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#marchofrobots

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The hubbies and I taking a week long trip north from New Los Angeles, California all the way through Cascadia, and into Alberta, Canada to see our Meta-hubbies. We're taking low level rail only and making several stops along the way. I mean sure, we could just take the Tier 1 Maglev from Union Station up to Chico, hop on the CasMag to Lethbridge, and be at Troy's in like 4 or 5 hours, but wheres the fun in that?

March of Robots Day 17: Quest

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I'm not someone who likes fighting, and I don't kill. Plus I live in a pretty safe part of New Los Angeles, so I don't have to worry about defending myself all that much. I do keep one self defense tool in my home, and that is a pepper gun. It fires from a pressurized can of pepper gel that expands into a foam that then solidifies and fuses itself to porous surfaces like skin. I've been told this stuff burns like hell (I wouldn't know, I'm both a robot and a bird, so capsaicin just doesn't do anything to me) and I can confirm that this will absolutely block out the optics of a robot if I can hit them in the visual sensors.

March of Robots Day 16: Weapon

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Another feature that I can access with my beak is an instant film camera. There is a slot that accepts film packs at the back of my inner beak, behind the entrances to my biomatter reactor and storage bay, that accepts instant film packs. From there, I am able to take pictures of whatever I'm looking at and either spit them out or swallow them into storage.

March of Robots Day 15: Picture

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Inside my body, beneath my biomatter reactor, is my internal storage bay. This allows me to swallow objects, keep them in a safe place, and recall them at will. Inside, nanite polymer (chains of nanobots suspended in viscoelastic fluid) sorts, tags, adjusts size, and moves objects to and from the entry point.

March of Robots Day 14: Cargo

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I went to South Lake Tahoe for a trip last December, and despite the snow and -3°C weather, I made my way out to the beach to see Tahoe Point, a place where California borders two other countries. The water of Lake Tahoe all belongs to Cascadia, but the city of South Lake Tahoe still belongs to California, and it also sits on the border of Sierra, not too far away from Reno.

March of Robots Day 13: Frozen

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There's a lot more magic* in 2429 than one would expect, but three that are particularly relevant to my life:

Shrink Drive: Allows me to change my size on a uniform linear scale from my usual stature of 2m and 200kg all the way down to a minimum of 2cm and 100g.

Portable Biomatter Reactor: Allows me consume foods in order to charge my battery, producing no organic waste product and generating heat and electricity. The most maintenance I have to do is occasionally descale it to clear out salt, iron, and other minerals that are in food.

Hard Light: It's what extends from my wings and lets me fly. Hard light protections are weightless and able to stop gasses from passing through them while solid objects are able to pass through without resistance.

*There's probably scientific explanations for all of them, but I'm not a smart enough robot bird to explain them.

March of Robots Day 11: Magic

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The historic Angel's Flight Railway in the heart of New Los Angeles, a funicular that has been in service for over 500 years. It sits adjacent to the 3rd Street Tram Tunnel and connects the Olive Hill Plaza and the Hill Grassway, and holds the record for being the shortest Railroad in the Nation of California. Despite being primarily a tourist attraction, it and the Griffith Park Gondolas are counted as Teir 4 Transit and therefore can be ridden for free by all California citizens.

March of Robots Day 8: Hill