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Other Jimness => Cinder Spires Spoilers => Topic started by: Quantus on September 16, 2015, 02:12:38 PM

Title: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: Quantus on September 16, 2015, 02:12:38 PM
First question:  How exactly is Meat generated in Vats, and is anyone else picturing some sort of soylent protein slime that sounds none too appetizing?  Granted, I eat chili dogs, but still...  :o
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: ITheHellAmFan on September 16, 2015, 05:24:08 PM
I don't know, All I could think of is an episode form the Colbert Report form a couple years back where he talked about scientists trying to grow artificial meat without an actual animal, which at that time was still several years of testing away form maybe being used for sausage.  I'll try to find a link.
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: knnn on September 16, 2015, 05:44:12 PM
It's a pretty typical trope for (admittedly futuristic) Scifi.  Cells reproduce on their own given oxygen/water/nutrients, so as long as you can supply that you are fine.  Here, I assume it's all done with "crystals". 

Very much reminds me of Dr.  Dinonsaur.   ;)

http://www.atomic-robo.com/atomicrobo/v4ch3-page-4
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: Second Aristh on September 16, 2015, 10:18:34 PM
Do we know that meat is necessarily generated with the vats?  I could see the vats being some sort of processing or preserving system.
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: Quantus on September 16, 2015, 10:22:31 PM
Do we know that meat is necessarily generated with the vats?  I could see the vats being some sort of processing or preserving system.
you are right, Produced might be a better word.  But it's a "vattery" so I have to assume that the vats are the primary part of the process.  Living on spires it would make sense that they cant have much in the way of traditional grazing herd animals.  But then were does the 'meat' come from?
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: Second Aristh on September 17, 2015, 12:17:36 AM
you are right, Produced might be a better word.  But it's a "vattery" so I have to assume that the vats are the primary part of the process.  Living on spires it would make sense that they cant have much in the way of traditional grazing herd animals.  But then were does the 'meat' come from?
Yeah, whatever the vats are for, the vats themselves have to be a major part if only based on the name.  I wouldn't assume that that role is producing the meat just yet though.  Like you said, the next question is where does the meat come from.  It seems inevitable that the Spires are pressed for space, so raising grazing animals doesn't seem likely.  Considering they sail through the air, how about "fishing" for birds?  "Whaling" for the mistmaw creature mentioned earlier might be an option as well.
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: Quantus on September 17, 2015, 12:44:58 PM
Yeah, whatever the vats are for, the vats themselves have to be a major part if only based on the name.  I wouldn't assume that that role is producing the meat just yet though.  Like you said, the next question is where does the meat come from.  It seems inevitable that the Spires are pressed for space, so raising grazing animals doesn't seem likely.  Considering they sail through the air, how about "fishing" for birds?  "Whaling" for the mistmaw creature mentioned earlier might be an option as well.
/nods.  Or even gathering and rendering down some sort of Cloud-krill maybe. 

So ok, lets say they get some sort of raw animal material from somewhere.  Im going with Soylent as the working name (you dont WANT to know where it comes from).  What do you all picture as the final form coming out of the Vats?  My mind first went to some equivalent of the Pink Slime that cause such a hooplah recently, but something more akin to sausage makes sense too. 
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: Second Aristh on September 17, 2015, 01:45:40 PM
/nods.  Or even gathering and rendering down some sort of Cloud-krill maybe. 

So ok, lets say they get some sort of raw animal material from somewhere.  Im going with Soylent as the working name (you dont WANT to know where it comes from).  What do you all picture as the final form coming out of the Vats?  My mind first went to some equivalent of the Pink Slime that cause such a hooplah recently, but something more akin to sausage makes sense too.
Yeah sausage or any of the canned style meats seems like a good guess.  I could even see the vats being used as baths to somehow neutralize whatever nasty goodies the meat might get from being out on the etheric currents.  That way you wouldn't have to grind everything to a mush.

One more thing pointing to the meat not being grown in tubs, Bridget mentions her family's knives.  You shouldn't have to butcher meat from a jar.
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: Quantus on September 17, 2015, 05:18:29 PM
Yeah sausage or any of the canned style meats seems like a good guess.  I could even see the vats being used as baths to somehow neutralize whatever nasty goodies the meat might get from being out on the etheric currents.  That way you wouldn't have to grind everything to a mush.

One more thing pointing to the meat not being grown in tubs, Bridget mentions her family's knives.  You shouldn't have to butcher meat from a jar.
Fair, though you could have to slice it after, especially if it's a tough consistency.  Im picturing them cubing it off like Tofu, in that case, only with more the consistency of a canned ham.   
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: Second Aristh on September 17, 2015, 08:34:01 PM
Fair, though you could have to slice it after, especially if it's a tough consistency.  Im picturing them cubing it off like Tofu, in that case, only with more the consistency of a canned ham.   
Also a possibility  ;D
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: Quantus on September 17, 2015, 10:43:51 PM
Still not the most appetizing of things.  I mean...Tofu?   :o
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: Second Aristh on September 18, 2015, 12:23:49 AM
Still not the most appetizing of things.  I mean...Tofu?   :o
Idk, I've had tofu before, but never meat grown in a vat.   ::)
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: wyltok on September 22, 2015, 02:47:19 PM
Here's the thing: sliced ham, chicken nuggets, imitation crab meat, those frozen pre-cooked chicken breasts with the grill marks on them... they're all what's called "restructured meat". In other words, they're chunks of meat (or sometimes not even chunks) that are glued together to form whatever shape is desired.

If you ever bite into a piece of "meat" that has no fibers in it, or really soft mini-fibers (or that happens to be shaped by a rectangle), the odds are really high that the current shape does not match the shape of the muscle the meat came from.

However, people are currently working on 3D printing meat. Once that's achieved, we should be able to replicated a proper steak, with all muscle fibers properly aligned and everything (people actually want to 3D print working organs for transplant, but that's gonna take a lot longer).

I'm guessing that's how the vattery works: you have huge vats where the different type of meat component cells are grown (a muscle fiber vat, a blood vein vat, etc) before final 3D printing and assembly into primal cuts.

Personally, I'm ok with this idea. I've never had an issue with ham, or imitation crab meat (I'm not really a fan of chicken nuggets, but that's more the breading, really). If / when we figure out how to get the texture right, should it matter where the meat originally comes from? (Assuming, of course, that there are no poisonous ingredients involved in the printing process or whatever).
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: Second Aristh on September 22, 2015, 03:56:17 PM
Here's the thing: sliced ham, chicken nuggets, imitation crab meat, those frozen pre-cooked chicken breasts with the grill marks on them... they're all what's called "restructured meat". In other words, they're chunks of meat (or sometimes not even chunks) that are glued together to form whatever shape is desired.

If you ever bite into a piece of "meat" that has no fibers in it, or really soft mini-fibers (or that happens to be shaped by a rectangle), the odds are really high that the current shape does not match the shape of the muscle the meat came from.

However, people are currently working on 3D printing meat. Once that's achieved, we should be able to replicated a proper steak, with all muscle fibers properly aligned and everything (people actually want to 3D print working organs for transplant, but that's gonna take a lot longer).

I'm guessing that's how the vattery works: you have huge vats where the different type of meat component cells are grown (a muscle fiber vat, a blood vein vat, etc) before final 3D printing and assembly into primal cuts.

Personally, I'm ok with this idea. I've never had an issue with ham, or imitation crab meat (I'm not really a fan of chicken nuggets, but that's more the breading, really). If / when we figure out how to get the texture right, should it matter where the meat originally comes from? (Assuming, of course, that there are no poisonous ingredients involved in the printing process or whatever).
No, I get that "printing" meat is a possible function for the vats.  I'm just reluctant to say that's the most likely function.  That kind of technology doesn't mesh well with the genre, even with handwaved crystal technology.  The setting doesn't seem to have enough scientific background to be able to handle artificial meat.
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: ITheHellAmFan on September 22, 2015, 04:10:22 PM
I agree.  For real science fiction that something like printing meat or replicators makes sense, but not in Steampunk.
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: Quantus on September 22, 2015, 05:28:55 PM
I agree.  For real science fiction that something like printing meat or replicators makes sense, but not in Steampunk.
Concur.  Especially in light of the comment about how their competitor's vat-meat was "rubbery chum"
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: cass on September 22, 2015, 08:28:35 PM
I dunno.  Growing cultures on a framework isn't particularly advanced stuff. You can grow rock candy/sugar crystals on a string, after all.  Growing bacterial cultures isn't hard-- god knows I do it all the time in my fridge-- and I could well believe that they could induce edible tissue to grow from a broth of otherwise inedible proteins/lipids/sugars without the use of computers, etc.  I could also believe that there's skill in it-- inducing the fibers to grow in such a way as to give it a tender (or firm or whatever) texture.  Sort of like making a rock candy rib cage, instead of just a string with lumps hanging from it.

The whole 3D printed/culture-grown meat thing isn't particularly far along in our world because, frankly, there hasn't been a need. Ranching/livestock farming  produces meat cheaper and quicker, and thus far there hasn't been a need to curtail it.
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: Quantus on September 22, 2015, 09:53:41 PM
I dunno.  Growing cultures on a framework isn't particularly advanced stuff. You can grow rock candy/sugar crystals on a string, after all.  Growing bacterial cultures isn't hard-- god knows I do it all the time in my fridge-- and I could well believe that they could induce edible tissue to grow from a broth of otherwise inedible proteins/lipids/sugars without the use of computers, etc.  I could also believe that there's skill in it-- inducing the fibers to grow in such a way as to give it a tender (or firm or whatever) texture.  Sort of like making a rock candy rib cage, instead of just a string with lumps hanging from it.

The whole 3D printed/culture-grown meat thing isn't particularly far along in our world because, frankly, there hasn't been a need. Ranching/livestock farming  produces meat cheaper and quicker, and thus far there hasn't been a need to curtail it.
My hesitance comes less from a lack of computer analogs or their ability to physically perform the processes, and more from my own assumptions that they'd need far more advanced scientific development in Biology and organic chemistry than is present in most Steampunk settings that are generally a Victorian analog in that regard. 
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: cass on September 22, 2015, 10:37:26 PM
Ah.  And I was coming at it from a necessity-drives-development direction.  I don't read much steampunk, so I'm unfamiliar with the typical tech level. Is limited living space (and therefore different methods of food production) a theme? I just sort of jumped from 'surface is inaccessible' to 'culturing meat makes sense if they can't raise it' without a huge amount of in between.
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: Second Aristh on September 23, 2015, 12:10:53 AM
Well, it's called steampunk because tech is supposed to stick roughly near the idea of a fantastical steam engine.  Obviously you take liberties because things like airships and laser gauntlets are cool, but if you go too far you lose the flavor of the genre.
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: cass on September 23, 2015, 01:10:21 AM
Hmm. Well, the technology itself isn't complicated-- even Dresden couldn't hex it up.  As Quantus points out, it's the knowledge of biochem that's a sticking point.  I could suspend my disbelief for it though: ancient peoples couldn't tell you the reactions that made grain-water into alcohol or made milk into curds, but that didn't stop them from making beer or cheese! Maybe the people who run the vatteries don't know exactly what is going on, in the biological or chemical sense, but they do know what they have to do to produce something edible?  That covers a lack of scientific (rather than practical) knowledge of the process...
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: Second Aristh on September 23, 2015, 01:34:47 AM
Hmm. Well, the technology itself isn't complicated-- even Dresden couldn't hex it up.  As Quantus points out, it's the knowledge of biochem that's a sticking point.  I could suspend my disbelief for it though: ancient peoples couldn't tell you the reactions that made grain-water into alcohol or made milk into curds, but that didn't stop them from making beer or cheese! Maybe the people who run the vatteries don't know exactly what is going on, in the biological or chemical sense, but they do know what they have to do to produce something edible?  That covers a lack of scientific (rather than practical) knowledge of the process...
Sure, but making meat is much harder to stumble upon than figuring out fermentation by experimentation.
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: Quantus on September 23, 2015, 01:21:55 PM
Hmm. Well, the technology itself isn't complicated-- even Dresden couldn't hex it up.  As Quantus points out, it's the knowledge of biochem that's a sticking point.  I could suspend my disbelief for it though: ancient peoples couldn't tell you the reactions that made grain-water into alcohol or made milk into curds, but that didn't stop them from making beer or cheese! Maybe the people who run the vatteries don't know exactly what is going on, in the biological or chemical sense, but they do know what they have to do to produce something edible?  That covers a lack of scientific (rather than practical) knowledge of the process...
To Artish's point, Alcohol mostly comes about by letting fruit juices and such spoil, and the secret to all cheese in history is cooking the stomachs of baby mammals (requires an enzyme from before they switch to solid food) which i imagine happened pretty often when they threw all the scraps into a stew-pot and notice that the cream soup stock has gone all chunky.  I could see something similar happening to make a homogeneous tofu-style protein paste, scrounging whatever scrap animal matter they could and rendering them down into Pink Slime.

But to go to all the effort to artificially sculpt realistic animal tissues for what would be essentially a cosmetic "texture" difference seems a stretch to me. Especially if animals are rare enough that they arent typically raised and slaughtered for meat, so the majority of the population wouldnt know the difference enough to warrant the extra effort.  I see it as kind of like them developing massive advanced tech to make all their meat turn purple; it's probably possible, but I just cant see how the motivation would develop.


PS  In modern times not all cheese is actually Animal stomach enzyme (animal Rennet (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rennet)), they have created a vegan version that is processed from a mold byproduct.  Because mold poop is somehow healthier, I guess. 
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: ITheHellAmFan on September 23, 2015, 02:48:08 PM
PS  In modern times not all cheese is actually Animal stomach enzyme (animal Rennet (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rennet)), they have created a vegan version that is processed from a mold byproduct.  Because mold poop is somehow healthier, I guess. 

I don't personally hold this viewpoint, and to avoid political TT I won't go into my opinions any further, but for at least some vegans, especially the ones that make that distinction, it's less about health and more about the morality of not having to kill animals.
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: Mith on September 23, 2015, 03:01:57 PM
It could also be a process for refining and decontaminating Mistcreature meat like the Mistmaw, for general consumption.  Master Stock (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Master_stock) comes to mind.
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: cass on September 23, 2015, 10:51:03 PM
To Artish's point, Alcohol mostly comes about by letting fruit juices and such spoil, and the secret to all cheese in history is cooking the stomachs of baby mammals (requires an enzyme from before they switch to solid food) which i imagine happened pretty often when they threw all the scraps into a stew-pot and notice that the cream soup stock has gone all chunky.  I could see something similar happening to make a homogeneous tofu-style protein paste, scrounging whatever scrap animal matter they could and rendering them down into Pink Slime.

But to go to all the effort to artificially sculpt realistic animal tissues for what would be essentially a cosmetic "texture" difference seems a stretch to me. Especially if animals are rare enough that they arent typically raised and slaughtered for meat, so the majority of the population wouldnt know the difference enough to warrant the extra effort.  I see it as kind of like them developing massive advanced tech to make all their meat turn purple; it's probably possible, but I just cant see how the motivation would develop.


PS  In modern times not all cheese is actually Animal stomach enzyme (animal Rennet (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rennet)), they have created a vegan version that is processed from a mold byproduct.  Because mold poop is somehow healthier, I guess.

And yet people (and chefs) do all sorts of crazy things to alter the texture/color/smell of food products. I guess all I'm saying is that it would not break my suspension of disbelief if over the however many years people have been living in the spires they developed variations on basic food production that allowed for vastly different-seeming products.  I'm not arguing for growing whole animals in a vat, just that whatever form the products of the vatteries ultimately take, there is likely quite a bit of development behind the method used to make them.
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: Quantus on September 24, 2015, 01:21:29 PM
And yet people (and chefs) do all sorts of crazy things to alter the texture/color/smell of food products. I guess all I'm saying is that it would not break my suspension of disbelief if over the however many years people have been living in the spires they developed variations on basic food production that allowed for vastly different-seeming products.  I'm not arguing for growing whole animals in a vat, just that whatever form the products of the vatteries ultimately take, there is likely quite a bit of development behind the method used to make them.
Fair enough :)
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: Quantus on September 30, 2015, 02:32:00 PM
Ok, so Ive gotten a bit further and it seems that there is still some harvesting going on down on the surface (wood) and so there could easily be some animal matter being harvested rather than pure home-grown protein sludge. 

And further, it seems that "Vattery" is more of a generic term for an industrial operation, like "Mill" or "Plant" since they use the same term for their crystal production sites.  It makes sense, most industrial sites I work in have lots and lots of tanks and vessels so they are a visible defining trait, and it's not like every Mill around today has any Millstones grinding grain. 
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: Phariah on October 01, 2015, 08:16:39 PM
i think the meat is grown. it is not from a creature at all.
"part of growing the great sides of meat in the vattery was harvesting the leather casing that grew around them as they matured." sounds like an artificial meat source to me. if the Spires were created to get away from the earth because of some contamination or something. eating from the surface creatures was bad as they could be contaminated. so they have no room on the Spires for herd animal so they create an artificial way to create meat.
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: Quantus on October 01, 2015, 08:19:43 PM
i think the meat is grown. it is not from a creature at all.
"part of growing the great sides of meat in the vattery was harvesting the leather casing that grew around them as they matured." sounds like an artificial meat source to me. if the Spires were created to get away from the earth because of some contamination or something eating from the surface creature was bad as they could be contaminated. so they have no room on the Spires for herd animal so they create an artificial way to create meat.
good catch with that quote.  I dont think Ive reached it yet. 
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: Brightbane on October 01, 2015, 10:41:35 PM
i think the meat is grown. it is not from a creature at all.
"part of growing the great sides of meat in the vattery was harvesting the leather casing that grew around them as they matured." sounds like an artificial meat source to me. if the Spires were created to get away from the earth because of some contamination or something. eating from the surface creatures was bad as they could be contaminated. so they have no room on the Spires for herd animal so they create an artificial way to create meat.
Yeah, from what I picked up I'm assuming it's a big (like 150lb) piece of flesh that they grow in a nutrient bath and then harvest when it's big enough. It has skin on it, but I'm not sure if there are any bones inside. If there were it would help get the meat to the correct texture because they could stimulate it to flex against a core bone or something
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: Second Aristh on October 02, 2015, 03:31:49 AM
good catch with that quote.  I dont think Ive reached it yet. 
Yeah, based on that I'm starting to lean more towards grown meat.
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: Phaeton Seraph on October 05, 2015, 05:53:20 AM
The setting is interesting.  Jim's story telling is also interesting as he has managed to nearly avoid any form of exposition regarding this world leaving it all up to us to infer it from the narrative.

I think that "steam punk" is also a misnomer. Except for some ships having steam engines, and very few at all in this book having them, there was a distinct lack of steam. Except for the goggles, clothes and social setting, there's not much in common with most earth-based steam punk I've brushed up against.

It's not just meat that's grown in vats, but the crystals too, who knows what else is grown in vats?  As posted above, it seems like it's just big blobs of boneless meat with a leather casing.

The various levels of the spires are called "habbles" (sp?).  It seems that you have huge spires built to allow people to live off the surface of this planet.  I would conjecture that the habbles are the habitat tiers of the spires.


The warrior caste are genetically modified.  Possible the cats were too. (If someone wanted to give cat enhancements to humans, why not give cats human like intelligence too?  For proof of concept, or because they could, or because the mad geneticist in question was a crazy cat-person who wanted their conversations to be more meaningful...)

Probably this planet was colonised.  Genetically modified plants and modifying your live stock to not actually need to graze, or poop or move sounds good for a colony ship, and later on this world where the ground is not very hospitable.  For some reason, they've back slid, maybe they're not quite neo-barbs, but they're a shadow of what the original colonists were...
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: Electric MacButters on October 05, 2015, 06:53:15 AM
I agree with Seraph. Based on the text, my theory is that TAW takes place on a human colony world. One of the most interesting data points is the iron rot. Any oxidizing material exposed to the atmosphere degrades at an incredible rate. This would cause the vast majority of the equipment that arrived on the colony ship to become worthless. The original colonists could use their technology to create the habbles in space and then drop them to the surface. The vattery tech could be reverse engineered and rebuilt to remove all ferrous metals. That's why the builders did everything better, they could use n-th generation tools from the pinnacle of humanity. And since computers contain enough ferrous material to cause significant problems, the subsequent generations lost all the information no one thought to write down before the hard drives failed.

(click to show/hide)
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: Langy on October 05, 2015, 06:57:34 AM
The various levels of the spires are called "habbles" (sp?).  It seems that you have huge spires built to allow people to live off the surface of this planet.  I would conjecture that the habbles are the habitat tiers of the spires.

'Habble' seems to obviously be an amalgam of 'Habitat' and 'Level'.

Quote
The warrior caste are genetically modified.  Possible the cats were too. (If someone wanted to give cat enhancements to humans, why not give cats human like intelligence too?  For proof of concept, or because they could, or because the mad geneticist in question was a crazy cat-person who wanted their conversations to be more meaningful...)

Mention is made of the cats having thumbs of some sort, too, though they're obviously not as dexterous as human hands.
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: Aesir on October 05, 2015, 09:48:24 AM
Polydactyl cats with opposable "thumbs" on their front paws are not uncommon in the real world. The polydactyal gene is considered dominant, but its expression is variable such that the number of extra toes produced and whether or not they're opposable can vary. There are likely other still to be identified genes that effect its expression.

The hypothesis that this series takes place in a human colony world where technology has regressed, perhaps due to the "iron rot", at least in part, sounds like a good one to me. I must also admit to being curious how "the enemy" factors into this world's history and development.

Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: Phaeton Seraph on October 06, 2015, 02:20:24 AM
Polydactyl cats with opposable "thumbs" on their front paws are not uncommon in the real world. The polydactyal gene is considered dominant, but its expression is variable such that the number of extra toes produced and whether or not they're opposable can vary. There are likely other still to be identified genes that effect its expression.

The hypothesis that this series takes place in a human colony world where technology has regressed, perhaps due to the "iron rot", at least in part, sounds like a good one to me. I must also admit to being curious how "the enemy" factors into this world's history and development.

Well, the enemy could be native to the world.
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: wyltok on October 06, 2015, 08:07:39 PM
'Habble' seems to obviously be an amalgam of 'Habitat' and 'Level'.

My thought as well.
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: Quantus on October 14, 2015, 09:34:56 PM
OK, New question on the Spires, specifically their dimensions. 

Spire Albion is "ten thousand feet high, two miles across. There are two-hundred and fifty habbles, of which two-hundred and thirty-six are occupied."  -Ch 20

Ill save you the conversion factors and say that it's 10,000 ft tall by 10,560 ft wide.  The word "spire" was evocative of, you know, pointy things; something tall and narrow and shrinking down to a point.  But Ablion is actually slightly wider than it is tall, making it as squat as any Egyptian pyramid, which in turn makes me wonder if it comes to a point at all, or if it's a more uniform cylinder. Otherwise the differences of available space per habble will be fairly extreme. 

Thoughts on this?
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: Mith on October 14, 2015, 09:56:56 PM
There are older structures on the planet that are more Spire-like, and Albion is one of the newer designs, so the name had already been in use when Spire Albion was built.
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: Dina on October 14, 2015, 11:38:10 PM
Ok, visiting this thread. A few comments
  a. Be careful with spoilers, as the title only mentions the Sample Chapters. So kudos to Electric McB for the spoiler tag
  b. In my mind, "vattery" translated as "factory" or "plant"
  c. I understood that meat was artificially produced but I don't care how.
  d
(click to show/hide)
.
e. If habble means habitat level (which sounds logical) I am upset by the extra b.
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: knnn on October 15, 2015, 01:22:48 AM
OK, New question on the Spires, specifically their dimensions. 

Spire Albion is "ten thousand feet high, two miles across. There are two-hundred and fifty habbles, of which two-hundred and thirty-six are occupied."  -Ch 20

Ill save you the conversion factors and say that it's 10,000 ft tall by 10,560 ft wide.  The word "spire" was evocative of, you know, pointy things; something tall and narrow and shrinking down to a point.  But Ablion is actually slightly wider than it is tall, making it as squat as any Egyptian pyramid, which in turn makes me wonder if it comes to a point at all, or if it's a more uniform cylinder. Otherwise the differences of available space per habble will be fairly extreme. 

Thoughts on this?

Maybe all the spires were initially one giant space station that was cut into pieces and dropped on the planet?   Possibly also not all spires look alike and the name "spire" comes from the older ones? 
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: knnn on October 15, 2015, 01:30:19 AM
re: "Steampunk", remember that the term "punk" comes originally from Cyberpunk (Neuromancer), where "punk" referred to the dystopian, mercenary world in the setting.  This novel doesn't seem to have the steam or the punk in it.  Frankly it seems to be quite similar in content to some of Sanderson's stuff (e.g. Alloy of Law et al).  Those are categorized as "high fantasy" (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High_fantasy).  I suggest that this falls nicely into that category.
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: Mith on October 15, 2015, 01:41:27 AM
Quote
If habble means habitat level (which sounds logical) I am upset by the extra b.

I think that is more or less English being a mess.  I know the word didn't exist before this book (that I know of), but I think the logic of the word is more akin to "rabbit" having two "b"s even though only one would do.
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: Dina on October 15, 2015, 01:47:04 AM
Probably, My Spanish speaker is slightly annoyed not only by English being the TAW world language (except for a Latin reference) but for the use of not-metric units.
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: Mith on October 15, 2015, 03:31:53 AM
That's just an American thing though.  One day they will realize that some traditions are not worth keeping.  :D
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: Brightbane on October 15, 2015, 05:45:20 AM
Probably, My Spanish speaker is slightly annoyed not only by English being the TAW world language (except for a Latin reference) but for the use of not-metric units.
I think the base language for the book is "Albion". Every habble has their own language.
There was a scene where someone cursed in auroran
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: Dina on October 15, 2015, 05:57:17 AM
Yes, I think Auroran and Olympian have their own languages. You are right in that.
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: Tarion on October 15, 2015, 08:38:13 AM
Yes, I think Auroran and Olympian have their own languages. You are right in that.
Given that Albion means Britain, it does make sense that they speak the English language and use Imperial units.  And if you think it's bad reading about a place that uses a lot of Imperial units, imagine living here. 
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: Quantus on October 15, 2015, 01:07:26 PM
That's just an American thing though.  One day they will realize that some traditions are not worth keeping.  :D
We keep trying to get rid of it every generation or so.  Turns out it's ridiculously expensive to switch 320 million people and especially 4.3 million kilometres worth of road-signs to a knew system.  Not to mention we hate and fear change, and are often more than willing to share that opinion in a loud and belligerent manner.   In the early 90's they tried teaching us youngsters only metric in school, hoping if they got the newer generation exposed to metric first, it would force the nation to shift as they aged.  But it didnt get wide enough support to accomplish anything.  At this point Im hoping the internet and the internationalzation of culture (combined with the US losing their throne as the science/tech leaders) will finally push it out of usage. 
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: Mith on October 15, 2015, 02:13:37 PM
I more find it amusing that the United State was one of the biggest supporters and drivers of the precursor to SI, as well as a strong support in the early days of SI as well IIRC, yet is currently is one of three nations that holds onto the Imperial system.

I will admit that Imperial can be nice in small measurements for quick math (feet and inches being in base 12 makes for nice fractions).  After that though, it just falls apart.
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: knnn on October 15, 2015, 02:50:57 PM
I will admit that Imperial can be nice in small measurements for quick math (feet and inches being in base 12 makes for nice fractions).  After that though, it just falls apart.

We should just switch to doing all math in base 12.  Everything will be simpler.
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: Mith on October 15, 2015, 03:34:13 PM
In that case, we would need to create two more numerical characters.  Part of the awkwardness of imperial is using a base 12 math system with a base 10 numerical system
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: knnn on October 15, 2015, 03:50:17 PM
In that case, we would need to create two more numerical characters.  Part of the awkwardness of imperial is using a base 12 math system with a base 10 numerical system

We already have ABCDEF for hex, so it's not like it's completely new, and as you say, it would solve the imperial problem as well as making a lot of everyday calculations a lot simpler.  The fact is that base 10 is in general awkward to use, and we only have it because of the number of fingers we were born with.
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: Mith on October 15, 2015, 04:35:44 PM
True, but I think it is an easier to have a population that is at large not scientifically inclined to shift their measuring system to match their counting system, then the entire world to re calibrate their counting system and thus their measuring system.  I am not a very skilled pure mathematician, so I cannot say if switching from base 10 to base 12 would truly complicate our constants and established measurements.
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: knnn on October 15, 2015, 04:56:13 PM
I am not a very skilled pure mathematician, so I cannot say if switching from base 10 to base 12 would truly complicate our constants and established measurements.

Actually I don't think pure mathematician would care as much, since the stuff they deal with is almost entirely number system independent.  This is more about the fact that your average person will need to divide things into 3 more often than into 5.
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: Second Aristh on October 15, 2015, 05:25:58 PM
Actually I don't think pure mathematician would care as much, since the stuff they deal with is almost entirely number system independent.  This is more about the fact that your average person will need to divide things into 3 more often than into 5.

Numbers are just extra letters when everything is said and done  ;D

We could always go with the Babylonian route and use base 60. 
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: Dina on October 15, 2015, 05:39:43 PM
Actually I don't think pure mathematician would care as much, since the stuff they deal with is almost entirely number system independent.  This is more about the fact that your average person will need to divide things into 3 more often than into 5.

Really? I don't think so

I just skip the parts with units I don't get, that's too technical for me and I don't want to bother. I am more or less familiar with feet because of RPG manuals and I've got an idea of pounds. Miles and inches, I just ignore them.
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: Second Aristh on October 15, 2015, 06:17:13 PM
Really? I don't think so

I just skip the parts with units I don't get, that's too technical for me and I don't want to bother. I am more or less familiar with feet because of RPG manuals and I've got an idea of pounds. Miles and inches, I just ignore them.
Using a particular base usually only changes how numbers are expressed.  I don't know of any important results that depend on which base you use.
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: Dina on October 15, 2015, 06:28:59 PM
I agree with that, I disagree with the divide into 3 more than into 5.
Let's see, I concede the 24 hours of a day, or the 9 muses. But 60 minutes or second divide by 3 or 5 with no problem. 30 days for a month, again divide 3-5. Many things are seven. We also have 4 directions. Many things come in pairs. There are flowers with 5 based corolles and with 3 based one, so it's a tie here. I agree insects have 6 legs, so divide by 3. But other animals have numbers not based in 3 or 5.
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: Quantus on October 15, 2015, 07:00:12 PM
It's not that complicated:  Now we use Base 10, but some things are entrenched into Base 12 (Time, Geographic coordinates etc) because the Aliens that taught them to us in the first place had 3-toed appendages instead of 5 toes on their paws like us. 

Obviously.


( :P)
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: Dina on October 15, 2015, 07:03:49 PM
Of course you are right  ;D
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: Quantus on October 15, 2015, 09:01:51 PM
(http://cdn.meme.am/instances/55222368.jpg)
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: KeyMasterOfGozer on October 17, 2015, 03:25:33 PM
I agree with that, I disagree with the divide into 3 more than into 5.
Let's see, I concede the 24 hours of a day, or the 9 muses. But 60 minutes or second divide by 3 or 5 with no problem. 30 days for a month, again divide 3-5. Many things are seven. We also have 4 directions. Many things come in pairs. There are flowers with 5 based corolles and with 3 based one, so it's a tie here. I agree insects have 6 legs, so divide by 3. But other animals have numbers not based in 3 or 5.
You are right and wrong.  Many scientists and mathematicians have argued to move to a base 12 system because it is evenly divisible by twice as many numbers.  Also in base12, only divinding by 7 will result in an ugly repeating decimal value.  In base10, you get that ugly result with 3, 6, 7, and 9.   That makes the simple mathematics much easier for non-mathematicians.  Your everyday life would be easier.

Here is a Numberphile video that might explain it better:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U6xJfP7-HCc (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U6xJfP7-HCc)
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: Mith on October 17, 2015, 05:58:48 PM
I have seen that video before.  And while I agree about the change, I still think at this point, it would be easier for the change to be for those still using imperial to switch to metric.  Mostly because although Base 12 is a better system to use, Imperial is not just base 12.  I know not all the ones listed below are common usage anymore, as most people use inches, feet, yards, and miles, with chain and furlong still used in surveying.

1000 thou. = 1 in.
12 in. = 1 ft.
3 ft. = 1 yrd.
22 yrd. = 1 chain
10 chain = 1 furlong
8 furlong = 1 mi.
3 mi. = 1 league
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: Dina on October 17, 2015, 06:56:52 PM
So, sometimes base 10 (1000 thou = 1 in), sometimes 12 (12 in=1 ft), the rest sounds mosly random. Best thing about metric system is that you know how the units are (always difference of ten with the following, as decimeter, centimeter, milimeter and it's easy to divide by ten. So, a person who is 174 cm height is 1.74 m. A person who is 68 inches...how much is in ft? or thou?
Anyway, my idea was not discuss the advantages or disadvantages of metric system, only to say that as it is not used in all the world is depressing that in TAW is still used. And yes, I know Victorian Era really used those units, but as I think it is set in our future I would expect another thing.

Still, did I mention I loved this book, right?
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: Mith on October 17, 2015, 08:20:19 PM
You did.  :D

I just have my personal rants because I have to work with imperial units due to being in Engineering, even though I live in Canada, where we use SI.
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: KeyMasterOfGozer on October 18, 2015, 01:50:13 AM
Absolutely, I think everyone who does Math, Engineering, or Sciences whole heartedly agree that metric is better than Imperial, it's just that some would say metric should be base 12 rather than base 10. 

However, with base 12, imperial measurement jumps are almost always factors of 2, 3, 4, 12 or 60, all of which would look more natural in base 12.  Maybe it would be easier to make a 2-step change to base12 metric.  I know we've tried to switch to metric a couple of time here in the states, and it never took off.   Maybe baby steps?   :)
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: Quantus on October 19, 2015, 01:32:51 PM
The real strength of SI/metric is not just the ease of math from the Base ten numbers and divisions, it's the way the various units of measurement are defined with relation to each other for conversion uses.  The Meter is 1/10millionth the distance from the earth to the equator, the gram is the mass of one milliliter of water, which is one cubic centimeter, and takes one calorie to raise one degree in temp, which is 1/100th the difference between water's freezing point and its boiling point, etc etc etc. 

So while Im sure we could come up with new units that are equally useful under a Base12 system, it would be a complete replacement of all measurement standards as well, which is just a whole new layer of complication.  And one that scientists in particular will be loathed to invite, because the only thing that really matters is that everyone is using the same standard and agreeing on all the definitions; actual ease of use is secondary.   
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: Dina on October 19, 2015, 02:43:00 PM
So, sometimes base 10 (1000 thou = 1 in), sometimes 12 (12 in=1 ft), the rest sounds mosly random. Best thing about metric system is that you know how the units are (always difference of ten with the following, as decimeter, centimeter, milimeter and it's easy to divide by ten. So, a person who is 174 cm height is 1.74 m. A person who is 68 inches...how much is in ft? or thou?
Anyway, my idea was not discuss the advantages or disadvantages of metric system, only to say that as it is not used in all the world is depressing that in TAW is still used. And yes, I know Victorian Era really used those units, but as I think it is set in our future I would expect another thing.

That is what I meant, Quantus.
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: Quantus on October 19, 2015, 02:52:27 PM
That is what I meant, Quantus.
Right.  I was just also saying that, in addition to how it makes conversions easier when up and down a given unit, as you describe, there was also a lot of benefit when converting between completely different values, as when going from Length to Volume and even to Thermal energy.  I was referring to the whole thing where SI is based on 7 Fundamental/Base units and how their definitions interact on a base10 as well:  Length, Mass, Time, Electric Current, Temperature, Luminous Intensity, and Chemical Amount/Amount of substance (moles).
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: Dina on October 19, 2015, 05:37:09 PM
Yes, indeed. For instance, you have Newton (kg*m/s2) or Pascal (N/m2) or Joule (N*m)

Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: Rygar on October 20, 2015, 04:14:40 PM
Actually the gram is not defined by the amount of pure water, but as 1/1000 the weight of The Kilogram and the mass of the International Kilogram Prototype possibly being off is a matter of some concern. It is the only Metric measurement still constrained by being derived from a physical artifact.
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: Dina on October 20, 2015, 05:39:24 PM
But it is the weight of a litre of pure water in standard conditions. I still like the "metro patron" (the concrete stick that was the international pattern for the metre)
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: Quantus on October 20, 2015, 05:48:42 PM
Actually the gram is not defined by the amount of pure water, but as 1/1000 the weight of The Kilogram and the mass of the International Kilogram Prototype possibly being off is a matter of some concern. It is the only Metric measurement still constrained by being derived from a physical artifact.
It was historically based on Water, that's how they originally defined it, even though now it's defined by a specific block of platinum alloy. (http://www.bipm.org/en/bipm/mass/ipk/)  All of them  (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SI_base_unit)are like that.  The meter used to be based on the earth's size but is now a derivative of the speed of light in a vacuum and a calculated fractional second, and even the Second is now defined by the decay of a caesium 133 atom instead of anything to do with the earth's rotation. 
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: Mith on October 20, 2015, 06:53:05 PM
For what it's worth, they have moved away from The Big K and are now defining the kilogram using Avogadro's number and Si-28. -   (http://www.nist.gov/pml/si-redef/kg_new_silicon.cfm)
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: Quantus on October 20, 2015, 07:04:04 PM
For what it's worth, they have moved away from The Big K and are now defining the kilogram using Avogadro's number and Si-28. -   (http://www.nist.gov/pml/si-redef/kg_new_silicon.cfm)
Oh, sure, that's one of a bunch of new/revised definitions that have various levels of support.  In the case of the Kilogram, it's the only one left that is still standardized to a specific artifact rather than a physical constant of some kind (though other are defined by the kg, so it's hidden in them too), and the two most popular methods are to base it off either the Planck constant or the Avogadro constant.
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: Mith on October 20, 2015, 10:19:55 PM
From what I am finding, they are currently refining equipment for precision to go ahead with this transfer of the definition of the Kg.  Which is good, because after that happens, we will no longer define one of our Seven Fundamental Units for Understanding Life, the Universe, and Everything on an over sized, multi-million dollar paper weight.  :D

Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: Quantus on October 22, 2015, 01:32:28 PM
From what I am finding, they are currently refining equipment for precision to go ahead with this transfer of the definition of the Kg.  Which is good, because after that happens, we will no longer define one of our Seven Fundamental Units for Understanding Life, the Universe, and Everything on an over sized, multi-million dollar paper weight.  :D
Yup, if they succeed at solving the manufacturing problems they hope to offer it up as a viable Atom-counting alternative to the Planck constant (energy based) approach, which it turns out was accepted back in 2011 as the path forward, though at the same time they (the International Committee for Weights and Measures) postponed their next conference to 2015, so the change-over hasnt happened yet.  Well, what they did was: "Accept a resolution to 'Take note of an intention' that the kilogram be defined in terms of the Planck constant, h (which has dimensions of energy times time) together with other fundamental units."  That contains far too much parliamentary gibberish for me to pull any definitive meaning  :P
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: Mith on October 22, 2015, 01:38:33 PM
I think it's more the sensitivity of everything involved makes the desire for a second path to check the other is what is making the switch over so slow, and so expensive.  That and the bureaucracy needed to organize everything also seems to make things so slow. But I am sure they had good reasons.
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: Holywhippet on November 18, 2015, 02:42:17 AM
Probably this planet was colonised.  Genetically modified plants and modifying your live stock to not actually need to graze, or poop or move sounds good for a colony ship, and later on this world where the ground is not very hospitable.  For some reason, they've back slid, maybe they're not quite neo-barbs, but they're a shadow of what the original colonists were...

 I was thinking along the same lines as I went through the book. My main reasoning is that they've stated outright that the surface world is too hostile for humans to safely live on. If that is the case then humans could not have evolved there let alone have lived long enough and advanced far enough to build the spires. From what I've read vat grown meat is something that scientists are working on today.
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: Ulfgeir on November 18, 2015, 08:13:56 PM
As much as I dislike the archaic measurements favoured in the US, they do have one advantage (at least for shorter measurements): you can easily get a rough estimate of length using just parts of your body.

As for the setting, I agree that it isn't much that is steampowered in it. I do love it though.

/Ulfgeir
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: Morenath on December 07, 2015, 11:55:06 PM
No, I get that "printing" meat is a possible function for the vats.  I'm just reluctant to say that's the most likely function.  That kind of technology doesn't mesh well with the genre, even with handwaved crystal technology.  The setting doesn't seem to have enough scientific background to be able to handle artificial meat.

I always imagined it like when they do limb replacement and such in sci-fi space movies.   The character that is hurt is usually submerged in a tank, and machines (or lazers or whatever) grow the artificial replacement back.  Some examples are Starship Troopers, with Rico.  Age of Ultron, with Hawkeye.  Matrix, with everyone pre-pill.

A vat doesn't necessarily mean the product is a liquid, or even semi-solid.  I imagine the process is like this.

1 ) fill a big ass vat full of enzymes.
2) load in a crystal somewhere (maybe a crystal rod inside the vat, maybe two opposite polarity crystals on either end)
3) energize crystal
4) wait for the enzymes to gather in groups due to the crystal's etheric charge (the way static gathers lint)
5) pull out the completed piece of meat product
6) chop it up

Precedent is there, just not for food.
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: Quantus on December 08, 2015, 04:08:09 PM
I always imagined it like when they do limb replacement and such in sci-fi space movies.   The character that is hurt is usually submerged in a tank, and machines (or lazers or whatever) grow the artificial replacement back.  Some examples are Starship Troopers, with Rico.  Age of Ultron, with Hawkeye.  Matrix, with everyone pre-pill.

A vat doesn't necessarily mean the product is a liquid, or even semi-solid.  I imagine the process is like this.

1 ) fill a big ass vat full of enzymes.
2) load in a crystal somewhere (maybe a crystal rod inside the vat, maybe two opposite polarity crystals on either end)
3) energize crystal
4) wait for the enzymes to gather in groups due to the crystal's etheric charge (the way static gathers lint)
5) pull out the completed piece of meat product
6) chop it up

Precedent is there, just not for food.
That sounds about right.  Especially given the part where they have to repeatedly peal of a leather 'rind' to allow it to continue growing, it makes me imagine something that layers up.  I expect it would have what by our definition would be a distinctly odd texture. 

Another thing to keep in mind is that this is an example of a sharply declined society, from a technological point of view.  They may not have the scientific understanding to actually pioneer that sort of technology, but they could easily have the basic capabilities to apply the knowledge and maintain the systems, the The Builders blazed the trail for them. 
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: kazimmoinuddin on December 09, 2015, 03:34:10 AM
I wonder if the builders created the original version of the vatteries?

I wonder why power crystals are the only one that gain in strength over time and use. Imagine if the other crystal can be grown so they mimic power crystals in this form. It would allow large scale implementation of high level crystal engineering. So not just used for the military or the nobility.
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: Quantus on December 09, 2015, 03:00:36 PM
I wonder if the builders created the original version of the vatteries?

I wonder why power crystals are the only one that gain in strength over time and use. Imagine if the other crystal can be grown so they mimic power crystals in this form. It would allow large scale implementation of high level crystal engineering. So not just used for the military or the nobility.
I think Core crystals are life-forms.  If weapons crystals and lift crystals are equivalent to Vat meat, Core crystals are actual animals that are growing and maturing. 
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: knnn on December 09, 2015, 08:44:44 PM
That sounds about right.  Especially given the part where they have to repeatedly peal of a leather 'rind' to allow it to continue growing,

The have wool (or at least something called "wool"), so it may be more than just a rind.
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: Quantus on December 09, 2015, 08:47:40 PM
The have wool (or at least something called "wool"), so it may be more than just a rind.
INteresting point, I never considered where their textile fiber comes from.  they have hydroponic Gardens, so fibers from common sources (Cotton, hemp, etc) are simple enough.  But animal fibers are a different matter, and being another byproduct of Vattery meat along with Leather makes as much sense as anything.
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: knnn on December 09, 2015, 09:19:03 PM
But animal fibers are a different matter, and being another byproduct of Vattery meat along with Leather makes as much sense as anything.

Either that or they use cat fur....   ;)
Title: Re: Cinder Spires Setting discussion [TAW Sample Chapter SPOILERS]
Post by: Quantus on December 09, 2015, 09:31:44 PM
Either that or they use cat fur....   ;)
like the cats would stand for that...  :P