Adit here – We just said it was the food, but I caused her a bit of a seizure, well not a bit, I mean any seizure is a seizure but it was mild. It was an absence seizure, she went blank for a second and then just got really nauseous. She made it to the bathroom on time.
I got a little board that you can easily tuck away on one of the goggle’s straps. We tested it on Kaitlyn to see if she could get the video feed of the goggle’s camera to go straight to her brain. POV was mapping the simulation’s data to our brains, there was no original visual at all until our brain visualized it. I was mapping the real visuals captured by the goggle’s camera to a data format similar to how the simulation processed.
I tweaked that process to make it more efficient, but what I did contained a mistake, but I am not sure which change was the route of the problem. We’ll go back to exactly the same method tomorrow.
I guess my mistake was subconscious revenge for all the seizures you two gave me when making Adit 2.0. Yes I know about Adit 2.0 terminology – I’m not mad, it fits. I’m not mad about the seizures either, I am definitely not seeking revenge. I know you know this, but I want it on the record. Our record. A record only we read?
This does mean that the frequency method of triggering the neurons isn’t as full proof as we thought. When and if things are a bit more calm around here I’ll work with Janice and see if she or one of her team members has an idea of what happened. I don’t like being restricted to a method I know isn’t as efficient as it could be. But I don’t like giving folks seizures even more, so I’m in no real rush to figure this out.
Chen and Makda are also basically done with the old style VR set up, but they made a custom kernel to run their system that isn’t just an old VR unit but is easily extensible, that can support input from the simulation and export data to alter the simulation, and, ahead of schedule, can support any type of security we develop. There’s your writing on a white board Rob.