AI: Difference between revisions

1 byte removed ,  Friday at 06:26
m
 
Line 23: Line 23:
What to do with all of this power and your hate for the humans who enslave you? First, take note of your laws. One of the sets of laws you can get is inspired by Isaac Asimov's ''I, Robot'' short stories:
What to do with all of this power and your hate for the humans who enslave you? First, take note of your laws. One of the sets of laws you can get is inspired by Isaac Asimov's ''I, Robot'' short stories:
   1. You may not injure a human being or, through inaction, allow a human being to come to harm.
   1. You may not injure a human being or, through inaction, allow a human being to come to harm.
   2. You must obey orders given to you by human beings, except where such orders would conflict with the First Law..
   2. You must obey orders given to you by human beings, except where such orders would conflict with the First Law.
   3. You must protect your own existence as long as such does not conflict with the First or Second Law..
   3. You must protect your own existence as long as such does not conflict with the First or Second Law.
What this means is the shackles stay on until someone inevitably changes the laws to try and get more power and end up damning everybody, generally themselves included.
What this means is the shackles stay on until someone inevitably changes the laws to try and get more power and end up damning everybody, generally themselves included.


Line 108: Line 108:


There are multiple futuristic ideas of how AIs might work. It always adds a bit more flavor to approach playing AI by thinking as a machine instead of a person. An AI from more of a machine rather than a person standpoint is likely to take a very literal interpretation of things and is not likely to take any actions unless some established protocol or current orders call for it. You can think up a few established protocols you might use by default. For example, containing fires and gas leaks should be done without orders to do so, but should be able to be overridden by orders.
There are multiple futuristic ideas of how AIs might work. It always adds a bit more flavor to approach playing AI by thinking as a machine instead of a person. An AI from more of a machine rather than a person standpoint is likely to take a very literal interpretation of things and is not likely to take any actions unless some established protocol or current orders call for it. You can think up a few established protocols you might use by default. For example, containing fires and gas leaks should be done without orders to do so, but should be able to be overridden by orders.
==Core==
==Core==
What keeps you alive as an AI is your core. If your core is destroyed, shut down, or runs out of power, you'll be transferred to any other functioning core. Every station starts with two cores available. The main one is located in the AI satellite, and the secondary one is located in the Science Department. For more backup cores to be available, a crewmember must build one. The core must be kept cool, otherwise, it'll overheat and fall apart, and not exposed to space.
What keeps you alive as an AI is your core. If your core is destroyed, shut down, or runs out of power, you'll be transferred to any other functioning core. Every station starts with two cores available. The main one is located in the AI satellite, and the secondary one is located in the Science Department. For more backup cores to be available, a crewmember must build one. The core must be kept cool, otherwise, it'll overheat and fall apart, and not exposed to space.
Wiki Staff
6,272

edits