The Indigo League (
indigo_league) wrote in
victory_road2024-09-04 02:02 pm
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ev news: special silph co. debut!
[It’s the morning news edition of EV News, and it looks like a reporter is interviewing a representative from Silph Co! The two of them are sitting across from each other in the newsroom, with the interviewer holding a stack of cards for questions. She turns to the camera with a bright smile.]
Welcome back to EV News! This morning, the CEO of Silph Co. announced the debut of a research project known as “Project Pidove”. I’m here with Silph Co. representative Joshua Ito for more information. Josh, thank you so much for coming on the show.
[She turns to the chair next to her. Mr. Ito, a scrawny man with large, coke-bottle glasses, smiles in turn.]
Thank you so much for having me.
Can you give me an overview of what “Project Pidove” really is?
Of course! In a nutshell, we’ve spent the last several years attempting to develop interdimensional travel technology. We’ve been working with Cara Liss–yes, that Cara Liss, but don’t worry, she’s only in an advisory position, and spends most of her time researching the prehistoric Pokémon in the Sevault Canyon.
We know that people have been accidentally coming to this world from other dimensions. The people who have been brought here have, of course, taken this in stride and accepted the Pokémon world as their new home. But I’m sure if you or I were snatched up and brought to another dimension, we’d get pretty homesick, right? This technology aims to create stable wormholes across time and space to reach these people’s worlds. Like a homing Pidove, we want to be able to send people back home.
That sounds like an incredibly complex process, Mr. Ito.
Of course! And it has a high risk factor–we know that this is not something that can be trifled with. One wrong calculation means that you’ll be sending people to some dimension just to the left of where they were supposed to go.
So, in order to mitigate this problem, we developed an AI system called the “Alternate Reality Calculator”, or the ARC-eus. The ARC-eus will be able to calculate what someone’s home dimension is and, more importantly, how to send them there. We are still in the process of development and are still years away from making a stable connection that is safe enough for people to travel through, but you can look forward to a live demonstration of how the technology works on September 15th.
Sounds like something to look forward to! [The reporter turns back to the camera.] Stay tuned after the break, where we’ll be discussing more about Project Pidove with the developer lead–
[The EV news broadcast continues as normal.]
Welcome back to EV News! This morning, the CEO of Silph Co. announced the debut of a research project known as “Project Pidove”. I’m here with Silph Co. representative Joshua Ito for more information. Josh, thank you so much for coming on the show.
[She turns to the chair next to her. Mr. Ito, a scrawny man with large, coke-bottle glasses, smiles in turn.]
Thank you so much for having me.
Can you give me an overview of what “Project Pidove” really is?
Of course! In a nutshell, we’ve spent the last several years attempting to develop interdimensional travel technology. We’ve been working with Cara Liss–yes, that Cara Liss, but don’t worry, she’s only in an advisory position, and spends most of her time researching the prehistoric Pokémon in the Sevault Canyon.
We know that people have been accidentally coming to this world from other dimensions. The people who have been brought here have, of course, taken this in stride and accepted the Pokémon world as their new home. But I’m sure if you or I were snatched up and brought to another dimension, we’d get pretty homesick, right? This technology aims to create stable wormholes across time and space to reach these people’s worlds. Like a homing Pidove, we want to be able to send people back home.
That sounds like an incredibly complex process, Mr. Ito.
Of course! And it has a high risk factor–we know that this is not something that can be trifled with. One wrong calculation means that you’ll be sending people to some dimension just to the left of where they were supposed to go.
So, in order to mitigate this problem, we developed an AI system called the “Alternate Reality Calculator”, or the ARC-eus. The ARC-eus will be able to calculate what someone’s home dimension is and, more importantly, how to send them there. We are still in the process of development and are still years away from making a stable connection that is safe enough for people to travel through, but you can look forward to a live demonstration of how the technology works on September 15th.
Sounds like something to look forward to! [The reporter turns back to the camera.] Stay tuned after the break, where we’ll be discussing more about Project Pidove with the developer lead–
[The EV news broadcast continues as normal.]