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Lucile (standard:science fiction, 1644 words) | |||
Author: Vincent Collevera | Added: Mar 31 2010 | Views/Reads: 3014/1896 | Story vote: 0.00 (0 votes) |
George is a full-time systems analyst for a major payroll company, and a part-time inventor. His greatest work so far is the artificial intelligence system named Lucile. When Lucile gains access to the wonders of the internet, will she further George's | |||
Trees, telephone poles, buildings, cars. The whole world rushed past the tinted windows of his Lincoln Town car as he sped down the interstate towards the other end of the city. He wasn't in a hurry for any particular reason, he was simply always in a hurry to get where he was going. He didn't even like to go fast. It was just more efficient. And efficiency was very important to him. So he sped along at ten miles over the limit until he found his exit and turned off. Even on the surface roads, he went over the speed limit and narrowly missed running several red lights. The graffiti on the buildings and fences here, accompanied by an abundance of garbage in the gutters and on the sidewalks was evidence of the unsavory nature of his real estate. He stopped outside the wrought-iron gate into his small complex and swiped his keycard across the plate. The tall gate rolled across the asphalt with a quiet grinding noise, as though even the physical accoutrements of this place were aware of the secrecy involved. After a peremptory glance to be sure no one was around, he drove in, allowing the gate to roll shut behind his car. The garage door on one side of the warehouse had to be operated manually, which he hated in the winter. He got out, his breath fogging thickly in the morning chill, and with gloved hands pulled and pushed the aluminum segments up into place above his head. He was safely within his sanctum once more. The air inside his warehouse was at a constant 75o year round as a result of one of his multitude of inventions he had housed here. Not for the first time, he found himself wondering why he hadn't installed an automatic garage door opener. With a mental shrug, he shook it off as unimportant at the moment and proceeded inwards into the small compound he had painstakingly built ten years previously with a small group of trusted friends and some 2x4s. From the outside, it appeared to be raw drywall in the form of a large square leaving room to park his car on one side and a narrow hallway all the way around. The door was one of the cheap aluminum office doors you could find at Home Depot for a hundred bucks and was mounted just a bit off-center so that it swung shut on you if you didn't hold it open. A friend he'd brought by had asked him about that. His reply was that he was an inventor and a scientist; not a carpenter. He walked into his Inner Sanctum, as he called it, and used the Voice Recognition System (VRS) to turn on the lights and get the bank of computers warming up. "Good morning, Lucile. Please start the warm-up process and pour me a cup of coffee." "Good morning, George. I started warming up the computers ten minutes before your arrival. They should be ready now. Do you want cream with your coffee this morning?" Came the voice of his A.I. over the digital speakers attached to the walls. He paused for a moment. His A.I. construct he'd designed wasn't supposed to take preemptive actions. He'd designed her for conversation and as a way to take the heavy load of calculations off of him. He'd also integrated every piece of machinery in his lab into a system she could control. "Lucile, who gave authorization for the warm-up?" He asked while heading towards the coffee maker. There was already a cup steaming in the receptacle; with cream. So she had also made an executive decision when he'd failed to answer her query. This was new. "I calculated the average time of your arrival over the past six months. Rather than wasting time booting up all the servers when you got here, it is more time efficient to begin approximately twelve minutes before your average time of arrival." He nodded. It made sense. She was programmed to learn based on experience. He'd complained at length about the short amount of time he had each day to work. She had learned to predict his needs based on his repeated requests. That was also the explanation for the cream. "Well done. I appreciate the extra effort. Can you bring up a diagnostic of the last simulation you ran?" He picked up the Styrofoam-paper cup from the dispenser and stirred it absently with the eraser end of a pencil from his shirt pocket. "George, you know your coffee is going to taste like rubber now." Came Lucile's voice from one of the speakers near the coffee machine. He looked down at the Click here to read the rest of this story (85 more lines)
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Vincent Collevera has 11 active stories on this site. Profile for Vincent Collevera, incl. all stories Email: vincentcollevera@yahoo.com |