trust_the_fuckhead: (Mr. Jerusalem)
trust_the_fuckhead ([personal profile] trust_the_fuckhead) wrote in [community profile] caughtinanetwork2012-08-28 09:58 am

Text - Way too early in the morning.

I need a Hacker to make me some custom software. I can provide compensation far more interesting than some simple starfish tokens.

I also could use the services of an engineer capable of working and manufacturing with nanometer precision. I can only really offer a challenge and the promise of scientific discovery.

I'm pretty sure there are individuals in this bubble capable of either of these. If you're interested, let me know and I can give your some more details.

[The following gets edited in after an hour or so.]

Edit::
Shit. I should have mentioned. If there are any sort of physicists out there, You'll probably be interested in some of what I have planned. Anyone with experience in Astronomy, Robotics, Mathematics or Optics could be helpful.
dotthedisconnect: (What am I reading?)

[Video]

[personal profile] dotthedisconnect 2012-08-30 12:19 pm (UTC)(link)
[Tech mentally packs "Sun Distance Experiments" somewhere in his ever-looming future project file, before a voice returns his attention to the SFC. He watches with piqued interest as something seizes the figure, then jumps in his seat a bit at the sudden burst of activity. On regaining himself, he raises an eyebrow.]

Um.
Edited 2012-08-30 12:21 (UTC)
dotthedisconnect: (Confident)

[Video]

[personal profile] dotthedisconnect 2012-08-31 12:25 am (UTC)(link)
[Ah, these were many of the things that Tech was wondering about himself. So they had that in common. At least.]

All excellent questions. But the problem, of course, is that what makes this place so metaphysically interesting is also what makes it difficult--if not impossible--to quantify. It's hard to make a physical observation when every other person in the city seems to operate with a varying set of physics. For all we know, other things, such as your distance to the sun, could be just as negotiable. It's fascinating really.