- Leo Cherne
Today our
journey in the time machine took us from one cabin to another. The
only difference I noticed at first was that, wherever we had landed,
it was a lot colder there. Fortunately, Mr Tuniak had informed me in
advance that that would be the case and so I had prepared and put on
warmer clothes.
As we left
the cabin, I saw that it was located right at the edge of a forest,
pretty much on top of a mountain. Below us was a long valley. A river
was running right through it and dividing it into two parts. In the
middle of the valley was a city, one of the most unusual cities I
have ever seen. It was as if someone had cut out the centre of a big
metropolis and relocated it exactly as it was right in the middle of
the wilderness. I couldn't really put my finger on it, but it seemed
immediately clear to me that this city hadn't grown naturally, but
had been planned. There were no suburbs, where the houses would stand
farther and farther apart from each other and slowly disappear
completely. It looked like the city planners had drawn an imaginary
line in the valley and declared that this was exactly the point where
the city would stop.
“Where
are we?”, I asked.
“Alaska,
your present”, Mr Tuniak said. “Our car is parked over there.”
Right next
to the cabin was a small parking area and a road that led down to the
city. A car was standing on one of the parking spots, not much bigger
than a Smart, but from no company I recognized. There was a little
sticker on the passenger side door, which informed me that the
vehicle belonged to Raben Consulting. We got into the car and I
expected Mr Tuniak to drive us. But there was no steering wheel.
Instead a computer screen was right in front of what in other cars
would be the driver's seat. On the screen Mr Tuniak entered our
destination, “Center”. And then the car started and drove on its
own.
It was
extremely uncomfortable sitting in a car, knowing that even in an
emergency there was no way to interfere with the steering (later, I
was informed that this was not true; a joystick – which I had
mistaken for gear shifting lever – could be used as a manual
override). As long as we hadn't actually entered the city, it was
bearable, but once inside... A countless number of other cars was
travelling along the streets and all of them were apparently driven
by an on-board computer. And in addition to that there were of course
also pedestrians and bikers, people on roller-skates and Wheelies and
every other means of transportation imaginable. I even saw a rickshaw
being pulled by a robot. And not one single accident!
Once I had
gotten slightly used to all of this, I was able to concentrate a bit
more on my surroundings and the buildings we passed. Although we were
somewhere in Alaska very few of the streets signs were actually
written in English. Even on the big posters which could be seen on
some walls or the signs in the front windows of shops used hardly any
English. Instead Russian was used (the vast majority of signs), but
also some kind of Arabian and Chinese. And the people who lived here
seemed to come from every corner of the world.
In the
centre of the city there was a big fountain. There was a metal plaque
at its side, describing and explaining in Russian the figures visible
on it.
“There
should be glasses in the glove compartment in front of you”, Mr
Tuniak said. “Take them with you.”
I took the
dark blue spectacle case and we left the car. Mr Tuniak went to the
metal plaque and pointed at it. “Put on the glasses”, he said.
I took the
glasses from the case. They were heavier than I had expected, with
dark and thick temples and frame. After I put them on, I noticed that
my sight hadn't noticeably improved or worsened, so I guessed that
they glasses were just that: made of simple glass.
“On
the right temple you'll find a small indentation”, Mr Tuniak
explained. “If you press with a finger on it, you will activate the
glasses.”
I did as I
was told. And the glasses really came alive! When I looked at the
plaque now, a new text was seemingly floating in front of it: a green
font, the translation of the Russian text. I turned around and looked
at a poster with Chinese writing on it. And again the glasses
super-imposed the translation.
“That's
fantastic”, I said. “What is this city?”
“Fifty
years ago, when it was founded, it didn't have a name”, Mr Tuniak
said. We were walking towards one of the taller buildings with a
glass front. “It was built and maintained by the secret services of
several western nations during the hight of the Cold War. The plan
was to recreate a Russian city here, so that spies could get used to
living in one.”
“Spies
who would then be sent to the Soviet Union?”, I asked.
“Yes”,
Mr Tuniak answered. “The Soviet Union by the way had similar cities
hidden somewhere in Russia. Of course, those were built to look like
American cities. But at the beginning of the 80ies the project was
ended and for over a decade the city wasn't used for anything. Until
Feodor told Alice and me about it.”
“This
city is one of the... companies you founded to research old knowledge
and put it to new uses?”
“We
came here in the early 90ies. That's when the city got its name,
Lagua's Dwelling”, Mr Tuniak told me. “It was taken over by
several of our companies, who had fused together and are now
controlled by Raben Consulting. They were looking for a quiet place
to... well, you could say to go into hiding.”
We stopped
in front of the main entrance. “One more thing before we enter.”
Mr Tuniak turned to me and started to whisper. “The people here
know me as Alexander Mueller, member of the board of executives of
Raben Consulting. Only a few know my true history and who I really
am, so if you talk to someone it's best to suppose he doesn't.”
I said that
I understood and that I would be careful and then we entered.
“This
is basically the centre of the whole city”, Mr Tuniak explained,
now again talking in his normal voice.
“You
still haven't told me what it is people here actually do”, I said.
“Everything
you can imagine”, a woman with blond hair and a cap answered. She
was sitting in an electric wheelchair and driving by she must have
heard my question. “We develop, invent and test everything we can
think of.” She pointed to the glasses I was still wearing. “Why
do you think you can find signs in every language outside?”
“Just
to test the glasses?”, I asked.
“Not
only the glasses, but yes”, she said. Her mobile phone was ringing
and she excused herself. I watched her drive off and it took me a few
moments before I realised that the wheelchair had started moving on
its own. She had pressed no button and given no other visible or
audible kind of command, but it still seemed to know where she wanted
to go. When I asked Mr Tuniak about it, he answered: “The cap she
is wearing is measuring her brain activities and is connected with
the computer of the wheelchair. She is basically controlling it with
her thoughts.“
The
receptionist, who gave us our visitor passes for the building, was an
android. The liftboy, who took us to the fifth floor, was a hologram.
The people we passed were wearing t-shirts which changed colour. On
some you could even watch whole films.
“Is
that how cities in the future will look like?”, I asked.
Mr Tuniak
was thinking for a bit, before he answered: “I don't think I'm
telling you too much, when I say that the future will be quite
different from what you can see here. Everything here will be used in
one form or another, but not really in the same way the people here
use it.” He smiled. “From my point of view, Lagua's Dwelling is a
city where children have been given the technology of the future to
play with. Take a look at this for instance.” We were passing an
open door and Mr Tuniak gestured to me that I should take a look
inside, without attracting attention. I saw several women and men
sitting in front of computer screens and apparently playing some kind
of game. They seemed to be controlling some robots through dark
corridors or caves.
“Do
you see the biscuits on the table?”, Mr Tuniak asked quietly. “In
some of them, they have hidden nano-bots, miniature robots that are
smaller than a human cell. They ate a few biscuits and are now trying
to figure out, which of them ate the biscuit with the nano-bots.”
“Isn't
that dangerous?”, I asked alarmed.
“No,
not at all”, Mr Tuniak replied. “But that's what I meant when I
said that they are like children playing with toys they don't
understand. They developed nano-bots which in the future will be a
very important medical tool. Operations won't be necessary any more,
because instead of cutting people up, they will just be injected with
those nano-bots who can repair practically any damage from the
inside. But right now they are... used for these stupid games.”
At the end
of the corridor we entered a small office. A blind secretary was
sitting in front of a computer and greeted us. The screen of his
computer was part of the surface of his desk and the man had laid
both his hands on top of it. It was explained to me, that the screen
consisted of a material that could be shaped with great precision.
Parts of it would raise and lower themselves and thus create
something very similar to Braille. The secretary could “see” the
images on the screen with his hands. But, he admitted, the system
wasn't perfect yet and there were still a few bugs to take care of.
“Is
Doctor Cumshewa here?”, Mr Tuniak asked.
“She
is down at the AI laboratories”, the secretary said. “They had
some problem there this morning. I'm afraid she won't have time for
you.”
We thanked
him for the information and returned to the lift. Mr Tuniak decided
we would try our luck and so we went down to the third floor where
the laboratories for artificial intelligence were located. As we got
there, we found chaos. People were running up and down, shouting
things to each other, gesticulating and in general creating the
feeling that the end of the world was near. Mr Tuniak talked to an
elderly woman – I guess it was Doctor Cumshewa – but she seemed
to completely ignore him. There were several computer terminals in
front of us, a technician or software engineer working at each of
them and the woman was going from one to the other, issuing orders or
giving advice. She returned to Mr Tuniak once more and quickly said:
“Sorry, Alexander, but I'm quite busy, a you can see. An artificial
intelligence has escaped into the internet this morning.” Mr Tuniak
nodded only in response, but I think I heard him mumble: “And so it
begins.” But maybe that was only my imagination at work.
We left the
AI laboratory, because we were only standing in the way.
“I
guess, we won't get a guided tour through the city today”, Mr
Tuniak apologised, as we left the building. “But I think you have
got quite a good idea now of what hidden ancient knowledge is capable
of creating.”
Oh yes, I
did have an idea now. But looking back, I don't think I even
understood half of what I have seen today. I can't possibly imagine
how the future will look like...
NEXT WEEK
Die Menschen sind nicht
immer, was sie scheinen, aber selten etwas besseres.
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