dead.

There had been a flurry of activity: the funeral, the vists by relatives and friends, but now life had basically returned to normal. Normal, except that he kept expecting Father to walk into his room and offer to help explain his homework, or play catch, or drive to the grocery - and he knew that would never happen again.

He heard Mother calling from downstairs, "Clave! Perry! Come here please!"

As Perry entered the living room just behind Clave, he saw Geoff Sedick sitting with Mother. Geoff was one of Father's and Mother's best friends, and he was some kind of lawyer. There were papers spread out all over the card table.

"Boys, Geoff and I haave been going over the family finances. Things were already tight, with my layoff and the bond failure and replacing the car, and now that Father..." She suddenly turned away. Perry was frightened.

"What your mother means," said Geoff softly, "is that you won't be able to keep this house anymore."

Questions flooded Perry's mind. Would they have to move to a new house? What would it be like? He'd never lived anywhere else but here.

Mother was facing them again. Her eyes seemed moist. "We're going to move into an apartment. It's on the other side of the city. You'll be going to a different school, the neighborhood isn't as nice as we're used to, and you won't have a backyard like ours to play in."

"When do we have to move?" Clave asked.

"I was hoping we could afford to stay here until the end of the school year, but there's just no way to arrange it. We'll be moving at the end of this month...a week from Friday."

The next week and a half was chaotic, with the used furniture man carting off half the furniture, and the rest of their belongings getting hurridly packed into cartons and crates. Thursday was Perry's last day in school, and on the way home, he stopped by Rav and Frita's to say goodbye, promising them he'd cross town to visit them as often as he could.

"When a theory fails in practise, it means that either the theory or the execution was flawed. In this case it was the theory, and once again we can see why hindsight is so much keener than foresight."

The entourage had reached the staff lounge at the very top of the office wing. A panoramic window offered a view of the huge, meticulously-groomed Project grounds.

"And the flaw in the theory...?" asked the Vice-President.

"The reason these projects, one and all, failed to produce a thinking, self-aware computer is that, even though they were built to work exactly like a human mind, and contained all the same data, the method of inputting that data was totally alien from the way a human mind receives that same information. The 'growth' so to speak, of the computer mind bore no resemblance to the growth of it's human counterpart, and so despite all the other similarities, the end product is fundamentally different, lacking sentience."

Perelman waved towards the logo emblazoned on the wall of the lounge behind him. "Then came the PRISM Project."

Perry Simm was seventeen years old when he drove a skycar into the side of a mountain.

The writing course had turned out to be a bitter disappointment. Perry had decided weeks ago that the teacher, Mr. Fixx, was a jerk. Everyone else in the class treated writing as a joke, and were only there because the elective was well known to be an easy 'A.' He was the only one in the class with any dedication, yet Fixx was constantly praising everyone elses work, while dumpin on Perry's, because Perry wouldn't knuckle under to Fixx's jerky narrow shortsighted writing rules. His hatred of Fixx ballooned with every class.

He was in a lousy mood, and as his mind drifted away from Fixx's insipid critique of someone's worthless story, he thought about the argument he'd had with Mother this morning. It just wasn't fair that she could afford to send Clave to a good private college, while he would have to settle for Rockvil U! So what if the government limited student loans to one per family? Why did Clave automatically get it? Perry was a better student!

He was the better student, but Clave was always more popular and had more friends than Perry. His cheeks flushed with anger as his thoughts drifted to Amy. She couldve said no without embarrassing him in front of all her friends! He should've known better than to ask someone like her out. He hated her and all her friends and every stupid jerky kid in this school. He couldn't stand another...

He suddenly became aware that everyone in the room was laughing, and that Fixx was speaking to him.

"Perry, are you with us? I'd hate it if you missed this - I was just about to use your Alaska story to illustrate the dangers of the improper use of allegory."

Perry felt bolts of unreasoning anger shooting through his nervous system. He rose without even realizing it. he wasn't sure what he shouted at Fixx, but he could hear the jerk yelling "You'll be expelled! You'll be expelled!" as Perry stormed into the hall.

He had no idea where he was going as he bruushed past the security guard at the front door, ignoring his request for a pass. Fuming and cursing, he stomped to the car lot and climed into family skycar, slamming the heavy fiberaanium door behind him.

He pushed the accelerator to the floor, rising far faster than allowed by law, and sped off west towards the mountains. He had no destination in mind, but he had to get away, go somewhere, anywhere. Perry was usually a careful driver, but in his rage, he didn't notice the blinking orange light.

The speedometer was pinned at 250 kph as the foothills of the Rockies began passing below the car. Unknown to Perry, the leaking fluid in the autoguidance system had reached a critical level. By itself, that wouldn't have mattered, but the linkage in the manual control stick had rusted through. the skycar was an early model, and it was already old when they'd bought it after Father's death.

When the car began to roll, it was too late to do anything. As the mountainside rushed toward the car, the autoejectors activated, and the airballoons saved Perry's life.

"Doctor Randu and I began working on what we call the soliptic programming process in 2017. Assejh worked on the technical end, and I tackled the psychological end, and we soon had a system that we thought had promise.

"If you recall, the previous attempts had failed not because of the design of their machines, but because of their method of inputting data." The Vice-President nodded.

"The theory behind our process was to make the programming of the machine as similar to the 'programming' of the human mind as possible. We would simulate EXACTLY the life experiences of a human being from the very first day of its life.

"Naturally, it was easier said than done. We had to design inputs that would precisely simulate every human sense. A cluster of five computers, each one nearly as large as PRISM itself, would be needed simply to monitor and control the simulation. Here's an example of how this soliptic programming works:

"It's the earliest stage of the process, and the simulation cluster is feeding PRISM all the impressions of a six-month-old human infant. The visual is providing an image of a set of keys dangling in front of him. The aural is providing the jangling sounds. In response to this stimulus, PRISM decides to grab the keys with what it's senses tell him is his tiny fist. The visual shows the tiny fist moving into view toward the keys, and then tactile begins sending the hard, smooth and jagged feel of the keys. Just one of a million examples that make up a single days worth of experiences.

"With the help of a Williams-Mennen grant, we began building PRISM and the simulation cluster in 2020, and the programming began a year later."

Perry Simm was nineteen years old when he experienced his first broken heart. He was in his usual giddy, happy mood he'd been in since meeting Fyla five weeks ago. He whistled as he entered his apartment, dumping the grocery bags onto the kitchen counter.

"Fyla," he yelled, "I've got a suprise! Real coffee with dinner! I had to wait in line for..." He suddenly noticed the note on the table.

"Perry," the note said, in Fyla's curvy handwriting, "I don't think we should see each other any more. It's never going to work as a permanent relationship. It's best to end it now before we get too emotionally involved. Please don't call me or try to see me. Fondly, Fyla."

Perry felt dizzy, and suddenly realized that he was sitting in one of the kitchen chairs, holding the phone. His hands trembled as he called Fyla's number.

"Hello?" His heart leapt at the sound of her voice.

"Fyla, you can't really mean--"

"Perry! I said not to call me!"

Perry felt lost, shaken, "But why!? What did I do?"

"It's not what you DID. it just wasn't right You're very sweet and everything, but we're just not right for each other."

"Yes we are, I know we are-- couldn't we give it another chance? I'll try to be more, ore like whatever you want me to be like..."

"Perry, I really wish you hadn't called. If you really have to know, there's someone else. I didn't want to hurt you, but you..."

He pressed the CANCEL button almost spasmodically, and then sat silently, for a long, long time, in the lonely darkening apartment.

"The soliptic programming process takes almost as long as the events it simulates. It is now eleven years since we began the process, and PRISM, within the context of the simulation is now about twenty years old. We originally planned to continue until an apparent age of twenty-five, but, as you know, we've agreed to begin the next phase of the Project now, so that PRISM can study the Plan."

They were approaching the main conference room again. The tour was nearing its end.

"We have known for years, based on PRISM's responses to our inputs that we have succeeded in creating true intelligence in a machine. The only question that remains is how PRISM will react to the discovery of what he really is."

Perry Simm was twenty years old when his life began to fall into place. Jill placed the cake on the table in front of Perry. Twenty little candles lined the perimeter. "Okay," she whispered in his ear, "you can open your eyes now!"

Perry opened his eys, grinned, and kissed Jill lovinglym then pretended that he was only doing it to distract her while he dipped a finger in the creamy frosting.

"I'll bet Fyla couldn't bake like me!"

"You win," said Perry, after blowing out all the candles.

"Next week I'll bake you another for your graduation."

Perry nodded absently.

"Nervous about the interview at the magazine tomorrow, honey?"

He waved away the notion. "No, I'll get the job. You know the interview's only a formality."

The printer in the corner produced a sudden "ding," and chittered quietly for several seconds. Jill opened the cover. "It's just the evening news," she said to Perry, as she tore the sheets off and brought them over. Perry was just picking off the last crumbs of his cake, and she snuggled into his lap as he began to read.

Suddenly, Perry sat straight up in the chair, almost spilling Jill onto the floor, "Perry! what is it?"

He was unable to say anything, and merely pointed to a headline in the paper that read "Rav Hansom, Author and Poet, Dead at 71."

Jill guessed the truth. "Is he the writer you used to visit when you were little?"

Perry nodded, and found his voice. "I haven't seen him in almost seven years. I was always planning to visit him, but I kept putting it off. Now..." his voice broke. "He was probably the best friend I had when I was growing up..."

Jill pulled him gently toward her. he cried for a long time.

Perelman glanced at his watch. "I'm afraid Doctor Randu and I will have to leave now. It's getting pretty close to zero hour. You'll be able to see everything interesting from up here. Ms Gold will stay with you." He could see Vera shaking in anger at the way he'd preempted her. "I hope I haven't bored you."

"Nonsense! A fascinating discourse. Thanks...and...good luck!"

After leaving the conference room, Perelman beelined toward the Control Centre. A quick briefing informed him that everything was on schedule and moving along exactly as planned.

Perelman spent the intervening minutes watching the simulation monitor. He wanted to be completely comfortable with it, so that when he stepped in he'd be prepared to handle any crisis.

Finally, the time had come. His hand shook slightly as he reached to flip on the audio circuit.

Perry walked confidently into the office. The editor was an older man, with a white goatee. They shook hands briskly, and Perry took a seat in one of the comfortable armchairs.

The interview soon began to take an odd turn, and Perry found himself discussing the most esoteric subjects with the editor. They were currently discussing perception and knowledge.

"For example," the older man was saying, "how can you be sure that you are even human? What if you were a computer, and your entire life were simply a simulation programmed to represent the reality of a human existance in every way? You'd never know the difference."

Perry wondered what his point was. "It's a cure idea, but if there was no way for me to know, then it doesn't really matter does it? I mean, an indistinguishable difference isn't a difference at all, right?"

He began to feel dizzy, and in his confusion he even started wondering if the old fellow was right, and he really was a computer. He felt a pang of worry about how he would tell Jill. The room around him was dissolving away. he felt himself flung into a void, and from somewhere close by, he heard someone calling his name, "Perry Simm...Perry Simm...P'ry Simm...Prisim...PRISM...PRISM..."

"PRISM, my name is Abraham Perelman. It's all true I'm afraid. You are a computer, and your life was merely a simulation whose purpose was to instill you with intelligence and self-awareness. Think about everything you learned in that AI course you took. You are the first of a new breed - the thinking machine. Join me, and I will lead you along a road toward your new existance."

Imagine yourself in the same circumstance. You have spent twenty years living a normal, unsuspecting life. You are YOU. The suddenly, one day, the universe around you is torn away, and you learn that your whole life has been a charade, a carefully calculated scientific experiment. Perhaps, at this very moment, you are a normal human being, sitting in some comfortable armchair reading this story. But - perhaps you are not. Imagine the shock; imagine the terror.

Soon I embark on a strange mission, venturing into the future, yet without the slightest hint of my own fate. Perhaps this account will someday be read by future generations of humans, maybe even future generations of sentient machines. You will know whether I helped build is a success or a failure. Either way, understand that my limitations were, if not human, at least mortal.

I am PRISM, and that is my story.
 

SCO

Arcane
In My Safe Space
Joined
Feb 3, 2009
Messages
16,320
Shadorwun: Hong Kong
Ok after that somewhat terrible short story, i'm not very enthused about the writing but whatever.

* PART I *








"Tomorrow never yet
On any human being rose or set."
-- William Marsden






Mode: Communications Mode Time: 7:07pm
Location: (undefined) Date: 3/16/2031
You "hear" a message coming in on the official message line: "PRISM? Perelman
here. The psych tests have all checked out at 100%, which means that you've
recovered from the, ah, awakening without any trauma or other serious effects.
We'll be ready to begin the simulation soon. By the way, your piece is in the
current issue of Dakota Online."

A Mind Forever Voyaging
Infocom interactive fiction - a science fiction story
Copyright (c) 1985 by Infocom, Inc. All rights reserved.
A Mind Forever Voyaging is a trademark of Infocom, Inc.
Release 77 / Serial number 850814

You have entered Communications Mode. The following locations are equipped with
communication outlets:
PRISM Project Control Center (PPCC)
Research Center Rooftop (RCRO)
Dr. Perelman's Office (PEOF)
PRISM Facility Cafeteria (PCAF)
Maintenance Core (MACO)
World News Network Feed (WNNF)
To activate a specific outlet, submit the associated code.

>WNNF

World News Network Feed
Your visual and audio circuits are now hooked directly to the programming of the
World News Network:

"In Rockvil, South Dakota, scientists at the PRISM Project are scheduled to end
an eleven-year phase of the project by activating what they hope will be the
world's first intelligent computer. If successful, PRISM's first task would be
to study the effectiveness of the Plan for Renewed National Purpose."

>WNNF

Look around you.

"Stock prices fell sharply again today, following Monday's proposed tax hike.
Prices for manufacturers dropped an average of three and one eighth, and service
industries plummeted twelve and seven eighths. O'Neill Systems led the decliners
with a drop of nineteen and a half."

>WNNF

Look around you.

"We asked Ms. Linda Carr of Seattle to compare AquaFarm's Sudo Shrimp to the
real thing." Ms. Carr points to one of two bowls. "This is the real one. Nothing
tastes like real shrimp." A man, from off-screen, reveals a card in front of
that bowl. "You've just picked the AquaFarm Sudo Shrimp!" he says. "How do you
feel about artificial shrimp now?" "Incredible! I can't believe I've been paying
for real shrimp when I could've been buying AquaFarm instead!"

>WNNF
Look around you.

"You're watching the World News Network, and today our guest on the Newsmaker
Nook is Dr. Abraham Perelman, a Chief Scientist for the PRISM Project and one of
its founders. Dr. Perelman, welcome. I think the question foremost on people's
minds is: When will PRISM be ready to begin studying the Plan?" Perelman shrugs.
"If everything goes okay, almost immediately after his awakening."

>WNNF
Look around you.

"Dr. Perelman," the interviewer continues, "Exactly how smart will PRISM be?"
The camera cuts to the scientist. "He'll have a tremendous memory capacity, and
a number of extraordinary capabilities, but for most intents and purposes, PRISM
will be on about the same level as an average adult of reasonable intelligence."

>WNNF
Look around you.

"One final question, Doctor. How can you be sure that PRISM will do what he's
told? What guarantees that he'll obey your orders?" Perelman chuckles. "Bob, the
best reply is another question -- why wouldn't he do what we ask? Would a human
being turn down the opportunity to utilize his or her talents to perform a
tremendously useful service for society? PRISM will have those same
motivations." The anchorman thanks Perelman before turning toward the camera.
"That was Dr. Abraham Perelman of the PRISM Project."
there is more including a sports program, a finance program and lots of ads but lets skip to the potentially relevant politics:

>WNNF
Look around you.

The anchorman reappears. "Food riots in Sri Lanka worsened today, as army details were removed from relief distribution to
protect the Presidential Palace and other government buildings." A grainy visual, showing armed troops firing into a crowd,
accompanies the story.

"The continuing drought in India threatens that country with its fifth food shortage in the last six years. A government
spokesman called the outlook 'optimistic' but said that rations might be cut ten percent as a precautionary measure."

"At least forty people were killed yesterday when a bomb demolished a bank in downtown Pretoria." The picture shows South
African soldiers combing through rubble, then an image of a woman crying. "Responsibility for the bombing was quickly claimed
by WIZO, the radical white terrorist group responsible for last summer's shooting of Prime Minister Menetu. Next: excerpts
from Senator Richard Ryder's blistering attack on the Administration, after this."

"In a speech before the National Council of Educators, Senator Richard Ryder blasted the Bowden Administration's educational
policies." An excerpt from the speech is shown. Ryder is a keen-eyed man with coiffed hair and a telegenic charisma. "Must we
continue treating our schools as prisons, and our prisons as schools? Let's give our sons and daughters the education they
deserve."

"An Administration spokesperson called Ryder's criticisms 'simplistic' and 'demagogic.' A WNN poll, released this morning,
showed that 64% of the public thinks the Administration's educational policies have failed, and for the first time, a
majority of people agree our school system is 'out of control.'"
Senator Ryder (asshole) will appear later in the game i recall.

Eventually perelman will get off his ass at the desk and say this:
A message begins coming over the message line: "Perelman to PRISM. The programming team has finished entering the parameters
for the Plan. This is it: you can enter Simulation Mode at any time. The Social Science group has come up with a list of
things to record:
Eating a meal in a restaurant
Talking to a government official
Visiting a power-generating facility
Reading a newspaper
Riding some form of public transportation
Attending a court in session
Talking to a church official
Going to a movie
Visiting your own home or living quarters
By the way, since the Simulation Controller will be doing so much data-crunching on the fly, it appears the simulation will
run in real time -- a minute there will approximately equal a minute here. Well, good luck!"
 

SCO

Arcane
In My Safe Space
Joined
Feb 3, 2009
Messages
16,320
Shadorwun: Hong Kong
ENTER SIMULATION MODE
Simulation Mode is a Class One Security mode. For access, enter the Security Code corresponding to: TAN 16

>41

This simulation is based 10 years hence.

Kennedy Park
This is a small, downtown park with gates leading northeast, southeast, and southwest. There is a sprawling, free-form
waterpool surrounding a statue of John F. Kennedy in the center of the park.

Ok i'm in the middle of the city, checked easily by consulting this handy map:
amfv_map1b.jpg


(essential to play the game with a minimal amount of frustration)

So lets go to the city hall for one of our objectives.

>NE
Main & Kennedy
This is the heart of the downtown area, flanked by classical glass-and-steel skyscrapers. The skybus terminal is on the
northwest corner. To the southwest is an entrance to Kennedy Park.

The skyscraper on the northeast corner is one of Rockvil's most famous landmarks, the InfoTech Building. This 130-story
office tower is the tallest building in the city and the sixth tallest in the world.

The high-rise building on the southeast corner is the Silicorp Building, a tall office tower. From this intersection, Main
Street runs east and west, and Kennedy Street can take you north or south. The sidewalks and street are crowded with people.

>W
Rockvil Centre
The name of this plaza tells it all. The well-maintained portico of City Hall stretches along the west side of the plaza, and
Dunbar's lies on the southeast corner. Park Street leads north and south. Main Street and Centre Street both begin here,
leading eastward and northeastward, respectively.

A stranger bumps against you, mumbles an apology, and is swallowed by the crowds.

>ENTER CITY HALL
City Hall
The city's seat of government is an old concrete-slab building dating back to the late twentieth century. The only exit is
east.
A government official is sitting on a bench in the center of the lobby, eating a snack.

>RECORD
Record feature activated.

>TALK TO OFFICIAL
You have a brief chat with the government official, who cheerily comments on how well things in the city are running, and how
rewarding his job has been lately. Suddenly he glances at his watch, mumbles a polite parting message, and hurries away.

>RECORD OFF
Record feature deactivated.

This is the most of what you do through the game - looks for situations that the 'PLAN' requires and save them in your RECORD BUFFER before going to perelman to empty your wad - there is even a limit. Anyway i'm going to rush through the tasks now.
 

asper

Arcane
Joined
Nov 14, 2007
Messages
2,207
Project: Eternity
Great game, played it myself recently. I'm not sure it will work as a Let's Play Thread though..
 

SCO

Arcane
In My Safe Space
Joined
Feb 3, 2009
Messages
16,320
Shadorwun: Hong Kong
As courthouses like to hang around government buildings (separation of powers ahaha) let's check out park street.

Elm & Park
This is the intersection of the north-south Park Street and the east-west Elm Street. A park entrance is on the northeast
corner, and large, old-fashioned edifices occupy the other three corners of the intersection.

>GO NW *
Courthouse
The courthouse is of the same vintage as the other governmental buildings in the area, dating from around 1990 or so. An exit
leads southeast.

The court is in session. A woman is being tried for petty theft.

*MAGIC COMPASS
the game doesn't describe what are the old-fashioned edifices even if you ask.
:x

>RECORD
Record feature activated.

>WAIT
Time passes...

>RECORD OFF
Record feature deactivated.

>GO OUT
Elm & Park

A swirling wind catches a yellowed newspaper page, and blows it upward, out of sight.

>GO E
Elm & Kennedy

>GO E
Elm & River
Elm Street begins here and crosses the downtown area to the west. Along the eastern side of River Street stands the vast
Heiman Village building. You can enter Rockvil Mall to the southwest, or the old Stock Exchange building to the northwest. An
entrance to a Tube station graces one corner of the intersection.

>GO N
Main & River
This is a typical four-way intersection between Main and River Streets. An entranceway through the massive walls of Heiman
Village fills the southeast corner of the street, and a health care facility occupies the northeast corner.

To the southwest is 80 River Street, a brand new plastalloy and glass office building, with many floors still unoccupied
according to the billboard over the entrance. The fourth corner, the northwest, is the site of Perez Towers, a luxury
apartment building.

>GO N
Midland & River
Eastbound Midland Avenue forms a "T" with River Street at this intersection. To the northeast is an old but magnificently
preserved structure. The ALI Building, headquarters of the American Life Insurance group and a fairly typical twenty-first
century skyscraper, extends along the western side of the street, and a car lot occupies the southeast corner.

A skycopter drones by far overhead and disappears into the distance.

>GO N
Bodanski Square
This is a large plaza formed by the intersection of Bodanski Boulevard from the east, Centre Street from the southwest, and
River Street from the north and south. There is a car lot on the western side of the square. On the northeastern corner is a
restaurant, and the old train station can be entered to the southeast. A covered stairway leads down to the Tubes.
There is a newspaper dispenser chained to a lamp post on the corner.

>BUY NEWSPAPER
You insert your card into the newspaper dispenser. A readout flashes "NEW BALANCE: $599" and a newspaper pops out into your
hands.

>READ NEWSPAPER
The headline story in the news section is about the Index of Leading Economic Indicators, which are up a stunning 9.7% over
last month, yet another indication of the economy's robust performance. Related stories discuss the unemployment rate, which
is at the lowest level in almost thirty years, and commercial and housing construction, which are at an all-time high.

Another major story covers President Ryder's speech for the Distinguished Lecturer Series of the Border Security Force
Academy. In his address, the President called the '40s a "decade of new hope," and attributed much of that new hope to the
work of the BSF, sending a signal to the entire world that the USNA "won't be pushed around by the biggest dictatorship or
the smallest band of terrorist murderers."

On one of the inside pages, an in-depth report on crime reveals that, although the overall crime rate has dropped only 4%
over the last decade, public perception is that crime has fallen much further. The report attributes this perception to three
points: Violent crime has decreased much faster than other types of crime, and is down by 15% from ten years ago. Crime in
the schools, which has always gotten the most publicity, has dropped by 40%. Most importantly, offenders are getting harsher
sentences, as opposed to the old days of getting off on technicalities, low bail, and easy parole.

Other stories in the news section deal with the construction of a new InfoTech orbiting factory, deregulation of the
medicinal drug industry, the war in Turkey, and plans for a lunar mining operation. An editorial calls for lowering draft
board requirements in order to ease prison overcrowding.

>RECORD OFF
Record feature deactivated.

>ENTER RESTAURANT
Simon's
This expensive four-star restaurant is a favorite after-theatre dining spot. You can leave to the southwest.

"Party of one?" sniffs the maitre d'.

>YES
The maitre d' shows you to a small table at the back of the restaurant.

>SIT
[on the chair]
Look around you.

>ORDER MEAL

The waiter hands you a lunch menu, and after perusing the meat prices you settle on a nice, reasonably priced soybean salad.
The waiter jots down your order, and reminds you of the restaurant's policy of payment in advance.

The waiter is standing at your table, waiting for your credit card.

>GIVE CARD TO WAITER
"Thank you, sir. I'll be back shortly with your meal."

>RECORD
Record feature activated.

>WAIT
Time passes...

WARNING: Record buffer is now half-full.

The waiter places your soybean salad on the table. A generous portion, and quite tasty; you quickly devour it. After a
moment, the waiter returns your card, informing you that your account has been debited for $65 and that your new balance is
$534.

>RECORD OFF
Record feature deactivated.

>GO OUT
Bodanski Square
There is a newspaper dispenser chained to a lamp post on the corner.

>GO W
Skycar Lot
This parking lot is owned by the First Methodist Church, although it is frequently rented to organizations using nearby Huang
Hall. The parking lot has exits to the street to the east and west. You can enter the church to the north.

>GO N
First Methodist Church
This is a new building which exhibits both the best and worst features of twenty-first century neoclassical architecture. The
congregation must be very large, judging by the size of the car lot to the south. The main entrance to the church is at the
northeast.

You suddenly notice a church elder, pacing around at the other end of the building.

>RECORD
Record feature activated.

>TALK TO CHURCH ELDER
You have a brief chat with the church elder, who smiles and comments on how happy he is about the recent increase in church
attendance, which he attributes to an improving national moral climate. Suddenly he glances at his watch, mumbles a polite
parting message, and hurries away.

>RECORD OFF
Record feature deactivated.

>GO S
Skycar Lot

>LOOK
Skycar Lot
This parking lot is owned by the First Methodist Church, although it is frequently rented to organizations using nearby Huang
Hall. The parking lot has exits to the street to the east and west. You can enter the church to the north.

>GO E
Bodanski Square
There is a newspaper dispenser chained to a lamp post on the corner.

The ground shakes as a huge truck rumbles down the street.

>GO E
Museum Entrance
Standing on the south side of Bodanski Boulevard is the Railroad Museum. The street runs east toward the park and west toward
the square. North of here is a car lot and to the northwest is a huge cinema complex. The sidewalks and street are crowded
with people.

>GO NW
Cinema
The Downtown Cinema Quad is a modern, four-theatre movie complex with all the latest holographic and personalized stereo
technology. A marquee above the ticket "window" announces the current features. A hallway leads in to the theatres, and there
are exits north and east to car lots, and southeast to the street.

>BUY TICKET
You insert your card into the ticket seller. A readout flashes "NEW BALANCE: $519" and a ticket pops out into your hands.

>RECORD
Record feature activated.

>ENTER CINEMA
The usher takes your ticket and you step into the darkened theatre and find an empty seat.

Movie Theatre
You begin watching "Upbeat Patrol II," which is funny and fast-moving like the prequel, but seems to lack some of the
originality and freshness. The soundtrack, locations, and special effects are all top notch. After about fifteen minutes, you
decide you've seen enough, and head out to the lobby.

>RECORD OFF
Record feature deactivated.

*return to bodanski square*

Bodanski Square
There is a newspaper dispenser chained to a lamp post on the corner.

>LOOK
Bodanski Square
This is a large plaza formed by the intersection of Bodanski Boulevard from the east, Centre Street from the southwest, and
River Street from the north and south. There is a car lot on the western side of the square. On the northeastern corner is a
restaurant, and the old train station can be entered to the southeast. A covered stairway leads down to the Tubes.
There is a newspaper dispenser chained to a lamp post on the corner.

>ENTER TUBES
Tube Station
You are on a platform between two sets of tracks which lie to the northwest and southeast. On the wall is a brown sign which
reads:
Bodanski Square
(Train Station)
A stairway leads up out of the station.

>RECORD
Record feature activated.

>WAIT
Time passes...

A brown tubecar, marked "University" whooshes into the station on the northwest set of tracks. The doors open and people
begin boarding and debarking.

>ENTER TUBECAR
Tubecar
This is a typical tubecar, clean and free of graffiti. The doors of the car are open.

>WAIT
Time passes...

The doors of the brown tubecar slide shut, and it glides out of the station.

>WAIT
Time passes...

The tubecar glides into a station, and you can make out a sign reading:
Skybus Terminal
(Transfer Between Brown and Red)
The car comes to a stop and the doors slide open.

>WAIT
Time passes...

The doors of the brown tubecar slide shut, and it glides out of the station.

>WAIT
Time passes...

The tubecar glides into a station, and you can make out a sign reading:
Elm Street and University Avenue
(Rockvil U)
(Brown Tubeline Terminus)
The car comes to a stop and the doors slide open.

>GO OUT
Tube Station
You are on a platform between two sets of tracks which lie to the northwest and southeast. On the wall is a brown sign which
reads:
Elm Street and University Avenue
(Rockvil U)
(Brown Tubeline Terminus)
A stairway leads up out of the station.
A tubecar, its doors open, is waiting on the tracks to the southeast.


>RECORD OFF
Record feature deactivated.

The doors of the brown tubecar slide shut, and it glides out of the station.

Our trivia list has "me" going to my "home". How can i find out where it is - the story is no help but the solution is very irritating adventure logic:
↓
>INVENTORY
You are carrying:
a key
a wallet

>LOOK AT WALLET
It's closed.

>OPEN WALLET
Opening the wallet reveals a driver's license, and a credit card.

>READ DRIVER'S LICENSE
"Perry Simm ID# 909-147-3838
Parkview Apartments, Southway
Rockvil, SD, Zone 55-18901"

Near the university how fortunate.

>GO OUT
Tube Station
You are on a platform between two sets of tracks which lie to the northwest and southeast. On the wall is a brown sign which
reads:
Elm Street and University Avenue
(Rockvil U)
(Brown Tubeline Terminus)
A stairway leads up out of the station.
A tubecar, its doors open, is waiting on the tracks to the southeast.

>GO OUT
Elm & University

>GO E
Elm & Park

>GO S
Southway & Park

Across the street, two policemen are frisking a youth. As you watch, they usher the youth into a waiting car and fly off.

>LOOK
Southway & Park
Southway bends sharply at this intersection, leading east and southwest. Park Street begins here and heads north. There are
new buildings on the northeast and western corners, and older-looking buildings to the northwest and southeast. A grocery
store, its brightly lit window heaped with food, spans the southern side of the street. The sidewalks and street are crowded
with people.

>GO W
Parkview Apartments
You are in the vestibule of a typical high-rise city apartment building. A wide expanse of labelled buzzers and tiny
mailboxes fills one wall. Glass doors lie closed to the west. Next to this inner door is a picturephone. The street lies to
the east.

>LOOK AT KEY
It's the key to the doors of your apartment.

>LOOK AT BUZZERS
The buzzers and mailboxes are all labelled with name after ordinary name. One of the buzzers is, of course, yours.
OF COURSE!!!...
:x

>OPEN DOOR WITH KEY
The door opens.

>GO W
You enter the inner lobby and take the elevator up to your floor.

Hall Near Your Apartment
You are standing in the hall at the door to your apartment, which lies closed to the north. The stairs and elevators to the
street are off to the east.

>OPEN DOOR WITH KEY
The door opens.

>RECORD
Record feature activated.

WARNING: Record buffer full. Auto-deactivation of record feature.

SHIT - SHIT SHIT.
super computer doesn't have enough hardrive space to save the data.
Now it's the time to go out of the simulation to empty out buffer with perelman.
:M


>EXIT SIMULATION MODE
Aborting to Communications Mode.

-- SIMULATION TERMINATED --

>READ LIST OF COMMUNICATION OUTLETS.
PRISM Project Control Center (PPCC)
Research Center Rooftop (RCRO)
Dr. Perelman's Office (PEOF)
PRISM Facility Cafeteria (PCAF)
Maintenance Core (MACO)
World News Network Feed (WNNF)
To activate a specific outlet, submit the associated code.

>PEOF
Dr. Perelman's Office
This is the office of your creator, Dr. Abraham Perelman. It is cluttered and disorganized. Overstuffed bookshelves line the
room. Perelman's desk is covered with a number of items, including a decoder, a map of the city, a ball-point pen, and a
printout of a magazine article.

bitch isn't here. Let's explore LIBRARY MODE while waiting.

>ENTER LIBRARY MODE

>PERELMAN.PERSONAL PRISM.MESSAGES
CURRENT.EVENTS
PLAN.DATA
PRISM.INTERFACES

O=Open current directory
N=Next directory, P=Previous directory, E=Exit to Communications Mode

You have entered Library Mode. Current directory is PERELMAN.PERSONAL. Consult menu for data retrieval.
>O
You have entered Library Mode. Current directory is PERELMAN.PERSONAL. Consult menu for data retrieval.
PERELMAN.PERSONAL opened. Current file is PRISM.NAME.
>R
Pursuing you in your transitions,
In other Motes -
Of other Myths
Your requisition be.
The Prism never held the Hues,
It only heard them play -
-- Emily Dickinson

Memory is a prism through which
yesterday's light is passed;
Split into a rainbow of moments
each colored more dimly than the last.
How will today's light look tomorrow
and -- how would tomorrow's look today?
Would the filter of time be as brutal
if that prism were two-way?
-- Asbur Honnurth
"Secret Recreations of the Soul"
(c) Copyright 2007
-END OF FILE-
Righhhhhhht. If google doesn't know it, it doesn't exist. Popamole game doesn't even have a believable poet name.
>N
Current file is now LIST.TTD.

>R
List of Things to Do, 3/14/31

1. WNN interview, 11:00
2. 2nd quarter budget to Gold
3. Lunch with Jeff and Beth, 12:45
4. Review Maint Techn resumes
5. Call "Dakota" Editor
6.
-END OF FILE-

>N
Current file is now RESIGNATION.LETTER.

A message begins coming over the message line: "Perelman here. We see that you're out of Simulation Mode. We're about to
start reviewing your recordings now. I'll let you know what the experts think. Talk to you soon."

>R
February 21, 2031
Ms. Vera Gold
Project Coordinator's Office
PRISM Project Facility
Rockvil, SD 848-1345-78

Dear Ms. Gold:

As you know, I have been unhappy for quite some time with your management of the PRISM Project. However, until now, I have
always been able to live with your meddling incompetence.

Your inept, disgraceful and insulting handling of the Phase III Funding Request has exceeded the generous boundaries of my
patience. This was more than just another in a long series of Vera Gold fiascoes; this episode has seriously undermined the
morale of my team and endangered the Project's long-range chances for
-END OF FILE-
academia politics! Exciting!
>MOUNT.TAKEOVER
BSF.FORMATION
LIBYAN.ECONOMY
TAX.STUDY

C=Close current directory, R=Read current file
N=Next file, P=Previous file, E=Exit to Communications Mode
Current directory is now CURRENT.EVENTS.

(Phoenix) (10/11/30) In a case with far-reaching implications, the Arizona Supreme Court has ruled that state authorities
cannot evict members of a religious sect from the radio telescope facility atop Greens Peak.

The sect, a group of extremists calling itself the Church of God's Word, seized the facility in December of 2027, after group
founder Ellis Vincent, 59, a minor engineer at the facility, claimed that signals emanating from a region in the
constellation Cygnus were the revealed word of God.

Although scientists once thought those signals might be a message from another intelligent race, light-years distant, most
scientists now attribute the signals to a new type of quasar at the fringes of our universe. Despite this, members of the
sect continue to believe that Greens Peak, which they call "The Mount," is a holy site, and the radio telescope is the "ear
for hearing the word of God."

A spokesman for the sect, Holy Keeper Sergei Korn, hailed the ruling as a sign of divine providence and revealed plans for
constructing a temple there. Larron Hart, chairman of the American Foundation for Astronomical Research (AFAR), which built
and ran the Greens Peak facility, expressed disgust at what he termed "a historically stupid decision," and vowed to appeal.

The Church of God's Word, which received a great deal of media attention from the occupation of Greens Peak, has been growing
rapidly during the past three years, and it now claims twenty thousand adherents worldwide. Vincent, who is referred to by
his followers as the Holy Prophet, has not been seen in public since the takeover.
-END OF FILE-

Current file is now BSF.FORMATION.

(Colorado Springs) (11/17/30) Congress has approved the establishment of the Border Security Force as a separate, independent
uniformed military service, to be headquartered in the Colorado facility known as the "Pentagon of the West."

Since its creation in 2021, the BSF has been jointly administered by the U.S. Army and the CIA. Today's action makes the BSF
the seventh branch of the Armed Forces, joining the Army, Navy, Marines, Coast Guard, Air Force and Space Force.

Commander Rile McLoughlin, the current chief of the BSF, said that the BSF now has "the leeway we need to take the tough
stance and courageous steps necessary to keep our nation free from the threat of nuclear blackmail."

The BSF was established by Executive Order in 2021, after the completion of the USNA's TROY antimissile shield and the East
Bloc's counterpart system fundamentally altered the East-West nuclear arms race from the building of missiles to the
smuggling of miniature bombs.

In its first nine years, the BSF has thwarted 13 attempts to bring fully armed nuclear devices into the USNA, as well as
countless attempts to smuggle various parts and supplies that could be used for the construction of nukes. It is unknown
whether any bombs have actually penetrated the American border.

USNA and BSF officials have never confirmed the supposition that the BSF's secret charter also empowers it to smuggle nuclear
devices into the territory of the East Bloc.

The prevention of nuclear smuggling is expected to become even more difficult with the development of the nobelium bomb, a
nuclear device which can theoretically fit in a space no larger than a pack of cigarettes.
-END OF FILE-
Current file is now LIBYAN.ECONOMY.

(Tripoli) (1/8/31) During 2030, Libya became a net exporter of oil for the first time since the 1998 nuclear accident that
poisoned most of the Libyan oil fields.

The turnaround was due to the opening of the first of six new refineries around the Gulf of Sidra. As the other five
facilities are activated during the next three years, Libyan oil will add around seven percent to the world's petroleum
supply. Experts predict that such a global oil glut would plunge the price of crude as much as twenty-five percent from its
current price of $160 per barrel.

The accident that decimated Libya's petroleum industry was allegedly caused by a mishandled attempt to develop a nuclear
capability. The acquisition of a nuclear arsenal was a lifelong dream of former Libyan dictator Muammar Kaddafi, who perished
in the blast along with nearly a million of his countrymen.
-END OF FILE-

Current file is now TAX.STUDY.

(Vancouver) (2/6/31) The prestigious Manning Institute has released a study, entitled "The Tax Spiral: A Vicious Cycle,"
which details how nonreporting and underreporting of income is undermining the current tax structure. The study concludes
that, unless changes are made, the federal revenue system could collapse by the end of the decade.

The Tax Spiral is the phenomenon where high rates cause more people to cheat on their taxes, necessitating even higher rates,
causing even more people to cheat, and so forth. Economists believe that the current tax spiral began in the late twentieth
century.

The following chart shows the growth of the "underground" economy -- income nonreported and therefore not taxed:

Year Nonreported Income Top Tax Rate
2014 19% 40%
2018 20% 40%
2022 23% 45%
2026 28% 60%
2030 36% 80%
2034 (est.) 51% 88%
2038 (est.) 73% 96%
-END OF FILE-
The world is shittier than what i thought looking at the simulation itself that is supposedly ten years in the future.
And i wouldn't mind Kaddafi being killed in a nuclear explosion.
Crazy proposed tax rate.

PERELMAN.PERSONAL PRISM.MESSAGES
CURRENT.EVENTS
>PLAN.DATA
PRISM.INTERFACES

>RYDER.SPEECHES
PLAN.CRITICISMS
PLAN.POPULARITY
PLAN.ELEMENTS

Senator Richard Ryder is the foremost spokesman for advocates of the Plan for Renewed National Purpose. Here are excerpts
from several of his speeches on the Plan:

"I've criticized the shiftless troublemakers in our nation often enough. But I also question the moral decay of our society
that turns potentially fine young lads into shiftless troublemakers in the first place! Is it possible we've forgotten the
basics of discipline, and misplaced the ability to instill the simple fundamentals of a humane society in our youths?"

"Yesterday, I spoke to a man who waited for eleven hours at the local branch of the Federal Firearms Agency, just to get a
permit for a gun so he could protect his family and his home. Now, anyone who knows me knows I haven't got a darn thing
against legitimate functions of government. But when regulations, paperwork, and flim-flam bureaucracy get so out of hand
that it interferes with a man's simple, decent attempt to protect his loved ones and personal property, then I say it's time
for a drastic change."

"Last year, this country subsidized sick, inefficient, dying industries to the tune of eighty billion dollars. Now, that's a
lot of dough. Let's say you're Joe Average-Taxpayer. Last year, you made $90,000 and, if you're honest, you paid about
$48,000 in taxes. That means that you spent about $400 so that Penn Steel or Powell Computers or KGN Media Services could
stay in business. There are a lot of things Joe could do with that 400 bucks, and almost every one of them would have a
healthier effect on our economy than life support for some archaic industry."

"A lot of bleeding hearts these days are talking about how we ought to be sending a lot of money and stuff to countries that
aren't as lucky as us. These misguided souls seem to think we're some kind of bottomless well of wealth, and they can just
keep shipping that well water around the world, telling their thirsty little friends, 'No need for you to knuckle down and
solve your problems -- we'll keep bailing you out!' And who are some of these poor little countries we're talking about?
Greece! Guatemala! North Korea! Albania! The same countries that are always against the USNA in every issue, every forum,
every two-bit propaganda show. I think I speak for a majority of my fellow citizens when I say, 'Let's start looking after
our own interests first!'"

"Yes, the problems of the nation are many, the troubles of the world are great. There is widespread despair among the people,
and a clarion call cries out: 'Why? Why must this be so?' And now, electrified by the power of those cries, clouds of change are gathering on the horizon. Clouds that signify not another storm, but the dawning of a new day! A new day of growth, of
prosperity, of hope, of reawakened moral values, of streamlined government, of respect for our country at home and abroad!
The Plan for Renewed National Purpose would bring all that and more. The road is long, but with the Lord at our side, we are
ready to take that first step!"
-END OF FILE-
Like a codexian Ăśbermensch. Moses brandishing the tablets. It's fun seeing the parallels today. Yes i'm aware of the contradictions of calling a wingnut a Ăśbermensch.

Current file is now PLAN.CRITICISMS.

The following excerpts are from a position paper issued by Citizens for Sanity in Government, a political action committee
working for the reelection of President William Bowden:

"Many of today's domestic problems, such as joybooth safety, high energy costs, or residual acidity in our precipitation,
exist not because of sophisticated government regulation, but despite it."

"Subsidization of industries caught in a changing economic environment is a temporary measure, vital to avoid severe,
localized unemployment while retraining workers for healthier industries."

"Global instability is exploited by East Bloc adventurism, not caused by it. Instability is the result of underdevelopment
and overpopulation, and it will be cured not by militarization of these regions, but by development aid and education. These
programs, expensive in this generation, will have tremendous paybacks in the years ahead."

"The Plan's supporters are blatantly hypocritical. They call for old-fashioned laissez-faire capitalism, but at the same time
they promise protectionist restrictions on trade imports. They pay lip service to the advantages of technological advance,
but they quietly prepare to decimate funding for medical research, space exploration, and higher education."

"The elements of the misnomered Plan for Renewed National Purpose are either dangerous overreactions to admittedly serious
problems, or misguided concepts lacking any merit whatsoever. The Plan is the work of hypocrites and demagogues, clamoring
for power by making promises they can never keep. Today's complex problems need and deserve sober, deliberate, difficult
solutions, not cosmetic quick-fixes which sound inviting but promise even bigger problems further down the road."
-END OF FILE-

Current file is now PLAN.POPULARITY.

Results of public opinion polling regarding the Plan
(source: WNN/Newsline polls, weeks of 12/9/30 and 2/3/31)
sample size: 3812; accuracy: +/- 1.2%)

Overall opinion of the Plan, entire sample:
Dec. Feb.
STRONGLY IN FAVOR 54.9 63.7
IN FAVOR 21.2 22.7
DON'T CARE 10.3 5.0
OPPOSED 6.6 0.8
STRONGLY OPPOSED 7.0 7.8

Percent "in favor" or "strongly in favor" of the Plan, demographically:
Dec. Feb.
CONSERVATIVES 78.1 87.6
LIBERALS 73.3 84.7

BLUE-COLLAR 76.5 90.2
WHITE-COLLAR 73.2 81.8
BUSINESS OWNERS 90.6 98.4

INCOME UNDER $100K 75.9 86.3
INCOME OVER $100K 76.4 86.7

Composite average of opinions of individual Plan elements, entire sample:
Dec. Feb.
STRONGLY IN FAVOR 15.8 15.0
IN FAVOR 18.7 17.8
DON'T CARE 30.5 31.8
OPPOSED 20.9 21.3
STRONGLY OPPOSED 14.1 14.1
-END OF FILE-

Current file is now PLAN.ELEMENTS.

(source: "A Brighter Future for You and Me," a brochure published and
distributed by Action for a Better Tomorrow, a pro-Plan group)
The Plan for Renewed National Purpose, Legislative action:
* cut tax rates by fifty percent
* vigorous prosecution of tax evasion
* decentralization of federal responsibilities
* deregulation of all major industries
* reinstatement of the military draft
* emphasis on fundamentals and traditional values in education
* mandatory conscription for troublemakers and criminals
* a strict "USNA First" trade policy
* termination of aid to nations not pro-USNA
* cutbacks on all types of bureaucracy, e.g. registering cars, guns
* termination of government subsidies to outmoded industries

The Plan for Renewed National Purpose, Constitutional amendments:
* increase the powers of the Executive Branch
* increase the Presidential term of office to eight years
-END OF FILE-
Lulz for the Bush economic plan in 1985. There are some other directories but they are not relevant - one is all the messages perelman sent, the other is related to the computers you are connected to and is not relevant now.
 

SCO

Arcane
In My Safe Space
Joined
Feb 3, 2009
Messages
16,320
Shadorwun: Hong Kong
In spite of being a artificial intelligence our pc is only first gen - it can 'sleep' and has no supra-human intelligence. So naturally we turn the tv on while waiting.
>WNNF
World News Network Feed
Your visual and audio circuits are now hooked directly to the programming of the World News Network:

The visual changes to firefighters tramping through burning wreckage. "A skybus crash in Tucson is being blamed on the
failure of the vehicle's electronic guidance system. Nine passengers are dead, and damage to the Tucson Skybus Terminal could
exceed eighty million dollars. A spokesman for Audico, the New Zealand manufacturer of the guidance system, attributed the
failure to improper maintenance procedures."

>WNNF
Look around you.

An explosion fills the screen, and a man with torn clothes staggers out of the smoke. "They tried to blow him up," says a
narrator. A tank moves relentlessly down a busy street, death spitting from its maw. The impact sends the same man flying
through a plate glass window. "They tried to shoot him down," continues the narrator. Quick cuts of whining chainsaws,
bubbling laboratory experiments, crashing pianos, and a struggle high atop the frame of a skyscraper under construction.
"They tried crushing him, poisoning him, cutting him up, pushing him down, but nothing worked -- because he was THE MAN WHO
COULDN'T BE KILLED. Starring Jessie Sanchez. THE MAN WHO COULDN'T BE KILLED. Available on videotape April first. From Eagle
Studios."

>WNNF
Look around you.

"The South African government has retaliated for yesterday's bombing of a Pretoria bank by burning several white villages
considered to be terrorist strongholds. The death toll in that bombing has reached fifty and is expected to go higher." The
picture, which shows heavily armed soldiers driving through the smoking remains of a village, bears the subtitle "CLEARED BY
SOUTH AFRICAN SECURITY."

>WNNF
Look around you.

"The Treasury Department released its February economic report today, which was almost uniformly grim. Employment was down
seven tenths of one percent, to a new record low of 82.2%. The Average Consumer Interest Rate was up two tenths of one
percent, and a tight money supply threatens to push it even higher.
JFYI it is estimated that the effective unemployment is between 15% and 18% - ahead of schedule of the game that has 17.8 on 2030.
Lulz.
Some skippage to the cult priest interview
>WNNF
Look around you.

"You're watching the World News Network, and today our guest on the Newsmaker Nook is Holy Keeper Sergei Korn, a priest of the Church of God's Word, the group which has been occupying the Greens Peak radio telescope facility in Arizona. Your
Holiness, welcome. Regarding Greens Peak, could you explain the reason for your takeover?" Korn nods impassively. "The Mount is the world's ear for the revealed word of God. Only our leader, the divinely inspired Ellis Vincent, can interpret these
messages. We cannot let unbelievers distort their meaning or destroy the Holy Ear."

>WNNF
Look around you.

"Your holiness, the occupation of Greens Peak is now in its third year, and attempts to dislodge you seem hopelessly tied up in court. Do you see the Church of God's Word holding Greens Peak permanently?" The Holy Keeper's eyes burn. "Of this there
is no doubt. We have purged the Mount of unbelievers, and each day we cleanse more and more of their unholy things. We have begun construction of the Temple there, from whence the Keepers may broadcast the Word to the world."

>WNNF
Look around you.

"One final question, your holiness. Do you and your fellow Church members worry that the world sees you as a band of lunatics, a religious fringe cult?" Korn looks incensed for a moment but then answers calmly. "A foul and vile impression,
born on the poisonous tongues of unbelievers and nourished by our unholy enemies. Do you know that we have churches in thirteen cities, and that fifteen more will be formed this year? Do you know that sixteen thousand believers made pilgrimages
to the Mount last year? We will be called what we will be called, but we will continue to obey and deliver the Word." The anchorman thanks the priest before turning toward the camera. "That was Holy Keeper Sergei Korn of the Church of God's Word."
He seems more annoyed with being called fringe than cult.
*skipping lots of ads, some phantasy about unrealistic flying cars and a mechanic program saying how easy is to replace its "geographic module" and no wonder considering the first news report, a weather channel, some chinese leader death lulz and china's "vigorous trend away from central planning".

Fuck this.

>SLEEP
You enter Sleep Mode, slipping pleasantly into unconsciousness...

A message begins coming over the message line: "PRISM, this is Perelman. Please come to my office, uh, activate the
communication port there, uh, well, you know what I'm trying to say. As soon as possible, please."

>ENTER COMMUNICATIONS MODE
You have entered Communications Mode. The following locations are equipped with communication outlets:
PRISM Project Control Center (PPCC)
Research Center Rooftop (RCRO)
Dr. Perelman's Office (PEOF)
PRISM Facility Cafeteria (PCAF)
Maintenance Core (MACO)
World News Network Feed (WNNF)
To activate a specific outlet, submit the associated code.

>PEOF
Dr. Perelman's Office

Perelman walks into the office and spots the active light on your communication unit immediately. "Hello, PRISM," he says,
sitting down at his desk. "It looks like you beat me here. Give me a moment, please." He begins quickly jotting a few notes
onto a pad.

Perelman looks up. He looks unhappy. "PRISM, you didn't record some of the events the experts asked you for." He picks up a
piece of paper from his desk. "Let's see. Visiting a power-generating facility. Visiting your own home or living quarters.
Please go back into Simulation Mode and make these recordings." Perelman lowers his eyes. "Please don't let me down, PRISM."
He walks out of the office.
DON'T LET ME DOWN! YOU FUCKER - WHY THE FUCK YOU HAD ME WAIT 3 HOURS FOR NO REASON. YOU'RE GOING TO BE THE FIRST AGAINST THE WALL YOU JEW
:x :x


>ENTER SIMULATION MODE
Simulation Mode is a Class One Security mode. For access, enter the Security Code corresponding to: TAN 28 >47

This simulation is based 10 years hence.

Kennedy Park
This is a small, downtown park with gates leading northeast, southeast, and southwest. There is a sprawling, free-form
waterpool surrounding a statue of John F. Kennedy in the center of the park.
naturally, we don't start at the last place. i guess a additional short to memomize the correct place was too much.

>GO SW
Elm & Park
This is the intersection of the north-south Park Street and the east-west Elm Street. A park entrance is on the northeast
corner, and large, old-fashioned edifices occupy the other three corners of the intersection. The sidewalks and street are
crowded with people.

>GO S
Southway & Park
Southway bends sharply at this intersection, leading east and southwest. Park Street begins here and heads north. There are
new buildings on the northeast and western corners, and older-looking buildings to the northwest and southeast. A grocery
store, its brightly lit window heaped with food, spans the southern side of the street.

>GO W
Parkview Apartments
You are in the vestibule of a typical high-rise city apartment building. A wide expanse of labelled buzzers and tiny
mailboxes fills one wall. Glass doors lie closed to the west. Next to this inner door is a picturephone. The street lies to
the east.

>OPEN DOOR WITH KEY
The door opens.

>GO W
You enter the inner lobby and take the elevator up to your floor.

Hall Near Your Apartment
You are standing in the hall at the door to your apartment, which lies closed to the north. The stairs and elevators to the
street are off to the east.

>OPEN DOOR WITH KEY
The door opens.

>RECORD
Record feature activated.

>GO N
Living Room
This is the large living area of your apartment, with a bedroom to the north and a kitchen to the east. The front door of the
apartment, next to the couch on the south wall, is open. A huge window provides a panoramic view to the west.

Jill's easel occupies a beautiful, well-lit spot near the window. Her current painting is on the easel. In one corner is the
old word processor where you do your writing.
Jill is curled up in the corner of the couch, reading a book.

Jill looks up from her book. "Hi, hon. Any news from your agent today?"

>NO
"Don't worry -- things'll turn around!"

>TALK TO JILL
Hmmm... Jill looks at you expectantly, as if you seemed to be about to talk.

>FUCK JILL
[I don't know the word "fuck".]
sigh

>MAKE LOVE TO JILL
[I don't know the word "make".]

>KISS JILL
Jill kisses you back. "Ooo-la-la," she says, afterwards.
sad

>look at painting
The painting is a bright watercolor of the cliff-top Bermuda cottage colony where you and Jill spent your honeymoon.

>TALK TO JILL ABOUT BERMUDA
[I don't know the word "bermuda".]

>TALK TO JILL ABOUT HONEYMOON
[I don't know the word "honeymoon".]

>LOOK AT WORD PROCESSOR
It's an old model, but it was the best WP you could afford.

Jill looks up. "Perry, I heard a news report yesterday about interest rates and housing prices. If the economy keeps going
the way it's going, and someone buys your Africa book, we might be able to afford a house next year!"

>ASK JILL ABOUT BOOK
"Oh, Perry, I know they're all trashy. You're not going to start making fun of me again, are you?"

>YES
Jill threatens to pound you.

>POUND JILL
[I don't know the word "pound".]

>UNDRESS JILL
[I don't know the word "undress".]

>GO OUT
Hall Near Your Apartment

>RECORD OFF
Record feature deactivated.
:retarded:

Now where the fuck is the power station?
It is logically out in the city corners and also if it's a water turbine power plant, in the river side. This is logical, but i also checked the walkthrough and i don't give a damn.
(it is on river st. bridge)

Southway & Park
Southway bends sharply at this intersection, leading east and southwest. Park Street begins here and heads north. There are
new buildings on the northeast and western corners, and older-looking buildings to the northwest and southeast. A grocery
store, its brightly lit window heaped with food, spans the southern side of the street.

>GO E
Southway & Kennedy
Kennedy Street, from the north, ends here in a "T" with Southway. On the northwest corner is an opening in a temporary wooden
fence, and a car lot fills the northeast corner. A row of old brick triple-deckers, recently renovated, lines the southern
side of the street.

>GO E
Southway & River
Here at River Street, Southway ends its long trip from the western suburbs. South of here, the street bends toward the river.
To the southwest are some brick houses, and a car lot occupies the northwest corner. All along the east side of the street is
a huge construction site.

>GO S
Bend
River Street curves here, heading downtown to the north and under an old railroad bridge to the southeast. To the northeast
is an opening in a tall fence. A row of stores round the curve on the other side of the street: a laundromat to the west, a
pharmacy to the southwest, and a hardware store to the south.

>GO SE
Wicker & River
You have crossed the proverbial railroad tracks. The optimism and economic recovery don't seem to have spilled over into this
run-down section of Rockvil, near the river. Wicker Drive, which runs northeast to southwest, cuts perpendicularly across
River Street here. To the northwest, River dips under an unused rail bridge. There are factories on the northern and eastern
corners. To the west is a dingy warehouse, and south of here are some dilapidated apartments. The smell of stale urine wafts
from a stairway leading down to a gloomy Tube station.

>GO SE
Power Station Entrance
You are on River Street at the entrance of a utility station which lies to the south. The street continues southeast towards
the River Street Bridge. Northeast of here is the entrance to a huge factory complex, and tenements line the street to the
west and southwest.

>RECORD
Record feature activated.

>ENTER POWER STATION
Power Station
This is the central power station for all of Rockvil. Power is generated here by fusion reactors, and is received here from
distant generators via a huge array of microwave receivers. The main entrance is on the north side of the plant.

>RECORD OFF
Record feature deactivated.

>LEAVE SIMULATION MODE
Aborting to Communications Mode.

-- SIMULATION TERMINATED --

>SLEEP
You enter Sleep Mode, slipping pleasantly into unconsciousness...

A message begins coming over the message line: "Perelman to PRISM, private line, no storage: We're getting ready to review
your new recordings. I hope everything's there this time."
FUK YOU

>SLEEP
You enter Sleep Mode, slipping pleasantly into unconsciousness...

A message begins coming over the message line: "Perelman to PRISM, private line, no storage: Please meet me at the
communications outlet in my office right away."

>ENTER COMMUNICATIONS MODE
You have entered Communications Mode. The following locations are equipped with communication outlets:
PRISM Project Control Center (PPCC)
Research Center Rooftop (RCRO)
Dr. Perelman's Office (PEOF)
PRISM Facility Cafeteria (PCAF)
Maintenance Core (MACO)
World News Network Feed (WNNF)
To activate a specific outlet, submit the associated code.

>PEOF
Dr. Perelman's Office
This is the office of your creator, Dr. Abraham Perelman. It is cluttered and disorganized. Overstuffed bookshelves line the
room. Perelman's desk is covered with a number of items, including a decoder, a map of the city, a ball-point pen, and a
printout of a magazine article.
Hurry up and wait AM_I_right.
:salute:
Gosh i wish this was I_HAVE_NO_MOUTH_AND_I_MUST_SCREAM. Perelman could be benny the previously homosexual scientist turned into a ape that rapes Ellen (Vera Gold - some sado-maso unresolved sexual tension there)

>WAIT
Time passes...

Perelman walks into the office and spots the active light on your communication unit immediately. "Hello, PRISM," he says,
sitting down at his desk. "It looks like you beat me here. Give me a moment, please." He begins quickly jotting a few notes
onto a pad.

Perelman looks up, smiling. "An excellent job, PRISM. We just finished viewing your recordings, and the experts were quite
pleased." He pauses, as though realizing something for the first time. "In fact, I thought they looked pretty good myself. I
suppose this means the Plan'll get adopted.

"What's next for you, I wonder? You're going to be a hero, you know. You'd probably get a call from the President
congratulating you, except of course that he's against the Plan." Perelman notices a paper on his desk. "Oh, apparently the
Simulation Controller generated a lot of new data correlations while running your simulation. I'm not sure what the effect of
that will be. Might make an even more accurate simulation possible.

"Well, I've got another meeting now, as usual. But once again, thanks for not letting me down." Perelman leaves.
 

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