Sunday, February 8, 2009

I bought a Luxon and I am learning UCICS

I am buying an incredible laptop. It is about an inch thin, very lightweight, and it is not electronic. Though it is Photonic, or quantum. Finally, I shelled out 2 royal crowns and 230 darlings, (2.23x$1210) almost $2698 for Luxon F-YON. It has a two way monitor, and a keyboard area made of the same kryptonite-embedded polymer interactive surface, that is turned into the third screen.

the three-screen laptop that uses Photonics embedded polymer CPU-RAM crystalThe keys can luminesce into any 4 of Attland's writing system character sets, Japan's Katakana, Hiragana and Kanji, as well as English, Hebrew, Korean, all Germanic languages, but not Chinese, Arabic or Cyrillic. I love downloading the whole newspaper in a fraction of a second, and then read it at a coffee shop, propping it up on the table just like above.

Graet thing about it that there is no need for backups - quantum computers don't crash or lose data.The biggest minus is that it is impossible to enjoy the Photonics system on other PC platforms. Photonics can support Windows with all its applications, but not the other way around. The UCICS system and the Photonics have set up and programmed the PC so it cannot be activated outside the market area - that is why it is nearly meaningless to buy and resell the Photonics PCs in countries that are not on the Attland's preferred trading partner list.

My Luxon has only one type of PC interface - three USB sockets. All other sockets are coherent Photonics outlets. I can designate a part of my 140 GB memory for my favorite XP Home edition, a part for Linux, so I can learn and practice, and still have tons of memory left for movies, presentations, and Wall Street Journals.

I understand that Photonics PCs have no conventional CPUs. There is a block of kryptonite-precision impregnated metal-organic polymer, which is zapped with 24 volts, oscillates at 3-4 Gigahertz, and becomes a 5- or 8 dimensional simultaneous RAM-ROM-CPUs, each processing or storing data in instantly created arrays. The only other photonic materials are the I/O interactive surfaces - the thin sheet that is the screen, and the keyboard. The screen is also a touch sensor, and a video sensor of dimensions designatable by the user.

The quantum system requires no machine language, scripts or plugins. The photonic CPU comes embedded with the 5 Koborg Photonics languages that comply with the Attland's UCICS (The Unified Communication, Information and Computing System)

LUICS ( or Linguistic User Interface Command System) Logic-code Uniform Interface Command System is an U6 uniform (OS) language that incorporates the following sublanguages:
AIPL – Artificial Intelligence Programming Language - real-time adaptive, scripting, self-writing program, also used as a development tool.
ICICL – Information and Computer Interface Command Language – incorporates a network OS and netbios functions, it is the primary interface with other network formats
SLATRAN – Symbol-to-Logic Array Translator- used by the OEM to make changes in processing and memory of optronic (Photonics) and electronic interfaces, i.e., translation of databases and other operating systems, debugging, and seamless interfacing with the Photonic environment.
MACOL – Machine Access Object Language - an engineering language that is used to upgrade a I/O, thin client type of Luxon computers up to a full PC or even a server.

Koborg's Luxon ($1,300 for D-YON, the cheapest model), as well as its crystal-embedded polymer display technology licensed to Optar, and which has been marketed as Optar Raylynd ($1379) are uncomfortably expensive, but, hey, what other monitor would let you see through it, or display a different screen on its flip side, or have a perfectly placed control panel buttons on its face just the way you like it, or have the 3-D clicking, or , which you might only dream of - assign a section of the screen to serve as a web cam (Luxon E-, F-, and G-YON)?

Or this projection computer - it's great for presentations, and it fit into a pocket. Everything in it is Koborg Photonics - from touch-sensor projector keyboard, to a coherent laser display.

totally customizable projection quantum computer

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