
April 18th is Invention Day, so I invented a teleport machine! Beep beep beep beep beep! A! Yes, teleportation was a huge success! Whoa, that’s really amazing! Psshh… A psshh… psshh… Aaaahhhh!
Maybe it’s because I’m scared, so I’ll wait until safety is guaranteed…
I saw a manga once that had something like teleportation, but it was more like a cloning technology, where the original person died and went to heaven.
I see the thread image as a Star Trek approach where it is deconstructed at the starting point and reconstructed at the destination.
It failed to decompose, but
If we were to do it in reality, I guess it would start with animal experiments and then move towards ensuring safety…
Ghost dubbing themes have been a classic staple since long ago…
A fly got in and turned into a fly human!
The Star Trek method might have continuity of memory, but the original is dead, right?
It divides into whether to transfer the substance itself or just the information.
If it can be reconstructed as is at the destination even if the disassembly fails, then…
It seems that the decomposing element doesn’t need to be decomposed…
Is it that thing called telecloning?
Decomposition and reconstruction teleportation could be effectively used for treating injuries or curing diseases.
Let’s do it! SOMA!
It’s definitely faster to extract the information and generate it on-site rather than actually moving it…
I believe that in the future, a time will come when technologies like this will enable the inheritance of intelligence and memories.
As long as organic life forms continue, I guess we can’t win against lifespan… that’s what I think.
Cash continues to accumulate in places I don’t know.
One day beyond the limit.
There’s a story in Star Trek where the malfunction of a transporter results in the number of people doubling.
In the latest installment of Star Trek, it was revealed that a considerable number of people were secretly assimilated due to the Borg tampering with the teleportation device.
I feel a bit excited when I think about the girl with white hair becoming all muddy.
If A can’t be decomposed but B comes out, then it can be used as a device to infinitely copy money!
Don’t parallelize in Star Trek.
I think the resurrection system in Borderlands was like this.
A teleportation machine is essentially a 3D printer.
At least let the melting happen in an instant.
The one that was decomposed and the one that was generated are different entities, but both are the same existence as before execution, so it’s safe.
There are far too many questionable depictions of whether white-haired people are even human.
I understand that there are various issues, such as whether it’s essentially just dead.
Teleportation of inanimate objects can be used regardless of such issues, and that’s revolutionary and convenient by itself…
Just copy the body and back up the memory and personality to the cloud, then download it after the transfer.
The transfer of the subhuman that regenerates from the parts that were cut off in advance by turning the main body into powder looks like this.
The Ship of Theseus! Isn’t it the Ship of Theseus?
I’ve heard that the revival method in Cyber Knight is like this, although I’ve never tried it.
Save the memory, and when you die, install it in a clone.
If the time comes in the future when I will die, I want to entrust everything to the younger version of myself who recognizes me as I am.
I want to die after doing ghost dubbing rather than just dying.
As long as it is not proven that the self is an existence that cannot be observed and is not an electrical signal in the brain, it is merely a copy of the person.
I am the Swamp Man.
There was also a manga with the premise that the original disappears an hour after teleportation.
The copies spend their remaining lives in their own ways until they disappear.
Even if I were to teleport, it wouldn’t be by moving myself through transfer.
I feel safer with types like the Anywhere Door or dimension rift that forcibly connect spaces for travel.
There are so many games that have been overly polished to the point that they deliberately use this revival system! It’s become such a standard that listing them is now a hassle.
Like Prestige.
The impact of flies is huge compared to human size, isn’t it?
In “The Sixth Day,” the scene where the final boss creates a clone to heal his lethal injury, only to find out that the old version is still alive and says, “Die,” is quite impactful.
Since face mites are quite small, I guess it doesn’t really matter if they mix in.
Tapeworms can be dozens of times larger than some flies…
The twist of SOMA.
Let’s release it as a device that perfectly hides the results!
Everyone gets into this box every day for work, and the world keeps turning!
In reality, it seems that this kind of transfer technology is unlikely to be developed anytime soon.
Among the many SF gadgets, there is a particularly thin sense of connection to reality.
It seems like it would be dead at the development stage…
The problem that the soul cannot be transferred.
Is there really that much value in using such a large-scale device to transport humans over long distances…?
The transfer location is limited to the place where this equipment is located, and it’s just one person at a time, right? Even if it takes some time, a transportation system that can cheaply transport many people to various places would be more convenient, and at worst, it can be managed remotely…
In that case, if such technology is developed, it will likely be utilized in fields like medicine rather than for teleportation.
The fast travel in Nier: Automata was this system…
Transfer the soul and recreate the body based on the soul’s information!