- Joined
- Jan 11, 2017
- Messages
- 168
- Reaction score
- 83
Hey, so it's been... what... a year? Something like that! Anyway, a handful of you folks might remember my Logic Core with the programmable Chain Warp drive. Well, I worked for weeks on upgrading that shipboard computer, but before I ever got it uploaded my computer burned out. So I went from having a sleek and refined Mk3 logic core, to suddenly being back to mk 1. Combined with a lack of time and not being ENTIRELY certain of how I made the Mk3 actually work, I ended up getting frustrated and leaving the game for a while.
But I'm back! And even better, the Mk4 is starting to come together!
Features I plan to include on this version:
The mass of the computer is being changed from going across your ship to running down along it. (Back to front instead of side to side)
Programmable warp drive: 1 jump, 10 jumps, 25 jumps, Full-Auto-Chain-Drive-Action, you name it. Just tell the computer how many jumps you want it to make and it will do it automatically. It can also safely charge without risk of firing, so that it may be ready to use in case of emergency.
Customizable Drone Controls: Ther will be a certain number of command options and command groups. These can be named whatever you like and connected via logic to your drone bays (or the drones themselves) to give you greater control over your little fleet of AI minions.
Name recognition technology: When you first fire up the logic core, it will introduce itself and ask for your name. Once you enter that name, it will remember it, and actually USE it in all future dialogues.
Fuzzy Logic conversational AI (limited): I could go all out with this feature, but the computer would be HUGE!! The Mk 1 only took precoded commands: {CHARGE WARP COILS). The Mk 2 could interpret conversational commands by looking for keywords. "Charge the warp coil" would get the reply "Warp coils are charging. They will not activate unless given the command." Likewise, the sentence "Hello, Dolly! Would you mind charging up those warp coils for me? Thank you!" would get an identical response.
The MK3, however, actually had some limited conversational capabilities. Given the second sentence, it would formulate an answer like: "Hello [NAME]. I'm charging all 25 warp coils. Pleased to be of service."
Basically, there was just an extra row in the computer that just had miscellaneous words and phrases which the computer could catch and respond to, adapting those responses into the standard activation/deactivation dialogue.
I'm looking forward to getting back into the swing of things. I hope y'all have been coming up with more fun logic experiments while I was away!