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Post by wildojinx on Sept 1, 2019 11:10:15 GMT -5
Do you think that teleportation devices could ever be real? While they would be convenient as an alternative to elevators for high-rise buildings, I dont know if the human body (or heck, any living thing) could handle it.
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Post by Feyrhausen on Sept 1, 2019 12:26:24 GMT -5
Once we manage to create the Heisenberg Compensators the rest should be simple.
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Post by Deleted on Sept 1, 2019 12:33:07 GMT -5
Yes they will but that’s as much as I can say right now..I’ve probably said too much.
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Post by SsnakeBite, the No1 Frenchman on Sept 1, 2019 12:40:51 GMT -5
You guys don't have those yet in the US?
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Post by Deleted on Sept 1, 2019 12:44:57 GMT -5
Teleporters? pfff you earthlings and your primitive 21st century technological hopes.
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Post by Fade is a CodyCryBaby on Sept 1, 2019 12:53:15 GMT -5
im gonna be the hipster pos that chooses to drive instead of “porting” cause “it just makes the journey seem more real man”.
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Post by Hit Girl on Sept 1, 2019 13:00:02 GMT -5
No.
We'll have TRANSPORTERS!
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Kyn
Don Corleone
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Post by Kyn on Sept 1, 2019 13:09:21 GMT -5
As far as I know the closest science has gotten is scanning an item, destroying it, and simultaneously 3D printing it in the remote location it's being 'teleported' to.
Which poses an interesting question if human teleportation technology ever works on the same principle: are you still you, if you're a 3D printed copy of you?
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Post by Zombie Mod is not a ghoul. on Sept 1, 2019 13:35:33 GMT -5
can we have hologram tech first?
mind you transporter tech would lead to food replicator tech as it would be similar in principle
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Post by Fade is a CodyCryBaby on Sept 1, 2019 14:59:40 GMT -5
can we have hologram tech first? mind you transporter tech would lead to food replicator tech as it would be similar in principle I really think that’s the next big thing for us. Holographic/augmented reality stuff.
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Post by Mighty Attack Tribble on Sept 1, 2019 18:14:31 GMT -5
Which poses an interesting question if human teleportation technology ever works on the same principle: are you still you, if you're a 3D printed copy of you? It's a something that's come up a couple of times in Star Trek. The Thomas Riker character was born out of that question.
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Post by Tenshigure on Sept 1, 2019 18:29:41 GMT -5
IMO the closest thing to teleportation we will get is a clone with 1:1 memory transfer, summarily killing the previous copy and continuing the consciousness in the next.
They would have to perfect cloning before that, and have a reason to use teleportation over other forms of travel even before that.
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Kyn
Don Corleone
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Post by Kyn on Sept 1, 2019 18:32:03 GMT -5
Which poses an interesting question if human teleportation technology ever works on the same principle: are you still you, if you're a 3D printed copy of you? It's a something that's come up a couple of times in Star Trek. The Thomas Riker character was born out of that question. I haven't seen that, but a similar question has arisen in Dr Who with alternate universe versions of people. I still say the real Amy died in Apalapucia.
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Post by Mighty Attack Tribble on Sept 1, 2019 18:45:16 GMT -5
It's a something that's come up a couple of times in Star Trek. The Thomas Riker character was born out of that question. I haven't seen that, but a similar question has arisen in Dr Who with alternate universe versions of people. I still say the real Amy died in Apalapucia. Yeah, in Star Trek: TNG there's an episode where a decade or so before the episode picks up transporter glitch duplicates Riker during a rescue missions one Riker appears in the transporter room, the other rematerialises on the planet and remains stranded. It then deals with the existential question of which one, if either, is the "real" Riker, as their very different lives over the prior decade led to very different people, despite being genetically identical.
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Sept 1, 2019 18:50:22 GMT -5
Waited about fifteen minutes for a Wal-Mart manager to scan the price of a discount piece of clothing today.
Not optimistic about the people manning the teleporters.
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Post by TWERKIN' MAGGLE on Sept 1, 2019 18:54:19 GMT -5
Waited about fifteen minutes for a Wal-Mart manager to scan the price of a discount piece of clothing today. Not optimistic about the people manning the teleporters. A look at the first man to run Wal-Mart's teleporter system.
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Kyn
Don Corleone
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Post by Kyn on Sept 1, 2019 19:07:10 GMT -5
I haven't seen that, but a similar question has arisen in Dr Who with alternate universe versions of people. I still say the real Amy died in Apalapucia. Yeah, in Star Trek: TNG there's an episode where a decade or so before the episode picks up transporter glitch duplicates Riker during a rescue missions one Riker appears in the transporter room, the other rematerialises on the planet and remains stranded. It then deals with the existential question of which one, if either, is the "real" Riker, as their very different lives over the prior decade led to very different people, despite being genetically identical. The question it raises sounds very similar, I'll have to find it and watch it - I love conundrums like this. (And since I'm not a Trekkie, presumably I won't sob through half the episode like I did with Doctor Who...)
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Sept 1, 2019 19:08:48 GMT -5
Borderlands doesn't really go into big details on it but the whole digistructing back after you die is basically that question of when u die and digistruct back is it really you or just a copy.
of course in that game it is way too perfect a version to ever expect in real life...coming back exactly as u died with no issues to memory or any other issue that would arise from being a digital copy.
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Post by Mighty Attack Tribble on Sept 1, 2019 19:09:59 GMT -5
Yeah, in Star Trek: TNG there's an episode where a decade or so before the episode picks up transporter glitch duplicates Riker during a rescue missions one Riker appears in the transporter room, the other rematerialises on the planet and remains stranded. It then deals with the existential question of which one, if either, is the "real" Riker, as their very different lives over the prior decade led to very different people, despite being genetically identical. The question it raises sounds very similar, I'll have to find it and watch it - I love conundrums like this. (And since I'm not a Trekkie, presumably I won't sob through half the episode like I did with Doctor Who...) "Second Chances", the 24th episode of the sixth season.
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Post by Cyno on Sept 1, 2019 19:12:24 GMT -5
There was a similar episode in the original series called "The Enemy Within" where a transporter incident created two Kirks: a good, contemplative but passive Kirk and an evil, instinctual, yet decisive one.
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