Tenshinai wrote:The nanotech just doesn't fit - they can't make decent AI or even smart control software given tons of molycircs
Actual AI as opposed to a wellwritten program trying to fake being intelligent, is vastly harder to achieve than commonly thought today.
What´s called AI today is nearly completely rubbish and has almost nothing to do with real AI.
I know, that was why I had "AIs" in quotes higher in my post, and "or even smart control software" in your quote.
My point was that the behaviour the 'nanotech' shows - detect situation matching preset parameters, then act on it (and not just with preset moves, the Filareta disaster has the guy punching specific buttons) - is more than we've seen out of any other Honorverse computer.
If you can read audiovisual data, recognise people, speech and context and use that to determine when the fleet just surrendered, you
have good enough heuristics to be a hell of a lot more useful than conventional Honorverse computers actually are.
And that's with tiny, disconnected nanotech devices, plugged into undocumented neurons (if they
did have accurate information on individual neurons, replacement limbs wouldn't be an issue). A conventional computer made of Mesan nanotech magic wouldn't just catch up to 2015-level computers, it would be taking over the galaxy.
Oh, and the unfakeable tongue-barcodes.
Tenshinai wrote:Did anyone actually claim that they were unfakeable?
The following quotes (I suspect there are a few more), plus the simple fact that
everyone - the BSC, Torch, slavers, apparently Manpower itself - treats them as such. No-one's ever suggested faking them, or suspected that they might be faked; the mere glimpse of one is enough to put slave-traders at ease.
"The marker was unique and difficult to duplicate - impossible really, if it was examined at close quarters."
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"Even from a bit of a distance, that marker was effectively impossible to disguise or mimic"
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"There's no way known for that kind of genetic tongue-marker to be faked cosmetically. Not against the kind of scanning we do, at least. [snip] Trust me, we've already determined that both the codes in this instance are as genuine as genuine can be. Duplicates, yes; fakes, no."