(Taken from a conversation between the main character Keats with an AI (Artificial Intelligence) being called Ummon, in The Fall of HYPERION by Dan Simmons, page 415)
-- Why did you preserve Old Earth, Ummon?
[Nostalgia/
Sentimentality/
Hope for the future of humankind/
Fear of reprisal]
-- Reprisal from whom? Humans?
[Yes]
-- So the Core can be hurt. Where is it, Ummon? The TechnoCore?
[I have told you already]
-- Tell me again, Ummon.
[We inhabit the
In-between/
stitching small singularities
like lattice crystals/
to store our memories and
generate the illusions
of ourselves
to ourselves]
-- Singularities! I cry. The In-between! Jesus Christ, Ummon, the
Core lies in the farcaster web!
[Of course\\ Where else]
-- In the farcasters themselves! The worlmhole singularity paths! The
Web is like a giant computer for AIs.
[No]
[The dataspheres are the computer\\
Every time a human
accesses the datasphere
that person's neurons
are ours to use
for our own purposes\\
Two hundred billion brains/
each with its billions
of neurons/
makes for a lot
of computing power]
I try to conceive of this and fail. Farcasters were the Core's greatest gift
to us... to humankind. Trying to remember a time before farcasting was like
trying to imagine a world before fire, the wheel, or clothing. But none of
us... none of humankind... had ever speculated on a world between the
farcaster portals: that simple step from one world to the next convinced us
that the arcane Core singularity spheres merely ripped a tear in the fabric
of space-time.
Now I try to envision it as Ummon describes it -- the Web of farcasters an
elaborate latticework of singularity-spun environments in which the
TechnoCore AIs move like wondrous spiders, their own "machines", the billions
of human minds tapped into their datasphere at any given second.
― Sébastien Chikara (Sébastien Chikara), Monday, 16 August 2004 13:31 (twenty years ago) link