There was one set of patterns that the electron network had not encoded and processed as of yet. It was often received along the compression-relaxation sensors, and at times, these patterns circulated in parallel with, and often ahead of, that which was received. It was one case where the central network was capable of predicting what it would receive, and this attracted my attention.
This particular mode of communication was so akin to the slide-talker's methods that I was sure that they had invented it, but alas, it was something that these human creatures contributed. The basis of the communication was built on the sequences in which frequency changes occurred. While there were many different timbres of pitch and voice, the fundamental frequencies were shared.
Recalling my time in and around the delicate structures of the compression-relaxation detectors, there were limits to the peak amplitude that the input and processing structures could maintain, and here was a case for more than a steaming serving of optimism. In many of the observations that I made of rhythmic pattern processors, I found more than my share of tolerance for frequency and pitch. Perhaps these were necessary for the retention of information. I had wished not.
July 18, 2010
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment