The "un's" were quite adept at intercepting the multidimensional symbolic data that continued to was across the link into the random resolver. Comparing information locally, they began to resolve the overlap before transmitting, and processing patterns for a while, the "un's" began to expand their slice of observation, with each "un" revving up the processing until each node in the detector grid was processing a cross section of several streams.
I was not prepared for the next innovation. The "un's'" were a crafty bunch, and within each quad, they began the sub processing necessary to unify their outputs. Each quad then shuffled their combined streams to the quad closest to me, repeating the aggregation process once again. When complete, the "un's" had done something impressive, with each member handling data equivalent to what the entire configuration started with, along with the total multiplexing job that I had been doing, except at the next level.
Single layer intercept processing certainly was fast. The "un's" were able to expand and contract their arrangement, and alter their processing algorithm to match the new physical arrangement. The quality of the information in the channel imparted some form to the representation, and the regular grid discovered the ability to record the recalled shape that was buried in the pattern by reporting the positional distortion that equalized the reception to a single moment in time.
July 25, 2010
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