Difference between revisions of "The Handbook"
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A book created by the legendary [[tattoo]] hacker [[Kairo]], detailing his experiments into creating a [[Nanocel Assemblage]] to mimic the structure of a human brain. He calls this hypothetical construct a ''swarm'', and some people believe that he managed to create a swarm complex enough to transfer his own consciousness into. However, for most people this is in the realm of mythology, and the Handbook remains a hypothetical text on ways which could be used to add more computational power to a tattoo. | A book created by the legendary [[tattoo]] hacker [[Kairo]], detailing his experiments into creating a [[Nanocel Assemblage]] to mimic the structure of a human brain. He calls this hypothetical construct a ''swarm'', and some people believe that he managed to create a swarm complex enough to transfer his own consciousness into. However, for most people this is in the realm of mythology, and the Handbook remains a hypothetical text on ways which could be used to add more computational power to a tattoo. | ||
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| + | The most common practical use of the Handbook, therefore, is its appendices. These list a number of mechanisms for using one nanocel to affect another's structure, including formulae for the assemblages used to program tattoos, as well as a vast list (appendix VII) of common [[poison]]s. | ||
[[Category:Books]][[Category:Forbidden Science]] | [[Category:Books]][[Category:Forbidden Science]] | ||
Latest revision as of 10:51, 8 June 2012
A book created by the legendary tattoo hacker Kairo, detailing his experiments into creating a Nanocel Assemblage to mimic the structure of a human brain. He calls this hypothetical construct a swarm, and some people believe that he managed to create a swarm complex enough to transfer his own consciousness into. However, for most people this is in the realm of mythology, and the Handbook remains a hypothetical text on ways which could be used to add more computational power to a tattoo.
The most common practical use of the Handbook, therefore, is its appendices. These list a number of mechanisms for using one nanocel to affect another's structure, including formulae for the assemblages used to program tattoos, as well as a vast list (appendix VII) of common poisons.