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(I sort of mangled geyser's reconciliation theory the first time I rewrote this; I think this does a better job of conveying the idea) |
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==Facts== | ==Facts== | ||
===Daodan latency=== | ===Daodan latency=== | ||
The subject of latency is repeatedly mentioned by Shinatama, Kerr | The subject of latency is repeatedly mentioned by Shinatama, Kerr and the rest of [[Griffin|Griffin's]] scientific crew from [[Chapter 1]] on. While not very informative for the player at that stage, the unfamiliar term suggests something more exotic than regular biometric data. | ||
According to the game's dialogue, high Daodan latency is bad | According to the game's dialogue, high Daodan latency is bad and low latency is good: dialogue in the first chapters suggests that a reading of [[Quotes/Speech#Intro|27.1]] is normal and [[Quotes/Speech#Outro_2|29]] is a bit alarming (also mentioned are "bioplasmic waveforms", which are expected to be "stable"). However it gets a bit more complicated than that, as consoles at TCTF Science Prison ([[Quotes/Consoles#Superhuman|this one]] and [[Quotes/Consoles#Shinatama.2FKonoko_Relationship|this other one]]) both present <u>lowered</u> latency as the danger, not heightened latency. | ||
How can we reconcile this contradiction? First, | How can we reconcile this contradiction? First, "latency" apparently refers to a concept like [[wp:Virus latency|viral latency]] (a dormant, inactive state), rather than the more common usage of "delay in a network connection". If this is the case then "latency" should be seen as an at-rest state. A fully latent Daodan symbiote is one where the Chrysalis lays low and doesn't manifest itself. This explains why drops in latency concern the TCTF. | ||
A key question is ''what specific attribute'' of Konoko is being measured to determine latency. It's quite possible that the actual bio-signal being measured – intracellular energy output, the release of a brain chemical, a metabolic byproduct in her blood – represents a drop in latency <u>when it rises</u>, thus creating an inverse scale where higher numbers mean less latency for the Chrysalis. It could also be a combination of factors which are used to compute a single number representing "distance from full latency". | |||
If we assume that the TCTF's scientists refer to this combined factor as "latency" for short (though certainly a word like "activity" or "potency" would have been more self-explanatory), then there is no conflict between the dialogue and consoles: higher numbers indicate greater distance from a state of latency, or in other words a drop in latency. | |||
===Progress=== | ===Progress=== |