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> When you want that burger cooked just so...
Crusher Bob
post Jan 17 2004, 03:54 AM
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Anyone though of using chips to replicate 'exactly' certain skills. So that each McDonalds hamburger can be exactly the same, or the new janitor can clean the floor 'just so'? If you offer your fast food employees a loan to get a chipjack and then slot them with 'McDonalds burger making: 3' then you don't need to train them or anything... Also, the company can be sure you are not using them as a stepping stone to bigger and better things, when you quit the job all your skills stay with the job...
For relatively simple stuff it sounds like a possible solution.
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toturi
post Jan 17 2004, 04:31 AM
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Sounds like Baseball in 2060 (Wolf and Raven).
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Siege
post Jan 17 2004, 04:35 AM
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It's possible, but damn -- flipping burgers isn't that complicated and certainly not worth the effort and cost of implanting your burger jockies with chipjacks at a cost of how much?

Now, I can see entire think-tanks of vegetables wired with chipjacks and knowledge skills: mathematics, physics and so on. :grinbig:

-Siege
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mfb
post Jan 17 2004, 04:38 AM
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i can't. an S-K would be much cheaper.
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Siege
post Jan 17 2004, 04:41 AM
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Yes, but the human imagination can spawn academic leaps that a computer lacks.

Or maybe I'm just being perverse. :grinbig:

-Siege
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Crusher Bob
post Jan 17 2004, 04:46 AM
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Man to computer: "Can you supply a sample of a non-computable problem?"

Computer: "Damn you, James T Kirk!"

or maybe you are looking for:
and AC said "LET THERE BE LIGHT."
and there was light.
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Spookymonster
post Jan 17 2004, 05:42 AM
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In my games, dockworkers at the Port of Tacoma can go for the 'Lifer' package. Agree to an indentured servant contract, and the Metroplex will provide you with a chipjack and a basic (level 3) set of skillwires. Rather than train you to use the different types of equiptment (hovercrafts, powerboats, rotorcraft), they just give you a cluster chip with the skills already burned in. One day, they need a tug pilot; the next, they need someone to shuttle a hovercraft over to Federated Boeing. If you're unloading cargo for a foreign ship and crew, they'll slot you an appropriate linguasoft to make things go smoothly. Chipjacks also work great for slotting ship and crew manifests, as well as customs procedures and hazardous material protocols. Every chip issued to you is logged, with missing chips being deducted directly from your paycheck.
Aggressive young turks often accept the Lifer package, seeing it as a fast-path to a foreman or even management job.
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kevyn668
post Jan 17 2004, 05:59 AM
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QUOTE
Spookymonster Posted on Jan 17 2004, 05:42 AM
  In my games, dockworkers at the Port of Tacoma can go for the 'Lifer' package. Agree to an indentured servant contract, and the Metroplex will provide you with a chipjack and a basic (level 3) set of skillwires. Rather than train you to use the different types of equiptment (hovercrafts, powerboats, rotorcraft), they just give you a cluster chip with the skills already burned in. One day, they need a tug pilot; the next, they need someone to shuttle a hovercraft over to Federated Boeing. If you're unloading cargo for a foreign ship and crew, they'll slot you an appropriate linguasoft to make things go smoothly. Chipjacks also work great for slotting ship and crew manifests, as well as customs procedures and hazardous material protocols. Every chip issued to you is logged, with missing chips being deducted directly from your paycheck.
Aggressive young turks often accept the Lifer package, seeing it as a fast-path to a foreman or even management job.


I like it. I like it alot.

I was thinking the same thing about the burgers. Wouldn't you need skillwires for that to work? I mean, flipping that burger is "active", right? :lick:
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Crusher Bob
post Jan 17 2004, 06:11 AM
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And you thought your boss didn't know what he was doing...
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Frag-o Delux
post Jan 17 2004, 10:58 AM
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This maybe a little off topic, but if you are using chip for a skill for a long time, would be possible for the person to start to gain the ability to learn that skill? I mean if you drive a tug boat for months wouldn't you start to learn it with out the chip? Or after readign enough forieng lauges with the chips help wouldn't you start to learn a little about the launguage, I am not saying you'll become fluent, but you can recognize words with out the chip? I am not sure I haven't read the chipjack/skillwire rules in a long time.
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ting-bu-dong
post Jan 17 2004, 11:22 AM
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Hi,
it would make sense, but I doubt it would work, because skillsofts are described as giving machine-like skill. You can speak a language, but you cannot write poetry in it or become in another way creative in it.
If I recall correctly, in the second Neuromancer novel, a character uses a Spanish linguasoft. When he removes that chip, every knowledge of the language is erased and it's like he had never spoken a word of Spanish before.
While this is not Shadowrun, I suppose the Shadowrun linguasofts are based on the Gibson chips so they would work the same.

tbd
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Siege
post Jan 17 2004, 01:11 PM
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A machine skill exists only on the chip -- your body has no grey matter available to retain the information as the character performs the action.

I would imagine it would be a massively frustrating feeling to try and "Remember" a ghost skill a character used on a chip.

-Siege
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Frag-o Delux
post Jan 17 2004, 01:19 PM
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The thing I see is you are watching yourself do the thing it is you are doing, then later trying to imitate it. The skill may never touch your brain, but you are watching it happen. Many people learn things by watching someone else do it, then try to repeat it. The chip doesn't shut your brain down, it is just running your body for the moments you need the skill, you are still "awake" to see it happen. Just a theory. Just hinking about it, I can see active chips doing that, but I'll concede that anything knowledge based will not happen.
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Siege
post Jan 17 2004, 01:31 PM
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Eh, it doesn't really hold for me.

By watching someone shoot a gun, you might be able to puzzle out how to do it, so other people watching could pick up some pointers, but the person with chip would have to video him or herself to garner this secondary benefit.

-Siege
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Frag-o Delux
post Jan 17 2004, 01:33 PM
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It was just a thought, not trying to convince you. I am not even convinced myself.
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Frag-o Delux
post Jan 17 2004, 01:48 PM
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What if companies started P-Fixing there employees, no more company theft, no more harrassment, non of the junk that plagues corporations today. Also you would have nice courtious sales staff that will help a customer anyway they can. And they'll be happy. I can't stand a long hard day of work, but if I go to work, slot my 8 hour chip, them I wake up walking out to my car to go home, man that wasn't a bad of work at all. Never get pissed at haveing to go to work.
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Zazen
post Jan 17 2004, 05:25 PM
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Personafix chips are quite illegal (they're BTLs), so that'd require either a coverup or some new legislation.
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Frag-o Delux
post Jan 17 2004, 05:41 PM
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Ok scratch the the helpfull clerk, but an office full of nice friendly busy little bees would be great in extra-territorial sites.
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BigBlacksmith
post Jan 17 2004, 07:47 PM
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The real question is... how productive and creative would a p-fixed employee be compared to the real deal?
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Siege
post Jan 17 2004, 08:53 PM
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Interesting idea -- it depends on how much personal initiative the job requires, I suppose.

Of course, what's illegal in one area may not be so illegal in another --peyote being a prime example.

-Siege
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Frag-o Delux
post Jan 17 2004, 09:15 PM
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A lot of office jobs do not require creativity at all most of the stuff is constent repetition, like filling out forms or waht ever. So as long as the P-Fix doesn't mess with their ability to do work a basic trained monkey can do. The problems corps have is that this stuff is mind numbing so you have peolpe not wanting to come to work or harrasing their co-workers it costs corportion lots of money to repair these things. Just watch the movie Office Space and you'll see what I mean. Then imagine an office full of quiet drones doing their jobs at what could be top effeciency no idle chat at the water cooler, no playing grab ass with the secretaries, just give them 8 hour P-Fixes that way they come in slot the chip put in their 8 hours a day then they go home not knowing waht happened, they wouldn't try to call out sick as much, besides if they can't remeber what they read that day it will be harder for a runner to get info from them like what does the inside of the building look like or what ever. I think it would need a whole new generation of P-Fix maybe a Work-Fix.
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Talia Invierno
post Jan 17 2004, 10:31 PM
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QUOTE
it would make sense, but I doubt it would work, because skillsofts are described as giving machine-like skill. You can speak a language, but you cannot write poetry in it or become in another way creative in it.
- ting-bu-dong

And yet that is almost exactly the description of the McJob - conform the employee to the assembly-line nature of the production structure. (And the consumer also, for that matter.)
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Tziluthi
post Jan 18 2004, 07:26 AM
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Burger-flippers make, what, ten bucks an hour, if they're lucky? But even a rating one skillwires set will set you back 500 bucks, not including any MP, or the chipjack, or surgery costs, or the hospital bill to recover from the invasive surgery. You'd still be a poor burger flipper, but this way you've wasted 50 hours work on something that will probably just hold you back in the skill department. Maybe for jobs where a huge amount of money will be spent on training individuals, or the type of work involves operating delicate, expensive and/or important machinery, which the company cannot afford to have damaged just so some newbie can learn the ropes, or if the training cannot be simulated, would a set of high-end skillwires be cost beneficial.
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thunderchild
post Jan 18 2004, 12:11 PM
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QUOTE (Frag-o Delux)
The thing I see is you are watching yourself do the thing it is you are doing, then later trying to imitate it. The skill may never touch your brain, but you are watching it happen. Many people learn things by watching someone else do it, then try to repeat it. The chip doesn't shut your brain down, it is just running your body for the moments you need the skill, you are still "awake" to see it happen. Just a theory. Just hinking about it, I can see active chips doing that, but I'll concede that anything knowledge based will not happen.

Maybe with simple and not very reaction intensive tasks like tugboats, cranes, and such. firing a gun, probably not, but boats... maybe.
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Spookymonster
post Jan 18 2004, 04:22 PM
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QUOTE (Tziluthi)
Maybe for jobs where a huge amount of money will be spent on training individuals, or the type of work involves operating delicate, expensive and/or important machinery, which the company cannot afford to have damaged just so some newbie can learn the ropes, or if the training cannot be simulated, would a set of high-end skillwires be cost beneficial.

Exactly. With skillwires, companies can now hire unskilled laborers to fill highly technical positions. As their business changes (branching into new fields, eliminating unprofitable lines, etc.), so do their employees, but at only a fraction of the cost it would take to actually retrain them. No more pilot strikes to worry about, or salary negotiations. (Don't want to work for minimum wage? Fine - I'll go find someone else with a slot in their neck to do it.)

For the wired worker, it provides better job security and pay than an unskilled labor job. Sure, you aren't making as much as someone that actually went to school for the skill, and you may never be as good as they are, but then again, you're more flexible. If a company doesn't need helicopter pilots anymore, all you have to do is update your chips. The guy who studied aeronautics for 10+ years, with 15+ years of combat flying under his belt, has to go looking through the classifieds again.
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