6
kiki
3y

This night I had a fever and seen a weird dream. So, scientists discovered that our whole perspective is wrong, and the notion that anything is but a sum of its parts is now completely irrelevant. One can’t disassemble a thing and know how it works and what it consists of. Basically you want to build a computer, you buy all the parts you need, but you can’t assemble it anymore — it just doesn’t work, and nobody knows why. Same is true for cars, industrial machines, software and pretty much anything that have something to do with engineering.

So, earth went into riots, massive layoffs occured, world economy collapsed, and the forces of what used to be USA, China and Russia joined to tackle the problem. A research was started and we found out that we now have complexity cores (!) that distribute emergence (!!) in an ephemeral way (!!!) and that is what makes things work. Theory of New Complexity (!) emerged, and all the engineers were required to go back to universities to attend lectures about how complexity works and how to make things in that new reality

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    I want to know the theory behind this. Like, does the mobo / power supply etc. still work as individual components, just not when you try to put them together? If so, then where does it stop? Amd do the individual components of the power supply work until you put them together?

    So many questions, none of them sensible.
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    @AlmondSauce it’s just like nothing works. Electronic devices just yeeted out of existence. Primitive components work, like resistors and capacitors, but you try to put them together and they function unpredictably
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    Too much cheese before bedtime?
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    @TrevorTheRat which kind of cheese would you recommend? Asking for a friend...
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    @Lensflare I recommend nasal spray made by Takeda based on a recent Japanese research about depression. It travels right into your brain and eradicates otherwise invincible and undetectable HHV-6 that resides there in latent form, therefore curing depression, bipolar disorder, mania and other affective disorders once and for all.

    Too bad it’s still in development.
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    @Lensflare I think I’m immune to cheese dreams, only had one once when I was young and I’ve been trying to recreate the experience ever since.
    If I find the one I’ll let you know
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