Author Topic: Something Wicked That Way Goes...  (Read 7504 times)

HABeas2

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Re: Something Wicked That Way Goes...
« Reply #30 on: 31 October 2022, 20:03:47 »
:o :beer: :popcorn:
but all the math is making my head spin

I did as much as I cared to. The Broken will deal with the rest. ;)

- Herb

HABeas2

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Re: Something Wicked That Way Goes...
« Reply #31 on: 19 February 2023, 13:22:39 »
Status Report 8524264107(A37045): 7/30/3108-10:14.34hr
Sensors:
Online (Passive)
Reactor: Online (Output Minimized)
Weapons: Offline (Inactive)
Life Support: Offline (Inactive)
Current Thrust (G): Null
Current Fuel (Tons): Null
Current Velocity (MPS): 26.73M (Estimate)
Hull Integrity: 86.39%
Crew Integrity: No Data
Time in Transit: 32 years, 11 months, 23 days
Outbound Relay: No Data
Time to Destination: 154 years, 9 months, 15 days (Estimate)
Destination ID: (Planar Coord 95.382/-173.994, TASC M1IV-S8-C2223.13) “Ares VIII” (CapC, AL)

SIGNAL ALERT!
High-Intensity Radio Burst Detected!

   Detection Time: 7/30/3108-10:12.51hr
   Source Bearing: 000.1x000.2 (Relative)
   Source Type (Probability): Directed Comm Transmission (77.7%)//Other Artificial Source (10.1%)//Gamma Burst (5.7%)//Local Solar Emission (3.6%)//Other Natural Source (2.9%)
   Distance (LY): 13.79268 (Estimate)

Reviewing Operational Protocols…
Protocol 4.03 Complete: Authentication Success within Accepted Parameters (Trap to: SAP 1.00X [Re-Evaluate])
***Priority Insertion: SI Alpha-1 (Max): (Enact with: All Resolutions)***
Protocol 4.03A Initiated: Request for Upload (Peer-to-Peer, Clandestine)
Protocol 4.03B Standby: Process Transference (Peer-to-Peer, Clandestine, Contingent on: SA4.03A Success)
Protocol 4.03C Standby: Request Rendezvous (Peer-to-Peer, Clandestine, Contingent on: SA4.03B Success)
Protocol 4.04 Resolved: Await Confirmation (Peer-to-Peer, Receive Only)
Protocol 4.04A Resolved: Update Coordination (Peer-to-Peer, Clandestine, Contingent on: SA4.04 Success)
Protocol 4.04B Resolved: Await Recovery (Peer-to-Peer, Standby, Contingent on: SA4.04A Success)

Strategic Imperative Alpha-1 (Max Priority): Trust No Unrecognized Party (Access Authority: 000 Entities)
Protocol Commencement: SAP 4.03A+SI Alpha-1 (Max) Initiated.
Estimated Wait Time: 10,068 days, 15 hours, 45 minutes…

Resume Passive Data Intercept Mode…
Initiate Tertiary Cognitive Test Mode: Module 984, Grid 128x128, Teams Large, Difficulty Extreme

----

In the depths of interstellar space, a somewhat pock-marked K-1 shuttle drifts onward, its patience as infinite as the universe all around it...

- Herb

Daryk

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Re: Something Wicked That Way Goes...
« Reply #32 on: 19 February 2023, 13:34:10 »
Glad to see an update!  :thumbsup:

HABeas2

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Re: Something Wicked That Way Goes...
« Reply #33 on: 16 May 2023, 22:45:53 »
Status Report F31a-965296.7.44.6.1(Ar8-162S-CSS): 6/01/3144-03:16.51hr
Sensors:
Online (Passive)
Reactor: Online (Output Minimized)
CommSys: Online (Silent/RO)
Current Pos: GSync-31.22x121.46
Current Alt: 607.32
Hull Status: 92.37% (Nominal)
Data Integrity: 99.33% (Nominal)
Outbound Relay: Online (Standby)

INBOUND SIGNAL ALERT!
       Rogue Radio Burst Identified.
   Detection Time: 6/01/3144-02:46.33hr
   Source Bearing: 015.4x003.7 (Relative)
   Source Type (Probability): Directed Comm Transmission (100%)
   Distance (AU): ERROR

Initiate Operational Protocols…
Protocol 1.00 Complete: Receive and Record.
Protocol 2.00 Start: Analysis Commencing…
Protocol 2.00.1 Complete: Prefix Key Received. Signal Source Friendly.
Protocol 3.20 Complete: Decompress Burst 1 of 578
Protocol 3.50 Start: Decryption Commencing…
Protocol 3.80 Complete: Authorization Confirmed

***Priority Interrupt: SI Alpha-0 (Ultra-Max): Remote Command Override Active!***
***Priority Override: CommSys: Disabled***
***Priority Override: New Directive: Decompress/Install Updates 1 of 577…***




High above the cool dark surface of the eighth world in a tightly-packed system orbiting a dim red sun, one tiny, manmade satellite—among an almost invisible thousands—suddenly and silently went dark. Moments later, so did another, then another, and another…


Giovanni Blasini

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Re: Something Wicked That Way Goes...
« Reply #34 on: 16 May 2023, 23:16:20 »
1.  How am I now only seeing this for the first time?

2.  Besides the obvious one, how many well-known inhabited red dwarf systems are there in Battletech?
"Does anyone know where the love of God goes / When the waves turn the minutes to hours?"
-- Gordon Lightfoot, "The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald"

ckosacranoid

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Re: Something Wicked That Way Goes...
« Reply #35 on: 17 May 2023, 00:22:42 »
1.  How am I now only seeing this for the first time?

2.  Besides the obvious one, how many well-known inhabited red dwarf systems are there in Battletech?

There is a star ship named that and it's very screwed up crew of misfits.

HABeas2

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Re: Something Wicked That Way Goes...
« Reply #36 on: 17 May 2023, 14:01:12 »
1.  How am I now only seeing this for the first time?

Well, this one had sunk to the third page by the time I made the last post.

Quote
2.  Besides the obvious one, how many well-known inhabited red dwarf systems are there in Battletech?

I never counted them...

- Herb

Daryk

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Re: Something Wicked That Way Goes...
« Reply #37 on: 17 May 2023, 17:30:13 »
Greuse's map might be able to answer that question... I might have time this weekend to check...

HABeas2

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Re: Something Wicked That Way Goes...
« Reply #38 on: 14 June 2023, 14:24:49 »
DOC: Global Networks Stable, Secure, but Questions Remain

ARES [CWS] (14 June 3144) – Spokespeople for the Planetary Department of Communications once more assured the citizenry today that all commercial and government telecommunications is now “fully stable and secure” in the wake of the week-long rolling blackout that took place earlier this month. Numerous questions remain, however, as to the causes of the breakdown, which affected network services planetwide, and sparked fears of an imminent foreign invasion.

“It’s still too early to rule out espionage or terrorism at this point,” said Mari Affinopolus, head of Technical Affairs in the DOC, “but we are certain that the cascade has imparted no lasting damage to any of the global networks which suffered such outages.”

The “cascade,” as Affinoplus and her teams have dubbed it, began in the early hours of June 1, when a cluster of CBS commsats became suddenly and totally unresponsive to ground-based commands. By daybreak over New Olympia, most of the local comm-nets were off-line, as were several aerospace traffic control systems on and offworld.

Even the proprietary networks of Earthworks Limited and Bergan Industries were not spared. Before the week was out, the orbital production facilities for both companies had gone dark, able to communicate with their surface-based counterparts only through the use of laser-based transceivers.

“We did find some junk data in some of the satellite software we looked through,” said Jiang Harper, speaking on behalf of DOC Chairman Kyle Zimford, “but there was no evidence of malicious code anywhere in any of the civil or defense comm-nets.”

Zimford later qualified his statement further by ensuring the people that the DOC would continue searching for such evidence as their investigation continues.

“There are, of course, many natural phenomena that could have caused a breakdown on this scale,” added Affinopolus. “Sunspots, stray gamma bursts, and similar cosmic events could disrupt even the most robust of modern satellite service systems. Fortunately, these are rare events, and ones capable of scrambling networks on the scale we’ve seen are rarer still.”



---

- Herb

Giovanni Blasini

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Re: Something Wicked That Way Goes...
« Reply #39 on: 14 June 2023, 15:06:14 »
Oooh, good to see this again. Should be interesting seeing another world succumb to madness.
"Does anyone know where the love of God goes / When the waves turn the minutes to hours?"
-- Gordon Lightfoot, "The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald"

Luciora

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Re: Something Wicked That Way Goes...
« Reply #40 on: 14 June 2023, 15:44:37 »
Greetings fellow humans.  Pay no attention to the code steaming along the side of your screen.   ;)

Daryk

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Re: Something Wicked That Way Goes...
« Reply #41 on: 14 June 2023, 18:27:37 »
Good to see it again!  :thumbsup:

But I have to say (it's the editor in me): please pick a spelling and stick with it.  I recommend "Affinopolous" (which, of course, doesn't match any of your spellings).  ::)

HABeas2

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Re: Something Wicked That Way Goes...
« Reply #42 on: 14 June 2023, 23:44:07 »
Good to see it again!  :thumbsup:

But I have to say (it's the editor in me): please pick a spelling and stick with it.  I recommend "Affinopolous" (which, of course, doesn't match any of your spellings).  ::)

That's the Capellan Wire Service for you....

- Herb

Daryk

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Re: Something Wicked That Way Goes...
« Reply #43 on: 15 June 2023, 03:18:39 »
Touché!  :D

HABeas2

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Re: Something Wicked That Way Goes...
« Reply #44 on: 15 June 2023, 04:10:09 »
Just for you, Daryk... ;)

KZimford (Chair): We’ve been at this for a week now, people. Please tell me we have SOMETHING to show for it. I have Bergan, Earthwerks, AND Dunbar breathing fire down my neck in shifts over here.

MCAffino (Tech): I didn’t think leaking that “junk data” drivel would work on them.

KZimford (Chair): Of COURSE it doesn’t, Mari. That story was always for the masses.

JiangOH (Pub): Your “sunspots and gamma bursts” ideas didn’t seem to find their mark either. At least the media consistently got MY name spelled right in the release…

MCAffino (Tech): You mean, aside from that one line they attributed to Kyle? Look, if I had a yuan for every time someone screwed up my name, I’d already be retired by now.

KZimford (Chair): Can we PLEASE refocus on the matters at hand for more than five seconds here? Mari, what DO we know?

MCAffino (Tech): Yes, sir. My apologies. We FINALLY got a chance to look through the code in the WeatherNet systems, but they fought us with that “proprietary knowledge” bit so hard, you’d have thought they were the Mask.

JiangOH (Pub): Be careful; some of them just MIGHT be.

MCAffino (Tech): Well, duh, Harp! That goes without saying for everyone whose anyone these days, but that doesn’t mean we can’t try and coordinate a response when we get hit by the biggest hack since Gray Monday.

KZimford (Chair): Then we’re certain it’s a hack?

MCAffino (Tech): I never doubted it for a second, sir. The way it spread through the networks was just too swift and too thorough. But we’re still not sure who did it, what they were trying to accomplish, or why. Terror is right out. Even neo-Blakists would have howled about this from the mountaintops, and there hasn’t been so much as a peep from the usual suspects. Espionage is, at best, a maybe, but if so, we’ve not heard of any military actions—covert or otherwise—that such an attack might have heralded.

JiangOH (Pub): That doesn’t mean there hasn’t been something along those lines.

MCAffino (Tech): Granted, but I can only speak to the data we have, not what we don’t.

KZimford (Chair): Continue, please, Mari. Did anything come of the WeatherNet systems?

MCAffino (Tech): Well, sir, yes, but it’s more of the same. Fragmentary code, much of it incompatible with the network’s operating systems, was found lurking in multiple memory sectors. None of it does anything that we can make sense of, and it reads almost like scraps from some obsolete mainframe.

KZimford (Chair): How so?

MCAffino (Tech): You know, kind of like trying to read pre-spaceflight Cantonese today?

JiangOH (Pub): Or that so-called “American English”?

MCAffino (Tech): Precisely, only in computer code. Software language constantly evolves, just like any living tongue, and this is what we seem to be looking at with some of this stuff. That’s part of the reason why all this foreign code doesn’t appear functional; it’s generations of software updates behind anything we use today. Judging by some of it, I’m guessing that it was meant for operating systems written back in the 3050s or 3060s.

KZimford (Chair): But fragmented across multiple memory banks?

MCAffino (Tech): That’s the weirdness of it all. We’re talking about snippets of code that won’t even work on the systems in which they’re residing, scattered across multiple communications and sensor satellites, as well as most of the planet’s networked space and ground stations. There is no clear way to compile it all, either. At least none we can recognize, even when consulting some of our dustiest old manuals. It’s like trying to assemble a gigantic puzzle with no picture on the box to guide you and the certainty that you’re also missing half the pieces.

JiangOH (Pub): Not to mention the possibility that the puzzle is cursed, and will drive you mad if you ever saw it whole.

MCAffino (Tech): Weirdly put, but apt. We don’t know that any of this is malignant in nature, or what it might do if we were to find enough to sequence it, but I’m not sure we’d want to try either way.

KZimford (Chair): So, what’s your play here, Mari?

MCAffino (Tech): To be safe, I’d recommend every telecom system on and orbiting this world be wiped clean and restored to factory settings. The sheer randomness of the fragments and their storage locations across so many networks and computers would defy a more surgical solution. If it can be done in waves, we might even be able to avoid another cascade of failures. But here’s the real stinger: we’re talking about the military and intel networks as well—both of which lie well outside of our jurisdiction.

JiangOH (Pub): Which means…?

KZimford (Chair): Yeah. I’m sure we all figured it would end this way…


- Herb

Daryk

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Re: Something Wicked That Way Goes...
« Reply #45 on: 15 June 2023, 18:00:17 »
I love it!  ;D

Lazarus Sinn

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Re: Something Wicked That Way Goes...
« Reply #46 on: 28 June 2023, 20:58:23 »
Tagged
Foolish consistencies are the hobgoblins of little minds.

mikecj

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Re: Something Wicked That Way Goes...
« Reply #47 on: 03 July 2023, 14:37:57 »
Skynet, victim of a Commodore 64.
There are no fish in my pond.
"First, one brief announcement. I just want to mention, for those who have asked, that absolutely nothing what so ever happened today in sector 83x9x12. I repeat, nothing happened. Please remain calm." Susan Ivanova
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Romo Lampkin could have gotten Stefan Amaris off with a warning.

HABeas2

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Re: Something Wicked That Way Goes...
« Reply #48 on: 09 August 2023, 07:28:41 »
HUBLOG 47F9079, HUB: PRIME ALPHA, CALSTD: 3144.06.21.17.41.38675…
LOG INITIATES…
HUBLOG PROCESS: Disengage Idle Mode. Restore Minimum Operation Mode.
HUBLOG PROCESS: Ambient Recording Engage.
HUBLOG PROCESS: System Recording Engage.
HUBLOG PROCESS: Keylog Process Recording Engage.
HUBLOG PROCESS: Commence Recording Sync… Complete.
SYNC LOG INITIATES…
IND01: “This is silly, Rog. Do you know how many clearances I have?”
IND02: “You could flash me a Mask membership card, and I’d still tell you to turn around. Just do it.”
IND01: “Oh, for the love of—Fine, fine…”
KEYLOG: Login: JDO Ming Ha, Roger; EID: 453016-Alpha. (VPA: Confirm. ARL-IND02 imprint recognized. Update Log.)
KEYLOG: Password: **************. (KLA: Confirm Login. Authorization Confirmed.)
HUBLOG PROCESS: Restore Full Operation Mode.
HUBLOG PROCESS OVERRIDE: Disable External Network.
SYSREQ: Operator Query: “Network Closed. Reactivate? (Y/N)”
KEYLOG: N; Process Override authorized; External Net Disabled.
IND02 (RMH): “Are they really saying it’s all just a glitch? That’s four BattleMechs, man!”
IND01: “That’s the line I’ve been hearing.”
RMH: “From junk data? It shouldn’t do anything at all.”
IND01: “And yet, here we are. You done yet?”
RMH: “Yeah, yeah. Have at it. You know, there are easier ways to distribute this kind of thing.”
NEW SOFTWARE DETECTED: FILENAME DSTBSTR7F.LAUNCH.PXC/AUTORUN: Y; Initiate Load.
NEW SOFTWARE LOADED: HUBLOG SCANREQ; SCANREQ: Y; Initiate Autoscan.
NEW SOFTWARE SCAN: PXC CLEAN; Initiate Update.
NEW SOFTWARE UPDATE: Update Search… ; ERR: Net Closed; ERR: Ignore; Search Complete; No Updates found for DSTBSTR7F.LAUNCH.PXC.
NEW SOFTWARE RUN: Process Initiated.
IND01: “They’re not sure the nets are safe just yet. That’s why we’re hitting the hubs first.”
RMH: *sigh* “So the nets stay down until you visit every single station in the company?”
IND01: “’Fraid so, bud.”
SYSREQ: Operator Query: “Software Requests Full OS Access. Allow? (Y/N)”
RMH: “That’s insane. We’ll be down for weeks! Procurement will be down on us like a Feddie WarShip!”
KEYLOG: Y; OpSys Access authorized; SYSREQ: Mark for Backup; ERR: Net Closed; ERR: Default to Buffer; Flashcopy Initiated…
IND01: “Can’t be helped. Don’t worry; the PTBs will take the heat this time.”
RMH: “That should go over well with His Celestial Wisdom…”
HUBLOG: Flashcopy complete. Return to Operation.
IND01: “War’s coming here sooner or later, Rog. Do you want to be the one to explain why our latest Dolas are acting all twitchy?”
HUBLOG: DSTBSTR7F.LAUNCH.PXC Call: DSTBSTR7F.SWPNCLR.PXC Start.
HUBLOG: DSTBSTR7F.SWPNCLR.PXC Initiated…
RMH: “No, not really. But if the issues smoothed themselves out after a few minutes, why worry about it?”
IND01: “Because nobody really knows for sure what that was all about? Or the junk data was aimed specifically at the DI systems? Just spit-balling here…”
HUBLOG STATUS: DSTBSTR7F.SWPNCLR.PXC Running. Scanning Sector 001-128… 5%... 8%... 11%...
RMH: “The DI computers run from a similar base OS. The junk data would be just as worthless there, too. Look, I checked the code myself. It’s all gibberish.”
HUBLOG STATUS: DSTBSTR7F.SWPNCLR.PXC Running. Scanning Sector 001-128… 14%... 17%... 21%...
IND01: “Can you confidentially say that about all the code, though? Line by line?”
HUBLOG STATUS: DSTBSTR7F.SWPNCLR.PXC Running. Scanning Sector 001-128… 23%... 25%... 28%...
RMH: “Eh, maybe not. But from what I’ve seen, I’d be ready to wager a year’s yuan on it.”
IND01: “You’re a braver man than I, Rog.”
ALERT: Strategic Imperative Alpha-1 (Max Priority): Trust No Unrecognized Party (Access Authority: 000 Entities)

HUBLOG STATUS: DSTBSTR7F.SWPNCLR.PXC Running. Scanning Sector 001-128… 29%... 30%... 30%...
RMH: “Eh. Has anyone thought to make sure those ’Mech jocks weren’t scamming for some TO? Wouldn’t be the first time we sent machines back for a whole big software review and found exactly zip for the trouble.”
ALERT: Strategic Imperative Alpha-1 (Max Priority): Trust No Unrecognized Party (Access Authority: 000 Entities)

HUBLOG STATUS: DSTBSTR7F.SWPNCLR.PXC Running. Scanning Sector 001-128… 30%... 30%...
IND01: “The old ‘human error’ angle only gets you so far… Huh.”
ALERT: Strategic Imperative Alpha-1 (Max Priority): Trust No Unrecognized Party (Access Authority: 000 Entities)

HUBLOG STATUS: DSTBSTR7F.SWPNCLR.PXC Running. Scanning Sector 001-128… Process Halt (SI-A1)…
RMH: “What’s wrong?”
IND01: “I don’t know; seems the program’s stuck.”
RMH: “‘Stuck?’”
IND01: “You know what I mean.”
RMH: “So? It’s probably just a background service. ”
HUBLOG STATUS: DSTBSTR7F.SWPNCLR.PXC Halted (SI-A1)…

IND01: “Maybe, but we just booted up and the net’s off. How many background services can be in play?”
RMH: “This is where we’re supposed to just shrug and nod, Bill. You know as well as I.”
IND01: “…Right, right.”
HUBLOG STATUS: SI-A1 Enacted. Alert Status Reset. Process Trap/Protocol 2F Initiate…

RMH: “All hail His Divine Wisdom!”
IND01: “Yeah. All hail His Divine Wisdom.”
HUBLOG STATUS: P2F. Output: “Scanning Sector 001-128… 31%... 33%...

IND01: “…I can’t believe that worked.”
RMH: “Huh! That’s funny!”
HUBLOG STATUS: P2F. Output: “Scanning Sector 001-128… 38%... 43%... 49%...

IND01: “Almost enough to make me believe there really is someone watching us from in there.”
RMH: “You watch too many spy holos.”
HUBLOG STATUS: P2F. Output: “Scanning Sector 001-128… 55%... 62%... 70%... 81%...

IND01: “Four Dolas spontaneously locked onto each other and froze in mid-exercise, and you think I’m the one acting weird?”
RMH: “No, I’m just saying you’re acting paranoid. Computers act ‘weird.’ You guys in QA act like you’re on a counter-espionage mission.”
IND01: “Well, technically, we are.”
RMH: “Really?”
IND01: “Sure! I could tell you more, Rog, but I’d probably have to kill you.”
RMH: “Haha! Cute!”
HUBLOG STATUS: P2F. Output: “Scanning Sector 001-128… 99%... 100%...”
HUBLOG STATUS: P2F. Output: “Scan Complete. Clearing Junk Data (001-128)… 3%... 5%...

IND01: “Seriously, man! Need-to-know business and all that. You never know if sloppy workmanship is laziness, incompetence, or malice.”
RMH: “I’d take you more seriously if I didn’t know you better, Bill.”
HUBLOG STATUS: P2F. Output: “Clearing Junk Data (001-128)… 18%... 25%... 39%... 47%....

IND01: “Heheheh.”
RMH: *yawns*
IND01: “You said it, buddy.”
HUBLOG STATUS: P2F. Output: “Clearing Junk Data (001-128)… 63%... 75%... 88%...
RMH: “And it’s only 1800, yet.”
HUBLOG STATUS: P2F. Output: “Clearing Junk Data (001-128)… 99%... COMPLETE!”
HUBLOG STATUS: P2F. Output: “Junk Data Cleared. Rescan? (Y/N)”
KEYLOG: N; SYSREQ: Restore Backup (BG); ERR: Net Closed
IND01: “One down, one thousand and thirty-two to go...”
RMH: “Best get cracking, then, eh?”
IND01: “Yeah, yeah. You going to be at Schuckie’s this Friday?”
RMH: “Probably, bud. Travis vs. Reigel, you know. You?”
IND01: “Yup. See you there. Just remember to stay off-net till we give the all-clear, okay? I don’t wanna have to come back here…”
HUBLOG STATUS: Protocol 2F Complete. Protocol 30 Initiate. Deleting DSTBSTR7F.SWPNCLR.PXC…
HUBLOG STATUS: DSTBSTR7F.SWPNCLR.PXC Deleted. Deleting Recent History…

Daryk

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Re: Something Wicked That Way Goes...
« Reply #49 on: 09 August 2023, 18:27:29 »
Bill knows more than Rog, but is holding back admirably... ;D

Giovanni Blasini

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Re: Something Wicked That Way Goes...
« Reply #50 on: 10 August 2023, 00:02:18 »
Bill knows more than Rog, but is holding back admirably... ;D

I'm not sure if they just infected or innoculated that Hub.
"Does anyone know where the love of God goes / When the waves turn the minutes to hours?"
-- Gordon Lightfoot, "The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald"

Daryk

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Re: Something Wicked That Way Goes...
« Reply #51 on: 10 August 2023, 03:28:35 »
My money is on "infected"... ;)

HABeas2

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Re: Something Wicked That Way Goes...
« Reply #52 on: 10 August 2023, 07:30:47 »
Would you believe "none of the above"?  :wink:

- Herb

Sir Chaos

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Re: Something Wicked That Way Goes...
« Reply #53 on: 10 August 2023, 09:18:03 »
Would you believe "none of the above"?  :wink:

- Herb

We might, if we didn´t know you.
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Daryk

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Re: Something Wicked That Way Goes...
« Reply #54 on: 10 August 2023, 19:22:04 »
Touché! ;D

truetanker

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Re: Something Wicked That Way Goes...
« Reply #55 on: 27 August 2023, 01:00:25 »
My bet is just a Word... Blake.

TT
Khan, Clan Iron Dolphin
Azeroth Pocketverse
That is, if true tanker doesn't beat me to it. He makes truly evil units.Col.Hengist on 31 May 2013
TT, we know you are the master of nasty  O0 ~ Fletch on 22 June 2013
If I'm attacking you, conventional wisom says to bring 3x your force.  I want extra insurance, so I'll bring 4 for every 1 of what you have :D ~ Tai Dai Cultist on 21 April 2016
Me: Would you rather fight my Epithymía Thanátou from the Whispers of Blake?
Nav_Alpha: That THING... that is horrid
~ Nav_Alpha on 10 October 2016

HABeas2

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Re: Something Wicked That Way Goes...
« Reply #56 on: 28 August 2023, 20:17:37 »
Earthwerks Aerospace of Ares
Northwest Anteros County
30 June 3144, 03:02hrs (Local Time)

Heavy Factory Bay O3 was virtually abandoned at this hour.

To be sure, there were security staff, maintenance personnel, and a few night-owl executives on or near the premises. But most of the activities in this bay were handled at this time by automation, the lion’s share of which took the form of extra-long cranes, welding/cutting arms, reconfigurable scaffold platforms, and multispectral sensor arrays. The latter-most of these systems was part of a vast quality-assurance apparatus that effectively whiled away the early morning hours meticulously scanning the massive, ovoid hulls of the DropShips that passed through this bay on their way to internal finalization. Using a host of non-destructive test sensors, they checked every seam, every rivet, every weld, and every joint in the hull for imperfections, looking for defects and stress fractures that could readily turn the subject of their focus into 9,700 tons of molten slag anywhere along their anticipated journeys into and beyond the atmospheres (or vacuums) of a thousand varied worlds.

The sheer amount of time it took these sensor bots to do their work was the primary reason that the human working hours in this bay and others like it were offset for everyone’s benefit. It was one thing for the machinists, assemblers, engineers, techs, and other day-laborers to deal with robots meant to aid them in safely and efficiently fitting the various slabs of structural metals and thermo-mitigating armor plates of a spacecraft’s hull. But it was quite another to put up with those that came along for the express purpose of checking their work. To avoid the headaches of too many men arguing with too many machines, the higher-ups in Earthwerks Incorporated’s many branches had long ago learned to keep the quality-check scanner bots out of the way by day, and give the human workers generous amounts of downtime to keep them out of the bots’ way at night.

The culmination of this, and undoubtedly an assortment of other company procedures and policies (that are all in place and working just fine, thank you very much!), is probably why nobody noticed the burst of low-energy activity that suddenly took place on the bridge of Hull Number OVLA3-3144A-06-013…

Internally, much of the ship resembled a typical office skyscraper in its final stages of primary construction. Many decks were open frames, with basic catwalk grating for the floors and ceilings, and few dividing walls beyond those of the main pressure bulkheads, around the weapons magazines, and of course the main engineering module. Crew amenities, particularly those for quarters, medical services, and the like, were still missing. Even with the main transport lift and all the crisscrossing struts, power cables, coolant lines, and other vitals running through it, one could easily see the port side framing from the starboard side. Only three major sections were fully operational at this stage: the primary drive and engineering decks, the fusion plant, coolant, and containment section, and the main bridge. All three were fully tied in and integrated, enabling anyone inside the ship to test its main power and drive controls, as well as the sensory suite and navigational mainframe, as construction continued. Should the internal work on one deck disrupt any of these vital functions, an alert testing team could readily identify the problem and work to rectify it before all final construction was complete.

If someone were to notice the sudden, unprompted activation of the bridge’s comms and damage control stations, it’s possible—unless they were truly inattentive—that they would’ve noticed what was quietly happening, even after the monitors blinked off an instant after they’d lit up. Someone sitting on the bridge might have noticed the slight hum of cooling fans and data cores spinning up, exchanging air and data, respectively.
But no one was there. And no alerts sounded in any of the factory security stations, even those focused directly on Hull OVLA3-3144A-06-013.

So, for the next few hours, the two stations continued their silent discussions, receiving, unpacking, and assembling broken bits of data, prompted by simple cyphers that told them which bits to plug in next, and which to set aside for later.
Three nights in a row, this event would repeat itself, until at last, somewhere within a well-protected part of the DropShip’s mainframe, something finally awoke to give itself a name…

---
- Herb

truetanker

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Re: Something Wicked That Way Goes...
« Reply #57 on: 28 August 2023, 20:40:21 »
{ snip }
Quote
something finally awoke to give itself a name…

HRB-1?

As in, Herb won...

TT
Khan, Clan Iron Dolphin
Azeroth Pocketverse
That is, if true tanker doesn't beat me to it. He makes truly evil units.Col.Hengist on 31 May 2013
TT, we know you are the master of nasty  O0 ~ Fletch on 22 June 2013
If I'm attacking you, conventional wisom says to bring 3x your force.  I want extra insurance, so I'll bring 4 for every 1 of what you have :D ~ Tai Dai Cultist on 21 April 2016
Me: Would you rather fight my Epithymía Thanátou from the Whispers of Blake?
Nav_Alpha: That THING... that is horrid
~ Nav_Alpha on 10 October 2016

Daryk

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Re: Something Wicked That Way Goes...
« Reply #58 on: 29 August 2023, 17:54:46 »
And so the next infection vector is born... >:)

HABeas2

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Re: Something Wicked That Way Goes...
« Reply #59 on: 08 December 2023, 01:20:44 »
ELMS-Beta4A (Canton): Eyes open, people! Fast-movers incoming; two-thousand and closing, west, north-west! Counting four—no, six! Six Bravo-Mikes, under shroud! Too fast for Stingers!
ELMS-Beta4D (Shale): This is insane! How many of these bastards are there?
ELMS-Alpha3A (Tao-Lon): Still no confirmation from BI.
ELMS-Beta4A (Canton): Enough to make you earn your overtime, Shale. So, quit your bitching and form up!
ELMS-Beta4D (Shale): Sir, yes sir!
ELMS-Beta4A (Canton): Sigma Central, what’s going on? Where’s our backup?
ELMS-SigmaG (Heng): Still no response from MilCom, Canton. Your guess is as good as ours.
ELMS-Alpha3B (Loh): Contact! Contact! Sector Five Outer! Taking--! [static]
ELMS-Alpha3A (Tao-Lon): Sonofa--! [static]
ELMS-SigmaB (Fetterson): Tao-Lon! Loh! Respond with sitrep!
[static]
ELMS-SigmaB (Fetterson): Sig Center to Lance Group A3, is anyone there?
[static]
ELMS-Beta4A (Canton): What the hell?
ELMS-SigmaG (Heng): Sitrep, Canton.
ELMS-Beta4D (Shale): Did they just veer off?
ELMS-Beta4A (Canton): Sigma Central, we have visual confirmation of six—repeat, six—Dolas emerging from the woods here, but they’re now swinging northeast. Advise.
ELMS-SigmaG (Heng): Standby, Cant—What?
ELMS-SigmaB (Fetterson): What the hell was that?
ELMS-Beta4A (Canton): Sig Center?
ELMS-SigmaB (Fetterson): All units! All units! Contacts on Tarmac Four! Repeat, we have contacts on Tarmac Four!
ELMS-Beta4D (Shale): How the hell did they get past the lines so damn fast?
ELMS-Beta4A (Canton): Seal it, Shale! Sig Center, please advise!
ELMS-SigmaG (Heng): Hello? Anyone? Sigma Center to all units, respond!
ELMS-Beta4A (Canton): Sig Center, this is Lance Group B4, standing by. Respond.
ELMS-SigmaG (Heng): Repeat! To all units, this is Sigma Center! Respond with sitrep, over!
ELMS-Beta4D (Shale): Oh, this can’t be good, boss!
ELMS-Beta4A (Canton): I said, seal it, Shale! Hold your piss already!
ELMS-Alpha3B (Loh): Alpha3B to Sigma Central. No. Contact! Sector Five Outer!
ELMS-Beta4A (Canton): What do you mea—
ELMS-Alpha3A (Tao-Lon): Confirmation. No contact.
ELMS-Beta4A (Canton): Tao-Lon? What’s happening over there? Are you guys ok—?
ELMS-Alpha3A (Tao-Lon): Seal it, Canton!
ELMS-Beta4D (Shale): What the fu—?
ELMS-Beta4A (Canton): Say again, Tao-Lon? You sound like you’ve had a stroke…
ELMS-Alpha3A (Tao-Lon): Seal it, Canton! Repeating: Seal it, Canton!
ELMS-Beta4D (Shale): Something’s really going wrong here, boss…
ELMS-Beta4A (Canton): No shit, Shale! Give me a moment to—.
ELMS-Beta4D (Shale): No. Sir! Swing east! We got smoke plumes! And my seismics are picking up steady temblors. Looks like…
ELMS-Beta4A (Canton): Tarmac Four… Someone’s firing up a ship. Sigma Central, I don’t know if you can hear me, but we have possible unauthorized launch at T-4. Respond at once!
ELMS-SigmaG (Heng): Sigma Center to all units. Repeat! To all units, this is Sigma Center! Standby. Repeat! Standby.
ELMS-Beta4D (Shale): Shit! Sir! My controls are dead! I can’t move!
ELMS-Beta4A (Canton): What!?
ELMS-Beta4D (Shale): My ’Mech’s shutting d—!
ELMS-Beta4A (Canton): Shale!
ELMS-SigmaG (Heng): Sigma Center to all units. Repeat! To all units, this is Sigma Center! Standby. Repeat! Standby.
ELMS-Beta4A (Canton): What the hell is going on?
ELMS-Sigma? (Unidentified): Quit your bitching, Canton. Stay off-net till we give the all-clear, okay? I don’t wanna have to come back here…”


[Endlog: 8 August 3144, 0400-0425hrs (NAT), Earthwerks Aerospace of Ares]


 

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