Wednesday, 19 November 2014

ART BÉBÉ 2099 - Pilot scenes 2

Art Bébé says, 'Fade in:'


LASH IT!

From East 23rd, they make the turn onto the FDR express eway. This close to the wall and East river, the wind stronger, and the fall of pollutants heavier, they would need to take extra care. Just as well that she has relinquished control back to Miko, she better trusted to be sensible. Their goal is the Lower East Side pump station. One of her favorite stomping grounds. She smiles at the interesting reference. It is a phrase from a much earlier age. Stamping down an area to bed down. Later any area where one frequently returned to. And so she had. This would be only her third visit to the pump station, yet already a place of habit, where she is comfortable and finds meaning. She checks the map. They are almost at the eway turnoff leading to the pump station maintenance track, yet she opens fresh windows on her data goggles to resume her studies.
Bébé, Lower East Side pump station entry point, one minute.’
She breaks off from her current exercise in probability theory, closing the page, and opens a fresh page concerned with particle physics. Something has come to her.
‘Five seconds to the boom gate, Bébé.
‘Cloak and engage lift jets, Miko. Let’s jump this baby,’ she answers, not looking up, keeping at her studies.
The prohibited area warning sign comes into clear view. Miko cloaks, and then engages the lift jets, the rear suspension compresses, the front forks extend, and they are off. An easy jump. Once over the gate, the maintenance tract winds down to the massive pump station and parking area. The parking area is sparse and dimly lit, the pump station, largely featureless, ringed by a first story walkway and door for maintenance access. Huge, steam-driven pistons operate inside, pumping water from the flooded East River, regulating the canal flow on the island at this particular junction. A cloud of glistening steam hangs overhead, vented from the station’s many chimney stacks, they reaching as high as the concrete columned express eway overhead, and the steam only adding to the night’s humidity and general wetness. They make their way to the curb at the far side of the parking area. At a stop by the curb, Miko lowers the bike stand, simultaneously retracting the data cables from Bébé’s spine, and going on to say, ‘Bébé, you picked a fine night for this!
‘Not exactly picked, Miko,’ Bébé answers, but quickly stopping herself. She really did not want to get into this. It took her back to the garage. She had not fully explained herself to Miko then. The psychological was to complex, so much of it tied in to the existence of free will, as if it even existed, and the more she said now, the more she would open up the debate again just when much of the cortical firestorm within her has dissipated, brought on by the adrenalin rush of the ride, and just being in this place that she’d selected as so special, that she didn’t want to ignite a second storm by once more deliberating her existence as a puppet. She continues, thinking of a way to answer Miko without directly continuing on her account, and saying, ‘How long was I the last time, Miko? About 40 minutes?’ And here of course she knew the exact time, she had already retrieved it from her memory. She was just making conversation.
‘Forty-two minutes and twenty-five seconds to be exact, Bébé. But you know this!’
Never try and outsmart an AI, how many times did she have to tell herself. ‘Ok, I’ll be about thirty minutes Miko, my concession to the weather.’ She smiles to herself, proud of being able to divert the conversation from why she'd chosen to leave the tower while conceding to Miko’s point about the weather, retracts her helmet into the bulk of her armor, and dismounts.
She is then quickly off across the concrete that skirts the pump station, increasing her pace, causing the ends of her open coat to flap wildly about her. Miko will keep watch, she needlessly reminds herself, though she wonders if they are not over playing the caution. There is no reason for anyone to come here with the exception of the city’s utility workers, and never at night. The concrete skirting is lit by a series of wall lights. She keeps beneath these, until coming to the inspection pathway at the end of the skirting, the path tunneling into the dark towards the right. Now she needs to adjust her vision for the fifty meters to the wall, already clearly visible, looming high overhead silhouetted beneath the flaring sky. When she is directly in the lee of the wall, it almost windless, and in the stillness, somewhat eerie. She looks up. The wall is clearly outlined by its silhouette, and the reflected light from the sky. It towers 75-meters on a steeply tapered sloped, before ascending directly vertical for a further 10-meters. At the critical juncture of the two angle, an inspection walkway runs the entire length of wall covering this section of the river. A cage elevator provides access to the walkway and the railed path at the dam top. She moves on, reaching the elevator cage. There is an obvious security code. It hadn’t been a problem on her first visit. She touches the code in, the elevator opens, and she steps within. Very quickly she is on the walkway, steps out, and makes her way along, till for the second time staring up.
Every detail is memorized. At the wall apex, a football sized section of the concrete has chipped away, the iron reinforcement showing through, continuing to oxidize a little further each day. And she has recorded this decay from the beginning, noting it on her first unauthorized night out, her own lesson in redox potentials. And then extending out from the break there are the hairline cracks, the patterns like an Olsen artwork, lines skating away as long startled snakes. She continues to stare up while bending her knees, putting herself in a low squat, and then she leaps, making the jump to the railed pathway of the dam top, allowing herself to overshoot just a little, to descend, open coat flapping in the wind, so to land on the path in a ballerina pose, on one extended leg, toes pointed down, the knee of the other leg raised, finally to land with her boots crunching on the loose debris of the path and stare out.
The sky’s intermittent flaring Is exceptionally bad tonight. The volatile chemicals are forever adrift down from the burning north, exploding in a lottery of combinations, and leaving their afterglow through the black cloud. Across the East River, the Brooklyn and Manhattan bridges lie in silhouette as tangles of concrete and steel, their suspension cables torn from their crumpled arches to float as long tresses in the dark, white-capped water, the sunken bridges nothing but navigation hazards, as in fact are all the famous bridges crossing the Hudson, East, and Harlem rivers, all succumbed to the powerful surge waters in from the North Atlantic, and the water equally surging through the sunken boroughs of Queens, Bronx, Brooklyn, and the state of New Jersey, the old land drowned, and the boroughs now an archipelago of artificial islands driving their anchors into the water world of the old streets. She faces along the path to her left.
The navigation beacon sits at the tip of a large triangle of concrete, buttressed 10-meters out over the water. The reflector dish, turning behind the toughened glass dome, bounces the light over the water in shades of yellow, the light rippling in patches, like stepping stones to be hoped across. She is almost tempted to try. She smiles at the thought, then makes her way over the path and towards the beacon.
There is a narrow gap between the dome and the meter-high iron railing skirting the concrete. She is careful to edge her way along until coming to the very tip, and there, driving her legs beneath the bottom railing to dangle over the water far below, sits, sweeping her coat behind her. It is this place that has made the pump station so special, a place where she can think and reflect in solitude, almost her favorite pastime.
She is now closer to her machine self than she is to her biological self. The paradigm shift has been intrinsically coded into her growing maturity. Her bio-enhancements simply dictated it. As she has come to understand it, the bio-enhancements and the coding are linked in a symbiotic relationship, reliant on each other, even feeding off each other.
And if she is to be asked what might lie at the heart of her existential crisis, this symbiosis might well be it. Dr Syber has done this to her. She is his experiment, and one subject to increasing levels of synthesis and change, a self-evolving work in progress. And he has never cared to ask how she might come to feel about this. No consent form. So what to do? She brings up her knees, hugging her arms around them, and leans her chin in the knee gap.
She has learned that evolution is an irreversible process. There is no going back. And there are two strands. Fitness for change, and stratified stability. Bronowski has taught her this. She looks to her data goggles, loads her evolutionary biology folder, and reads off the notes that she has transcribed from J. Bronowski.
Fitness for change concerns itself with the variability of living forms, and stratified stability, naturally enough, with a living form’s stability, and linking the two processes, it is easy to understand how biological evolution has a direction, forward, just as time moves forward. And there is something more profound to be explained. The forward direction of evolution gives it the appearance of a planned program. It begs the questions; why does biological evolution not run hither and thither through time? What is the screw that moves it forward, or at least, where is the ratchet that keeps it from slipping back? Is it possible to have such a mechanism which is not planned? And what is the relationship that ties evolution to the arrow of time, that makes it a barbed arrow? ‘Lash it!’ she exclaims, breaking off her reading. She is trapped well and truly, caught in a type of deterministic mechanism that has billed her for the role of progenitor, a new human for a new world, a human to better survive. And then, as if in a type of coda to her thoughts, a spray of water hits her in the face. It has been kicked up suddenly from the river below, the wind sweeping the spray up the dam wall, so that she is now almost completely wet. She laughs, and makes a quick check on her data goggles.
The weather sensors give a three knot increase in wind speed, and a sudden, ten degree drop in temperature. But this has to be a freak local event, she convinces herself, she is right over the river after all. Nevertheless, the shivering makes her uncomfortable, and she engages her thermoregulatory nanos, calculates, and stops shivering.

Art Bébé says, 'Fade out.'




Art Bébé™ ©

Monday, 17 November 2014

ART BÉBÉ 2099 - Pilot scenes 1

Art Bébé says, 'Fade in:'


LASH IT!

The eways parallel the grid of the old streets, now canals. Night time on Lexington. She sits docked, not bothering to hunch behind the bike windshield while cutting up the traffic. Mutable Machine Unit 01 Miko is on song, her high-powered, hydrogen-fueled, electric motor effortlessly pulling through the power band. No one is going to hold them up. And certainly not this girl. But what was all this traffic anyway? Her data goggles confirm one of the worst night’s post-Tipping. Humidity 87%. Temperature 44Celsius. Rain contamination 67%. The very air the consistency of a sticky tar. But what has she to care? She’d simply desensitized those of her throat and décolletage skin cells exposed to the night, too impatient exiting the garage to fasten her coat, leaving it to billow behind her. But Miko? She engages her internal comms.
‘Sorry about the weather, Miko, How about I promise you a wash?’
'A wash, Bébé, I don’t understand!’
‘You don’t,’ she answers, smiling. There had been genuine puzzlement in Miko’s perfectly modulated, feminine intonation, a good example of how Quantum AI isn’t there yet, Miko not expected to understand that she is already getting a wash in the rain. ‘Never mind, maybe someday you will,’ she hurriedly adds, but then it comes to her that she hasn’t helped with her proviso, forcing her to just as quickly explain, promising, ‘I mean, I’ll program an algorithm for you, no problem, call it biocleansing.’
Miko remains silent, a good thing, she thinks. She did not want to reopen the debate on why they are out tonight. Lash it!
It had been another day in her room at her studies when the real world lay outside. Frustrated, she’d taken the long elevator ride up to the BAAL Tower skydeck on the 112th floor to watch the sunset. The fiery-red ball had been barely been visible behind the chemically charged black cloud as it sank over the Greater New York Archipelago (GNYA). She waited till it had completed set, all the time watching the build of pollutant on the perimeter glass. The post-apocalyptic world! How had it come to this? She was a long way from understanding.
Returned to her docking bed, she’d resumed her studies in all the fields that had lately come to interest her, but her concentration had failed on every subject. She had to get out of the tower. She understood what she was doing. This was an overt act of rebellion, a mindset she had come to commit herself to more and more in all sorts of ways, and each time felt herself swell with pride at the sense of her own growing independence. The holo dome retracted from the bed, she’d sat up, looking towards her coat.
It hung on the floating, headless, mannequin torso by the door. Of functionally adaptive biofabric (FAB), the fabric could bend to her will, lengthen and shorten, tighten to her wrist, and clasp at her throat. It was the one item of clothing of which she was the most proud, and she’d practically jumped from the bed to retrieve it, swinging it over shoulders.
She’d then taken the elevator down to the garage on the 33rd floor and, across the acid-pitted concrete, found Miko parked in her bay, charge cable on trickle, poised, in her blue-gray and red, thick structural form, like a predatory insect ready to pounce. The twin data cables already snaking from either side of Miko’s body to slip beneath the coat and dock into her spine, settled in the seat, systems check complete, and the charge cable disconnected, she’d disengaged her telemetry from Dr Syber, had Miko fire the engine, and open the door to the night.
And right at that moment she should have drawn up a contract with Miko, a clause stating, ‘Suffering existential crisis, feeling particularly reckless, maybe even suicidal, prepare for anything.’ Only she hadn’t communicated a word. She’d relied on the fact that Miko knew her well enough. She had nanos governing all aspects of her anatomy and physiology. But her psychology? Dr Syber had certainly underestimated that aspect. Human moods were not so easily governed. No doubt she could engage her enhanced neural loom (ENL) along various neuro receptor pathways, breaking the uptake or release of whatever neurochemical was momentarily out of sorts, lift her feelings, but the desperation of this always stopped her. Sooner or later her continuing flux of mood would leave her bouncing around like a hapless marionette. But beginning on the ride, she had quickly come to feel better, less like a hapless marionette, more the puppeteer. 
'Bébé, are you with me?' she hears from Miko.'
She returns what little part of her attention is needed to her data goggle telemetry.
'Yes, Miko, give me manual control.’
‘Ill advised, Bébé,’ she hears. ‘Not at this time. East 23rd intersection approaching. Oncoming traffic is heavy. I’m stopping.’
It is an uncontrolled node. She checks the CGI on her data goggles. Fast approaching on the intersecting inbound lane, three bikes front a stream of heavy and light vehicles. The bikes are tightly tucked in a single file. She feels Miko slow, and hurriedly yells, ‘No, I repeat, give me manual. I’m making the turn. There’s time.’
‘Bébé, I’m stopping.’
‘I said manual, Miko,’ she snaps back.
‘Manual override engaged, Bébé.’
She has three and half seconds to enter the turn. She plots an arc, calculating the initial braking strength, and then the exiting acceleration, all the time taking into account the friction coefficient of the road that would allow for maximum traction and stability on the front and rear tires. Making the turn, the first protest comes from the shuddering front tire, then the sliding rear, and finally, the front forks taking on all the worst aspects of Jell-O. But she gets around, beating the other bikes, already leaving them some distance behind.
‘Logging incident, Bébé,’ she hears from Miko.
‘Huh! Why?’
‘A hair’s breadth of extra drift would have colored the guard rail with my body paint. I could have bled to death.’
Had she heard right? Bled to death? ‘Miko, what was that!’ she exclaims. ‘Did you just evoke a simile?’
‘Simile, Bébé. Quoting the standard New World dictionary. Begin quote. A figure of speech involving the comparison of one thing with another thing of a different kind, used to make a description more emphatic or vivid. End quote.’
‘Congratulations, Miko. You are learning?
‘Always learning, Bébé. Always evolving. Inherent within my programming.’
Yes, she thought, never mind that Miko hadn’t understood her earlier irony, that she was already being washed by the rain, artificial intelligence, just like life, is always evolving. She must never forget. Good to have been reminded.

Art Bébé says, 'Fade out.'




Art Bébé™ ©

ART BÉBÉ 2099 - Pilot intro

Art Bébé says, 'Fade in:'


LASH IT!

Climbing the stairs, she catches sight of the rain. Lit a silver sheen by the moon, it streaks across the windows, glittering like the call of mercury streamers. Then at last she is through the roof hatch and upon the green and brown splotched concrete, the steamy rain and blow of arctic pollutants such that she feels as if the call of streamers has betrayed her. But she is happy. She stands on the roof of the BAAL tower. One hundred and twelve stories below lies the world she will conquer. And she will do so without reservation because the world has made her for this very job, fashioning her from alloyed steel, the chip, and the womb of humanity. She is not evolution but destiny. She crosses over the rooftop, the neuralwhip trailing, and comes to a stop with one leg to the roof edge, the whip to curl around her as she looks out. Certain people in this city will come to earn her endorsement, others to feel the sting of her whip, her primary weapon. She will look for both, and she will start tonight, because it is almost already too late, or perhaps because the very lateness of the hour has made it the crucible. It is time for Art Bébé. She will give birth to the 22nd century. Time to transcend.

Art Bébé says, 'Fade out.'




Art Bébé™ ©