Theemile wrote:Weird Harold"[quote="Theemile wrote:So instead of rivers of information everywhere they look - Tree-cats might see a spinning kaleidoscope of flashing lights and hear awful, ear-piercing sounds ....
I doubt that it is nearly that bad. Sorrow Singer was able to use a video communications link to confer with Honor. Nimitz and Samantha, both, are able to program ship's lifts to get around ships unaided.
It would seem that Treecats can interpret at least basic imaging technology that doesn't require skilled interpretation -- like radar/lidar displays. Like speech and signing, I suspect that such use of technology is a relatively recent development; Early interactions with Treecats in the anthologies suggest that they didn't understand "mouth noises" or technology then and it took centuries before any sort of breakthrough.
Actually, I agree completely, since it's written that way, but we can't assume that they (or any other species for that matter) hear/see
everything we do. I'm reminded of a co-worker in college who worked with me at a Target store. We were always supposed to wear a "Target red" shirt. She was colorblind and was unable to see that her "red" shirt was a orange tomato soup color - or when she accidentially slipped on an identical green polo. For her, flashing green or red indicators would not necessarily indicate anything to her, where it would to someone else.
Another case in point, your average cell phone camera can see a wider set of light frequencies than we do. Take an IR TV remote and point it at the camera and press some buttons - you will see it as a violet-white light as the screen tries to translate those frequencies into something we can actually see. Those cameras can't see much more than we can - just 10-15 Hz or so more on each end of the visual spectrum, but the camera's visual processors deliberately translate it into something we can see.
The IR capability is, of course on purpose, to allow "night vision" - since we can't see light in these frequencies, it can put it's distance sensors and "night vision" shots in these frequency ranges and light up the room with IR LEDs and range finder lasers and we can't see them - except on our screen.
However, to someone with a just slightly wider set of vision frequencies, they would be blinded by the LEDs and the lasers when the camera turns on.
As I said previously, it's odd to find a close evolutionary species that uses their sensory perception the same way we do (with the same limitations and strengths), it would be very odd to find another extra-terrestrial species which could perceive the world EXACTLY as we do.[/quote]
It's a good idea, but IIRC cats see at different wavelengths than humans. In ABF Stephanie was speculating that the celery thief was seeing at higher frequencies than humans because they were avoiding IR laser trip-wires and built her trip-wires to use the lower end, in the UV spectrum.