After a short break for Christmas and the New Year, I'd like to welcome in 2014 with the first in a new series (Which when the compiled PDF is finished will be a new chapter, I hope) on Talinz in Daily Life. We start with industry:
Much more than just sport, Talinz permeate everyday life,
and affect the way people interact with each other and with society. These frames
tend to be offered in two general formats: those for domestic use, and those
for industrial use. Their jobs vary widely within these two very broad clades,
and they are present in every economic sector, for better or worse.
Industrial Frames
Robotics is a major part of heavy industry, and it is in
this role that Talinz frames are perhaps considered most iconic. Bulky, robust
frames are often used for heavy lifting and large-scale construction, whilst
smaller frames clamber through production lines adjusting fine electronics, and
soldering together smaller pieces.
Outside of this, Talinz are used as crop dusters and
harvesters in agriculture; for extraction, crushing, sieving and transportation
in mining and quarrying; for synthesis of dangerous chemicals, and to help produce
energy in power plants, along with many more tasks elsewhere. Often, specialist
frames will be built fit to purpose. South American robotics giants Texlinz,
for example, have constructed a frame that closely associates with others of
its type to form a ‘swarm net’ to enable more efficient, Talinz-powered
fishing. These units tend to become very heavily reliant on each other during
their work, and robopsychologists have suggested they may even experience a
sense of grief when a member of the swarm is terminated, even after the basic personality
files of the frames were prevented from developing a capacity for sorrow.
The use of Talinz frames in industry has exploded massively
largely due to one thing. With an entirely Talinz-powered factory, one only
needs to employ a small number of engineers in case of breakdown, and a foreman
to supervise the work. Workforce maintenance costs drop through the floor, as
there are no legal requirements to grant Talinz a wage, breaks, or holiday. Companies
obtain the units either by purchasing direct from a manufacturer, or through
part time letting deals of the unit from its owners, and so in some cases do
not even need to provide shelter and charging ports for the units they utilise.
Whilst many units in industry tend to have very basic, blank
personality files at first – being intentionally designed to be as boring and
bland as possible in order to eliminate possible workplace fracas – the adaptability
of the Talinz system often confounds attempts to make an unthinking, unfeeling
workforce. All too often, the experiences and engagements of the frame with human
staff and other units in the facility will affect it as an individual, causing
it to form views and opinions that it might not otherwise have. Ones that might
be detrimental to productivity. One of the most difficult jobs of the small
human workforce is that of calling in the ‘Wipers’. Wipers are groups of
outside engineers who specialise in removing any aberrant traits from
industrial Talinz frames and returning them to a clean factory default, without
affecting the associated experience files (Which might necessitate the purchase
and downloading of expensive training packages or of lapses in the individual’s
memory that might inconvenience work). Engineers within the workforce at an
individual company could feasibly perform the task, but management often
worries about individuals becoming too attached to individual units, and
overlooking this in their judgement. Large companies might employ a wiping
department, whilst smaller firms may call in private contractors.
Increased production and adoption of industrial Talinz,
however, has had a major negative side effect on the humans who have now found
their jobs usurped by an ever growing robotic population. Outsourced and
outperformed, many of these individuals have understandably become dissatisfied
with the system. Governments have scrambled to counter the rising unemployment,
though different countries have approached the problem in different ways. Some
have granted subsidies and tax rebates to companies that employ a higher
percentage of human staff, some have introduced retraining and back to work
programmes to encourage education later in life, whilst others still have set
back and let the market take its course.
Disenfranchised individuals have not been silent, however.
In less stable areas, protests turn to riots, and hushed talk in the back rooms
of houses and meeting halls become political movements, or robotics sabotage.
Assaults against the few remaining Talinz engineers at large companies are on
the rise, to the point that some police departments have considered grouping
these Talinz-motivated crimes as a category all of their own.
Most notable among these groups is the Grey Hand.
Originally, this small internet forum was an area for those concerned about the
effect military Talinz were having on the human consciousness and perception of
violence. Since the Baku treaty, however, their membership has transformed into
a substantially more zealous, and more numerous anti-Talinz front. This
loosely-organised global network has been branded as champion by some,
terrorist by others. What none can deny however, are their effectiveness.
Although cells have been located and arrested, new bubbles seem to pop up out
of nowhere, infiltrating both Talinz factories and houses of prominent
individuals in the industry, and causing mayhem of levels varying from knowing
notes left on desks, through to full-scale bombings of important warehouses.
The Grey Hand is dangerous, whether one were to agree with them or not.
Considerable pressure on governments from corporations in more affected areas
has led to considerations of curfews, anti-social behaviour laws, and internet
monitoring.
Some claim it is unwarranted escalation. Some claim it is a
necessary evil.
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