(Untitled)

Oct 18, 2011 19:33

[itp: there is a robot.

he looks very confused.

perhaps because of ( this )

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Comments 687

soviet_catboy October 18 2011, 23:37:16 UTC
Uh... Where are these from?

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stayinthecar October 18 2011, 23:38:01 UTC
[...this face]

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soviet_catboy October 18 2011, 23:39:07 UTC
[This face??]

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stayinthecar October 18 2011, 23:42:04 UTC
I have no idea.

Why does her base form include mammary glands if she isn't able to appear as human?

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krillinoutmaxin October 18 2011, 23:42:46 UTC
[how did it know]

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stayinthecar October 18 2011, 23:44:08 UTC
[hi. i'm confused!]

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krillinoutmaxin October 18 2011, 23:58:12 UTC
Is that- I mean, is she- are you-

[I DON'T KNOW WHAT'S GOING ON]

[HAVE SOME FLUSTER]

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stayinthecar October 18 2011, 23:58:50 UTC
Excuse me...?

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into_adventure October 18 2011, 23:46:52 UTC
I'm always curious!

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stayinthecar October 18 2011, 23:47:59 UTC
Hello.

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into_adventure October 18 2011, 23:52:28 UTC
Hi.

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stayinthecar October 18 2011, 23:53:23 UTC
Does that mean you understand the sign?

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actualizedname October 18 2011, 23:59:56 UTC
...that's really creepy.

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stayinthecar October 19 2011, 00:00:44 UTC
What makes it 'creepy'?

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actualizedname October 19 2011, 00:17:25 UTC
Everything?

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stayinthecar October 19 2011, 00:24:16 UTC
[idgi. studying the image.... creepy... creepy.......]

Why does it inspire fear?

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x_autnihil October 19 2011, 00:02:49 UTC
*also so confused. for many reasons.*

What does binary mean?

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stayinthecar October 19 2011, 00:07:54 UTC
The word itself refers to a system made up of two parts, usually in math and science where numbers and functions are represented by the numbers 0 and 1. Since she's a robot, I'm fairly certain it means binary code, which is how the circuitry in computers implements logic and transfers information. Text is nearly always stored within the computer as binary, so that it can be transferred from machine to machine without worrying about file type or programming.

....in this time period, that is.

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x_autnihil October 19 2011, 00:13:08 UTC
I see. *thinking about this :|a that only mostly helps make sense out of this*

When I send an email, it works through this binary code?

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stayinthecar October 19 2011, 00:21:23 UTC
Actually no, binary is traditionally used for computing and the files themselves. Attachments may be coded in binary, but the message itself is transmitted using a system called the American Standard Code for Information Interchange. Text characters are encoded using that system, or depending on the sophistication of the mail client, in plain html, which is considered an equivalent coding system that allows for stylistic changes of text that all modern computers can translate. Again, modern for this time, based on my records.

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