[Mike is... better than he was. The events of the AU were like the best dream he'd ever had, and waking up to harsh reality was all the more painful this time because everyone else remembered the dream too. It was like being stripped bare in no way he'd ever experienced, nudist that he is, and he doesn't like it one bit.
she knows
After thinking
(
Read more... )
The main method of filtering a message is by enclosing the contents of the message that you wish to filter; said contents can essentially be anything from text you have written to voice or video files you have made. You then specify the people you wish to direct the filter either away or toward; that is, you can either filter a message so that it broadcasts to everybody except those you specify, or broadcast it to only those you specify.
After you enclose the contents you wish to filter, you design a passcode, numeric system, or similar method of deterring those who would wish to see it... Take note that the relative strength of the filter is dependent on the complexity of whatever passcode or equivalent you've designed.
[After a moment, Robert adds:]
... Likewise, you could choose to try to access a filtered message by attempting to enclose the area you think is filtered, and then inputting the text "hack". Then you would have to attempt to decode whatever filtering had been put on the message...
[He's only done that once, though. And it was a mun mistake.]
Filters can potentially be made impossible to infiltrate, but they take quite a bit of practise to make successfully...
... Is there anything else I should explain?
[And is it obvious that Robert is kind of starved for contact? He's... been a little isolated since the whole experiment ended.]
Reply
Uh, yeah. You could explain how to do it.
[Dude, seriously.]
Reply
... My apologies.
The method, er, varies between people. I tend to use complex mathematical algorithms, of course... but there are other methods you could use as well. Are you a visual-spatial learner, perhaps? [Here's Robert using educational concepts on somebody who never set foot in an actual schooling system.] If so, you might find the usage of some complex pictogram more helpful. Or perhaps you're skilled with word or number puzzles?
... It seems to be a relatively flexible system.
[This would be a little easier to walk him through if he were actually there...]
Reply
I like doing word search puzzles. [Not crossword puzzles. Though he's actually fairly good at those. But who remembers Gilligan's middle name? Or the color of the Lone Ranger's nephew's horse?]
Reply
Or a code phrase that needs to be translated, perhaps?
... I'm not sure how to competently demonstrate this...
Reply
[Mike demonstrates his skills with a pen by doodling a picture of Robert in the margins.]
Reply
[Robert starts writing himself; he first writes "This is a test", then draws the requisite box and begins producing a long string of complex mathematical formulations that the mun would never be able to describe properly because he fails; after a moment, he pauses and the text essentially disappears.
Then he speaks again.]
... That is the method I use.
But you could do something like this...
[He writes "This is a test" again, then draws the same box around it as before, and begins to draw a complex figure (in fact, it is a cutaway of a hyperdodecahedron) before pausing as well.]
... And simply have the user have to retrace the figure in question.
Those are examples. I am certain a creative person like yourself could come up with others.
Reply
So if I make it really complicated...
[And he starts drawing, coming up with a filter that's about 18% effective.]
How's that?
Reply
And the more complex the shape, the more effective that method would be. Especially if you were to use an unorthodox shape that would be difficult to copy...
[Robert regards that almost-20%-filter.]
It shows promise... You could rework it, make it more complex. Perhaps add a sequential pattern? Or a fractal...
Reply
This is kinda fun.
Reply
... You are quite artistic, Mike.
[Said with some begrudging respect. He still remembers that comic, after all.
...
Okay, maybe it was kind of cute.
As is the current doodle of him.
Robert lets himself go a little and draws a little doodle of Mike - overly precise but still very simplistic, since Robert lacks art skills - in the corner.]
... I lack your expressionism.
Reply
Haha. You forgot my chucks.
Reply
He feels weird even drawing a weapon now that he knows what it is.]
...
[Uncomfortably:] ... I... I think I still remember how some weaponry works, from the... experiment.
[Unlike Mike, the AU has been a disturbing affair for Robert. Though he's had some time to calm down and feel a bit better about things, he's still terrified by the fact some version of him rationalized violence so easily and knew how to fight (basic combat training)...
And Don's later explanation of "the Principle of Least Harm" didn't help to make Robert any less uncomfortable. He's still obviously struggling with the whole concept, which doesn't mesh with anything he knows.]
Reply
Do you still remember stuff from... from that other life?
[He absentmindedly draws a sword in the doodle-Robert's hands, and then starts on a doodle of Don, sparring with Robert.]
Reply
... The first thing I did after getting Don treatment was record everything I r-remembered. [Which was, quite frankly, a lot. Much of the information is significantly detailed, as well.]
... A-and I have yet to forget much of the memories, including things outside of the ten-day span of the... actual experiment. I am told that I am an oddity in that r-regard.
[Robert swallows down some bile at that particular doodle. He doesn't want to be reminded of the fact that he could be violent.
He begins drawing as well, an overly-precise but scattered-looking diagram... It's the tiny remnants of Daisy's MJOLNIR suit blueprints that he remembers. (He has a clearer picture of them in his post-experiment notes.)]
... Th-they... h-have... given me m-much to think about.
Reply
[Like how on earth he convinced Ami to marry him. That might have been useful to remember.]
Hey, what's that? [It looks cool.]
Reply
Leave a comment