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Sorry for the long wait.
I was on vacation and also had some other things to attend to.
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The next morning was nothing special. I did my usual routine, and once I was done met with Nea. She waited patiently beside my room and kept me company while I was heading for breakfast. Her bot was still impressive, and her avatar's body was as beautiful as the day before. Her physical presence gave me a feeling of company. Similar to how it felt when Pyra was here.
"So this bot," I said, between two bites of my breakfast, "It looks like you just bolted some monitors to the sides, or did you change anything else?"
"I added a module for the video output, but most of it is a standard service bot. However, the monitors do obstruct the sensors. Thankfully I can use the cameras on the ceiling to navigate, and if I need the internal sensors, I can lower the monitors." She said.
I watched as each monitor lowered a good amount until they nearly hit the floor. With the Monitors down, the sensor array on top of the bot was exposed.
"Clever. Yesterday, you also talked about an android. What's up with that?" I asked.
"Yes, my idea is to use the basic frame of a service bot, but instead of the wheels or belts, I would add a bipedal base. But I'm not sure how it would work as these bots were not designed for it and do not have the required parts to walk. Most bipedal bots have many additional sensors to keep balance, but maybe I can use my advanced reflexes instead."
I nodded, "That's practically how I walk, but since I've been doing it for so long, I don't need to think about it anymore. You also said something about silicone skin?"
"Yes, I have access to a recipe for real-feeling silicone. I thought about coating the bot in a layer of that." Nea said.
I walked to the service bay to dispose of my plate, and Nea followed me.
"Hmm, that would make it more human-like. But I have seen that 'RealFeel' silicone. It is impressive but still distinctly artificial. I guess it's because of the missing warms but still better than nothing." I said.
I turned around to head for the exit as Nea's expression changed. Her eyes widened, and she looked at me like she just discovered faster-than-light travel.
"What?" I asked.
"I just had an idea for the android. It probably needs a complete chassis redesign, but it will be worth it if I'm right. To the lab!" She said and rushed out.
I hurried behind her. "What lab?" I asked. She looked over her shoulder at me with a grin.
"Just an expression. I meant the admin room." She said.
We reached the elevator, but before I entered, I asked. "Do we need to be in any room? I wanted to explore some more of the station today. We can talk about it while we do that."
Nea thought about it for a few seconds. "I guess you are right. I already ran the calculations and only want to hear your feedback. We can talk about it while you explore."
I stepped into the elevator and looked at Nea. "I guess we should continue on deck 38. Since most traffic was from and to that and deck 37."
Nea nodded, and the elevator started to move. She looked a bit uneasy before saying. "You might not like what you find in some labs. I have a -"
I interrupted her. "It's alright. Also, please don't tell me what's in those labs. I want to find out myself. It makes me feel useful, and I like the mystery."
There was an awkward pause before the elevator reached the deck, and we exited.
"So you wanted to talk about your idea?" I said while opening the first door. The lab behind it was empty, and I closed it again before we continued to the next door.
"Yes! You said that the silicone skin was unrealistic, and I thought about how to improve it. Then it struck me, what if I use real skin instead of improving the silicone one."
"I see, but wouldn't getting it into the right form be hard, especially if you use a service bot frame?" I asked, still looking into the labs.
"Yes, that's why I will also redesign the chassis. To keep the skin healthy, I also need to use nanobots and some nutrient solutions, additional changes I want to make."
I stopped in the middle of the corridor and looked at her. "So you design and build a new bot. Isn't that like really difficult?"
"Yes and no. I have already created some plans. I have studied and analyzed most of the scientific breakthroughs in robotics from the last 100 years. By incorporating them and some of Hermes's biological research, the resulting android will be nearly indistinguishable from a human."
"Wow," I said, regretting not using the admin room for this. "I just hope your face does not end up looking like those hyper-realistic ones I have seen before. They were really creepy."
"I don't think it will. If I use natural skin, the uncanny valley effect will be minimal. Also, because I can design the chassis as I need it, I can better integrate myself into the android. The uncanny valley effect mostly comes from wrong or insufficient facial expressions, which should not be a problem for me."
"You are right. If I didn't know better, I could not tell if your avatar was real." I said, looking closer at her face before continuing with my exploration.
"Thank you. I took special care to make myself as realistic as possible and to incorporate my facial expression into my co-routines. Do you want to know more about the android?"
"I would love to..." I said, but then stopped after I opened the next door.
All labs before were empty, but this one was not, and it was not the one with the 3D printer either. It was completely different.
A sealed chamber in the middle dominated the room. Its walls reach the top, with only small round windows. I walked deeper into the room and examined the layout. Multiple desks along one wall, each with four consoles, were sprinkled with clutter and handwritten notes. Giant cables snailed away from the chamber into a bulky device sitting in one corner. The air felt colder than usual, and a low hum filled the room.
Towers of computer hardware and scientific equipment peeping and blinking in another area. The equipment, desks, and whiteboards occupied every free space around the room's perimeter. The equations and code snippets on the whiteboard were way too complicated for me.
I walked closer to the chamber to peak through the window. The bit of light that entered the chamber bearly lit a structure in the middle, suspended from the ceiling, consisting of mostly copper and gold pieces. I knew what that was. I had seen it in a documentary but never in person.
"That's a quantum computer, right?" I asked.
"Yes, although I think it is outdated now," said Nea. She had also moved into the room and had lowered her monitors to examine some of the equipment and whiteboards.
"Does it still work?" I asked, still mesmerized by the content of the chamber.
"Probably yes, but starting it up is lengthy and tedious. It might be worth it if we had a problem that could be solved with quantum computing, but as it stands now, we don't." She said.
"What about the DNA simulations? Aren't they really complex? Maybe a bit of quantum calculation could accelerate them?" I asked.
"Maybe, but converting the simulation to a program that can run on this computer and benefits from it would take longer than waiting for the results."
"Fair enough, still, this is really cool," I said, taking one last look around before leaving.
"What research did they do with it anyway?" I asked, again checking every door I walked by.