TRON L. : programs into the real world
Posted: Sat Oct 29, 2011 2:20 pm
If you've watched TRON LEGACY, chances are that while you knew how Users behaved on the Grid, namely a place which was supposed to support life for Users while giving them greater abilities to some extent, the movie ended with a big unknown, namely that we saw Quorra had been materialized to the real world, but we have no idea how her body would actually work in our realm.
By chance, her abilities to learn and the free reign she was given as an ISO would allow her to move around with more freedom than some mundane program. For one, their ability to roam the Outlands and even having been given birth from there, somehow.
Which also brings us to CLU's army.
It really seems he knew very little about the world he promised to his programs, and acted more on the premise of a myth. It's been clearly shown that programs couldn't move outside of certain domains (City, Arena, etc.). Only selected programs, including Rinzel and some henchmen following CLU were capable of moving around as freely as CLU.
It is never shown if CLU had ever reworked that bit at all, nor if he even could achieve that on his own. We don't know how the converted programs would behave either. The Carrier ship itself might have been an exploit of some kind to move legions of programs beyond the boundaries of the domains they were allowed to explore, but its properties, if not his mere volume, represent a whole bag of other problems.
Where would they reintegrate?
CLU didn't know much about where Users came from (from the movie, the game may reveal things and its plot is canon but I didn't play it yet). In fact, CLU was totally disappointed by what he sees when he captures Sam Flynn's Identity Disc ("I expected more"). He saw glimpses of Sam's memory before being digitized and saw how the system he came through. It appears that he wasn't particularly impressed, but it's hard to say if he expected more from Sam or from the real world, or even the portal itself.
In the end, there's no simple theory as to how the Carrier could have been reintegrated into the real world safely, or even if it would have been possible, either because of a mere volumetric issue, or because of an inadequate encryption and transfer protocol which didn't include anything for the Grid programs going to the real world.
On the other hand, Kevin really considered that there was a grave danger.
There's an obvious limitation in the real world. Outside of the technology that is clearly leaps and bounds beyond ours in some very specific department, energy requirements are still valid, and whatever would be used by the digitizer for one person or two may be all the device could be capable of.
Would have some kind of reality paradox or rift formed, progressively power by the device, where the soon to be reintegrated Carrier ship would have been slowly constructed with energy building up inside some kind of volume, until the whole thing would blow up nuclear style, only to leave the ship floating in some giant crater? Or would have everything been destroyed, with no ship, no army left whatsoever?
By chance, her abilities to learn and the free reign she was given as an ISO would allow her to move around with more freedom than some mundane program. For one, their ability to roam the Outlands and even having been given birth from there, somehow.
Which also brings us to CLU's army.
It really seems he knew very little about the world he promised to his programs, and acted more on the premise of a myth. It's been clearly shown that programs couldn't move outside of certain domains (City, Arena, etc.). Only selected programs, including Rinzel and some henchmen following CLU were capable of moving around as freely as CLU.
It is never shown if CLU had ever reworked that bit at all, nor if he even could achieve that on his own. We don't know how the converted programs would behave either. The Carrier ship itself might have been an exploit of some kind to move legions of programs beyond the boundaries of the domains they were allowed to explore, but its properties, if not his mere volume, represent a whole bag of other problems.
Where would they reintegrate?
CLU didn't know much about where Users came from (from the movie, the game may reveal things and its plot is canon but I didn't play it yet). In fact, CLU was totally disappointed by what he sees when he captures Sam Flynn's Identity Disc ("I expected more"). He saw glimpses of Sam's memory before being digitized and saw how the system he came through. It appears that he wasn't particularly impressed, but it's hard to say if he expected more from Sam or from the real world, or even the portal itself.
In the end, there's no simple theory as to how the Carrier could have been reintegrated into the real world safely, or even if it would have been possible, either because of a mere volumetric issue, or because of an inadequate encryption and transfer protocol which didn't include anything for the Grid programs going to the real world.
On the other hand, Kevin really considered that there was a grave danger.
There's an obvious limitation in the real world. Outside of the technology that is clearly leaps and bounds beyond ours in some very specific department, energy requirements are still valid, and whatever would be used by the digitizer for one person or two may be all the device could be capable of.
Would have some kind of reality paradox or rift formed, progressively power by the device, where the soon to be reintegrated Carrier ship would have been slowly constructed with energy building up inside some kind of volume, until the whole thing would blow up nuclear style, only to leave the ship floating in some giant crater? Or would have everything been destroyed, with no ship, no army left whatsoever?