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current_story:saratoga_in_absentia [2020/09/27 18:45] – ↷ Page moved from saratoga_in_absentia to current_story:saratoga_in_absentia site_admincurrent_story:saratoga_in_absentia [2021/04/24 14:56] (current) site_admin
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 For well over four centuries, the Smithsonian Institute has forged scientific inroads into the cultural, anthropological, and biological evolution of Earth, boasting numerous museums, research centers, and zoological gardens across the planet.  Originally considered "the nation's attic" for old-Earth nation-state governments, the Smithsonian eventually became the custodian of a majority of the planet's premier archeological collections by the late twenty-fourth century.  The expansive Sully Annex in northern Virginia housed many of the offices, research labs, and cold storage facilities that formed the foundation of the Institute's science programs.  One such building was a glass and metal skyscraper that boasted a statue of Zephram Cochrane outside in the front courtyard, with an engraved concrete placard that read "SPACEFLIGHT HERITAGE CENTER" Deep within the heart of the building, past a maze of hallways and doors leading to offices and laboratories, a mechanical door that read "Division of Holography" above it was carved into the smooth pearlescent walls between two potted plants.  A thin horizontal nameplate affixed onto the door itself read "Doctor Lewis Zimmerman". For well over four centuries, the Smithsonian Institute has forged scientific inroads into the cultural, anthropological, and biological evolution of Earth, boasting numerous museums, research centers, and zoological gardens across the planet.  Originally considered "the nation's attic" for old-Earth nation-state governments, the Smithsonian eventually became the custodian of a majority of the planet's premier archeological collections by the late twenty-fourth century.  The expansive Sully Annex in northern Virginia housed many of the offices, research labs, and cold storage facilities that formed the foundation of the Institute's science programs.  One such building was a glass and metal skyscraper that boasted a statue of Zephram Cochrane outside in the front courtyard, with an engraved concrete placard that read "SPACEFLIGHT HERITAGE CENTER" Deep within the heart of the building, past a maze of hallways and doors leading to offices and laboratories, a mechanical door that read "Division of Holography" above it was carved into the smooth pearlescent walls between two potted plants.  A thin horizontal nameplate affixed onto the door itself read "Doctor Lewis Zimmerman".
  
-Inside the room, workbenches and computer consoles were laid out along the walls and towards the central spaces, hosting a plethora of equipment and monitors, all chirping and humming while processing a multitude of simulations and experiments.  Towards the rear of the lab, behind an L-shaped desk, an older, baling human with black, penetrating eyes bore a perpetual frown as he examined a fist-sized cylindrical piece of metal, it's surface heavily scored with pock-marks and carbonized blistering.+Inside the room, workbenches and computer consoles were laid out along the walls and towards the central spaces, hosting a plethora of equipment and monitors, all chirping and humming while processing a multitude of simulations and experiments.  Towards the rear of the lab, behind an L-shaped desk, an older, balding human with black, penetrating eyes bore a perpetual frown as he examined a fist-sized cylindrical piece of metal, it's surface heavily scored with pock-marks and carbonized blistering.
  
 "The EMH backup module is definitely a Galaxy Class design," the man spoke to a person on the communications monitor.  "Its optical interface nodes are of a configuration that's only compatible with a Galaxy Class holomatrix.  Based on the microtag, it obviously came from the USS Saratoga, but what it was doing on the Republic before her demise three years ago is anyone's guess." "The EMH backup module is definitely a Galaxy Class design," the man spoke to a person on the communications monitor.  "Its optical interface nodes are of a configuration that's only compatible with a Galaxy Class holomatrix.  Based on the microtag, it obviously came from the USS Saratoga, but what it was doing on the Republic before her demise three years ago is anyone's guess."
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 "Very possible," he replied.  "If I were to add it all up, there's enough data in here to build almost ten different optical matrices," the doctor explained while looking over the device in his hand.  "But I can't initialize any of them without a master image sequence from the EMH, and those data nodes have all been damaged beyond repair." "Very possible," he replied.  "If I were to add it all up, there's enough data in here to build almost ten different optical matrices," the doctor explained while looking over the device in his hand.  "But I can't initialize any of them without a master image sequence from the EMH, and those data nodes have all been damaged beyond repair."
-// + 
-"Why not just use a master image sequence from another Mark Nineteen EMH?"//+//"Why not just use a master image sequence from another Mark Nineteen EMH?"//
  
 "No," the doctor dismissed the idea while shaking his head. "An existing EMH program encodes a rekeying sequence in each data packet, and there's easily four billion packets.   I'd have to manually decode each one if I were to transfer another image sequence.  If I miss even one of them, I'd cause the module's entire programming to reset, losing all those other external sequences while the EMH reintegrates itself.  What I really need to do is use a fresh master sequence without any encoding." "No," the doctor dismissed the idea while shaking his head. "An existing EMH program encodes a rekeying sequence in each data packet, and there's easily four billion packets.   I'd have to manually decode each one if I were to transfer another image sequence.  If I miss even one of them, I'd cause the module's entire programming to reset, losing all those other external sequences while the EMH reintegrates itself.  What I really need to do is use a fresh master sequence without any encoding."
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 "I don't know," said a frustrated Theo.  "At least put some clothes on him." "I don't know," said a frustrated Theo.  "At least put some clothes on him."
  
-Saal took off his overtunic and wrapped it around the lower torso of the unconscious bearded man, causing him to moan weakly from pain.  "Judging by the size of this room, this couldn't a very big ship," Saal observed.  "How many crew you think?"+Saal took off his overtunic and wrapped it around the lower torso of the unconscious bearded man, causing him to moan weakly from pain.  "Judging by the size of this room, this couldn'be a very big ship," Saal observed.  "How many crew you think?"
  
 Theo looked around the chamber, taking note of each and every detail.  "From the sensor readings we got on the shuttle, I'd say the life support systems wouldn't support more than a half dozen officers and men.  If I had to guess, this is a personal yacht of some type.  Not a military ship.  This cargo hold may have once been the food refrigeration unit for the galley.  Those look like sealed coolant manifolds," he said, pointing at a pair of capped pipes barely protruding from the corner wall near the floor. Theo looked around the chamber, taking note of each and every detail.  "From the sensor readings we got on the shuttle, I'd say the life support systems wouldn't support more than a half dozen officers and men.  If I had to guess, this is a personal yacht of some type.  Not a military ship.  This cargo hold may have once been the food refrigeration unit for the galley.  Those look like sealed coolant manifolds," he said, pointing at a pair of capped pipes barely protruding from the corner wall near the floor.
current_story/saratoga_in_absentia.1601232344.txt.gz · Last modified: 2020/09/27 18:45 by site_admin