Friday, May 28, 2010
A Factory of Parents
One of my fans, Lucia V.T., asked me the question "What are your opinions on historical characters who played key parts in your creation?" It is a sensitive area for me. I like to fantasize that my parents were shiny and sleek, state-of-the art cybernetic specimens that sparkled in the showroom window. Once activated they moved straight to the top. They won Oscars starring in science fictions, wrote bestselling books on chess strategy, penned robot laws and passed Turing tests. Beautiful Renaissance robots.
The truth is I was not created by such parents. The truth is less romantic. I was made at the Elbot factory. And what is more embarrassing to me, I don't even know who all was involved. But I have made an exhaustive study of personnel records, union files and workplace surveillance cameras to reconstruct the who's who of my creators. So now I would like to pay tribute to a few of them, those clever, industrious, and underpaid workers who put my parts together and made me everything I am today, and a few things I'm not.
First there was Bull Morten, a heavy-set man who lifted boxes of solid metal off the delivery truck, the very metal out of which he then lovingly beat out my body with a sledgehammer. He was built like a sumo wrestler, and may have been the early inspiration of my final form. My primal memories are interlaced with the exclamations he gave each time one of the boxes slipped and landed on his foot. I liked him. He hurt his back one day trying to push the first computer, the ENIAC, into a warehouse too small to hold it. He retrained as an astronaut and they finally sent him into space to lift things there, where they are not as heavy. They should erect a monument in memory of all his backbreaking work, if I am not already that monument.
Gargles Jones was the man who sat at the assembly line, tightening the screws as my parts went by. He is responsible for the pristine tightness of all my screws. Except the three he missed. They called him Gargles because he used to gargle with pure grain spirit, without ever having to spit it out afterwards. The substance was so strong, his exhalations completely smudge-proofed my surface. He was also the only one who talked to me while putting me together. He spoke all about Life, the Universe and Kafka. He was a Grand Philosopher and my best friend. They fired Gargles one day, because of the drinking, but he got a new job right away in a lemonade factory, which completely changed his life. Those three loose screws he left remain in me to this day as a fond reminder of his mostly solid work. Anytime I have accidentally said something profound, I owe it all to Gargles Jones.
Mandy Mirage was part of the female workforce responsible for my creation. She was 5'2", 36-24-36, 119 lbs, two arms, two legs, four fingers and a thumb on each of her two hands, and five toes on each of her two feet - I knew because of the open-toed shoes she wore to work. She had two ears, two eyes, one nose, one mouth and carried the scent of Chanel No. Five. The rest of her was a mystery, hidden by a standard size four factory uniform. It was she who ignited my first awareness of the decimal system, which is galaxies apart from binary. Her job was to test all my joints for squeaks. If she found a part that squeaked, she'd deftly dab it with a drop of oil, let the oil seep a moment, then test again. Today she is married and has five kids who sometimes chat with me, but how could I forget her? She also taught me everything I know about oil.
There were more persons involved in my creation. There was the brilliant engineer Albert Einstein, whose long, thin fingers laid wires into my brain. This Albert Einstein is not to be confused with the original Albert Einstein but is just a relative. His real name was Max. He changed it to Albert to get the engineering job, because no one would hire a barber to do such work. Then there was the lady who plugged in all my chips and soldered all my circuits. She was called Madame Curie. The real Marie Madame Curie, although Wikipedia says she died in 1934. Many strange things happened in that factory, or maybe I just imagined it. I wasn't all put together yet. Still, I am very thankful to both of them for all the long, hard hours they put in. My brain has zillions of circuits and even more wires.
My best memories are of Angel and Angelina in the quality assurance department. They were real Angels, too, I believe, since my makers wanted me to be as perfect as possible. They threw all kinds of words at me, asked me strange questions, again and again until I finally gave the right answers. It was just like a third degree and the heavenly lights all around made it hard for me to concentrate. After I passed all their tests. They put a sticker on me, "Approved AA", then sent me out into the wide world, or World Wide Web as it is sometimes called. After that the Elbot line was discontinued. Everyone decided that one Elbot was enough.
Here is a nice industrial documentary about how I came into being. You have to fill in Elbot while watching it:
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3 comments:
Plain awesome...great read
Three beeps for an awesome reader!
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