WHO: vidar etc. WHAT: log, but with starters (OTA + closed to a few) WHEN: throughout june! WHERE: [ handwaves ] NOTES/WARNINGS: will be noted as they come up
Magic is new to me, and I'd love to see more about it, but it's my understanding that witches and wizards and so on are quite secretive about their craft? Perhaps for good reason.
In any case, isn't it good that everyone operates similarly? I wouldn't have been able to ask you for help otherwise if it's something impossible.
[ though he's hoping that there aren't a lot of systems that make use of someone's brain, or soul, or whatever you'd call it as a stand-in for an operating system. ] What kind of stuff do you want to see?
( Another gentle sway comes about that secretiveness; yeah, fairly true in his experience as well, even if they didn't call themselves witches and wizards back there. They still kept their powers to themselves, sometimes even among themselves, never revealing to the rest of the group what they could do.
He's way more passionate about the other portion of this conversation, though. )
Don't get me wrong, it's great that I have at least some idea of what I'm doing with most of this new tech at the start, and it's great that I can generally figure it out using the same... methods, but... I don't know, it'd just be really exciting to see some kind of science or system that worked in a completely baffling, non-intuitive way that I couldn't wrap my head around for a while. Like--
( He struggles visibly for a second, searching his imagination for an example that doesn't sound stupid. )
Liquid metal, or- or- some variant on magnetism, a completely new material or element, or... something. I don't know. Something cool. Some of that abstract science fiction shit.
I think it's nice to be curious. But in that case you'll never be satisfied, no? There is always something out there just beyond the limits of your grasp.
[ vidar can't say that he understands that drive, but he respects it. anyone wanting to pursue something greater than themselves is going beyond the amount of respect vidar pays his own life, but that's not really something for a lighthearted discussion. ] Then again, I suppose that's what defines scientists and poets alike. There's a certain romance in it.
no subject
In any case, isn't it good that everyone operates similarly? I wouldn't have been able to ask you for help otherwise if it's something impossible.
[ though he's hoping that there aren't a lot of systems that make use of someone's brain, or soul, or whatever you'd call it as a stand-in for an operating system. ] What kind of stuff do you want to see?
no subject
He's way more passionate about the other portion of this conversation, though. )
Don't get me wrong, it's great that I have at least some idea of what I'm doing with most of this new tech at the start, and it's great that I can generally figure it out using the same... methods, but... I don't know, it'd just be really exciting to see some kind of science or system that worked in a completely baffling, non-intuitive way that I couldn't wrap my head around for a while. Like--
( He struggles visibly for a second, searching his imagination for an example that doesn't sound stupid. )
Liquid metal, or- or- some variant on magnetism, a completely new material or element, or... something. I don't know. Something cool. Some of that abstract science fiction shit.
no subject
[ vidar can't say that he understands that drive, but he respects it. anyone wanting to pursue something greater than themselves is going beyond the amount of respect vidar pays his own life, but that's not really something for a lighthearted discussion. ] Then again, I suppose that's what defines scientists and poets alike. There's a certain romance in it.
[ or madmen, actually. ]