by BrainWalker » Mon Aug 17, 2009 2:28 am
Max was wondering if anyone was going to mention plans to explore the unformatted zone tonight, but no one said anything. Too bad.
Max wanders lazily back to his room, thinking about how he's going to reorganize his files. Normally, organizing your stuff isn't at the top of any kid's list, but it's different when the stuff you're organizing is data inside your subconscious mind. Well, it's not actually inside his mind, it's more like... a separate place he can tap into with his mind. Actually, Max wasn't entirely sure how all this stuff worked. Which is why it was so exciting trying to figure it out.
Upon reaching his room, Max leaps onto his bed and flops down face-first. Comfy! After a confusing morning, relaxation was welcome. As his mind clears, new data enters his conscious via news stream.
"What!?" Max's exclamation is muffled in the bedsheets. "Ninja Surfer Kid 6 got cancelled!? That sucks!" The series has always been mostly about martial arts, but there have been some pretty cool chase scenes, and the action had always been solid. Plus, Kidritta Osbourne was pretty easy on the eyes. Oh well... it's pretty rare that a series remains good 4 or 5 sequels in, anyway.
The rest of the news didn't strike Max as being particularly revelatory. Violence in a violent part of the city? Stupid racists being stupid? Rain? Shocking.
Eventually, Max rolls over, and clasped his hands between his head and his pillow. He had has his fill of rumination on the nature of his existence for one day. Now he had something else on his mind: a file structure that he needed to organize and secure. "Snapshots" seemed like a fairly logical directory name for a file full of snapshots, but he didn't want to secure all of them. That might be a little... suspicious, assuming the adults had access to this storage. Max had already decided that he was going to create a separate directory for secure stuff, but what to call it? It would have to be something simple, but something he could defend. One thing Max has learned from movies is that if you're going to do something sneaky, you're going to need an alibi or some kind of boring, normal-sounding explanation.
"I got it! A journal!" Max had no interest in actually keeping a journal but it was a perfect excuse to want to keep some data to himself. Max created the folder, and made it secure using the method Enzo had taught him. Now all he had to do was move the picture of Thirteen into it. Simple!
Except, looking into his snapshots directory, Max discovered that all his picture files were labeled simply with the date and time. And only now did it occur to him that he had never actually looked at any of the images he had captured. "Well, dang." Now what?
"Guess I'll have to find a way to look at these... hmmm..." Max wasn't actually looking at a list of files in a directory on a computer monitor. He was simply... aware that there were numbered image files in a directory called 'snapshots' somewhere in his personal storage space, wherever that was located. So, it's not like he could check a 'view thumbnails' option somewhere. No, he'd have to find a way to project these images into the physical/digital space he currently occupied. But how? Why does this whole 'digital existence' thing have to be so complicated?
Staring at the ceiling, Max got an idea. "Hmm... flat surface. I wonder..." he muttered. He concentrated on the ceiling of his room, and stretched his hand out towards it, as if that was supposed to do something... but nothing happened. This was going to take some practice.
Max decides to knock his mission report out first. Somehow he already knew the basic report format and that he was expected to email it to Rivendare. It was a pretty simple mission, but he'd have to come up for explanations for a few things... like why he and his sister didn't just spend the whole mission flying around, how they found Robert, and most importantly, how they were able to figure out Robert was a cat. It required a little creative thinking, but Max was used to talking around certain details when dealing with adults. You don't live in Deck City without learning a little self-preservation. He also decided to toss in a little blurb about how the kids tested out their various abilities at the end.
Max decides to save a copy of his report in a new sub-folder called "mission reports," for future reference.
Well, now that that was out of the way, Max had the rest of the afternoon to figure out this picture projection thing. Which is good, because it took him most of the afternoon to figure it out. He tried using the ceiling, and the walls. He tried using his mirror and his TV as a viewing screen. He even tried making images simply float in midair like he'd seen in a sci-fi movie once. Man, that would have been cool. But he had the most success with walls. After a few hours of trial and error, Max was able to project his snapshots onto an existing flat surface. Awesome! He viewed his pictures one by one, deleted the junk pictures he had taken while practicing his ability to take them during training, and decided to rename the rest something more useful. He also made a mental note -- which ended up becoming an actual text file -- to try and remember to give these snapshots more useful names when he takes them in the future. He decides to leave the image of Thirteen with it's simple time and date filename, though. He felt that made it less conspicuous, especially in a folder named "journal."
Max had completed all the tasks that he had set for himself in his room, but by this point the evening wasn't far away. He thought about going back to the unformatted zone, but no one else had mentioned whether they were going to go back, and it didn't seem like it would be as fun to explore by himself. He'd have to go back with his sister sometime. That way they could fly around to their heart's content and not have to worry about leaving each other behind.
Max decided to see if he could get Ninja Surfer Kid 3 on his TV. It was his favorite movie in the series, mostly because it had two chase scenes, one of which involved a helicopter and a speedboat.