The Greatest Mecha

Chapter 46: A Bit Of Light Reading



Alto made his way back to his room rather hastily. On his way, he could hear murmurs from some of the officers who passed by. Apparently, General Duncan had managed to spread news of the upcoming duel. It was evident that he wanted to make a spectacle of it and disgrace him.

All of Alto’s agitation faded away as he reached his room. His mind went straight to the books he had in hand. Despite having the Mech Designer Protocol feed him the information earlier, he felt he still had to read the work for the knowledge to sink in completely. He felt he could not rely solely on what the system gave him without seeing it for himself. After all, the system had said it would not be holding his hand, and him relenting would make him feel like a cheat.

Reading the books given to him by the professor proved to be very easy, since the Mech Designer Protocol had already fed him the information. He only managed to gain a slight comprehension over the work. Still, he managed to find some things that the Mech Designer Protocol had failed to input into him.

Alto first started with the fields he was most unsure of before working his way up to those he was a bit more familiar with. The first thing he looked at was the sensor system. It was a field the professor had never introduced to him. He learned that the most common sensor was the heat sensor. It was compulsory for a standard mech to have this function, as it allowed it to get a reading of the hotspots within the area of reach of its heat sensor device. Since all mechs generally generated heat, this was clearly conventional technology. The better quality the mech’s sensor was, the farther the range it could read and the more accurate it would become.

Alto then moved on to learn coding, which had to do with the codes that would run within the working systems of the mech. It was a delicate subject that translated to converting the consciousness of human thought into codes, which would further be interpreted by the mech systems. The subject went even deeper than Alto had expected. Codes were like commands that enhanced the performance and optimization of a mech. Learning coding would also help him write a code that could not be hacked by someone else, which would prevent the mech from sustaining damages in battle.

Alto did not know why, but he felt that codes made a mech feel more alive. He found some notes in the books written in what he supposed was the professor’s handwriting. She addressed the fact that codes were the key to conventional breakthroughs, and that interpreting human thoughts as code could revolutionize the world of mech piloting. Her theories made no sense to Alto, so he just kept them at the back of his mind rather than dwell on them any further.

Next was a topic he had been saving for last: the AI interface of a mech. In simple terms, it was the artificial intelligence of a mech. Its job was to give feedback about the status of a mech in real time. If there was a problem with a mech or a drop in its armor defense—perhaps in the legs, hands, sides, or anywhere else—the AI interface would simply run its numbers and decide whether it was crucial to alert the pilot.

While this was what the book said, there were notes written by the professor at the back, and she had thoughts of her own on the matter.

According to the notes, Professor Alberta saw more to the AI interface. She believed that if a more capable code were written into the AI interface, perhaps a mech would be able to do more than just relay commands to its pilot—it would be able to help them physically.

"Is she suggesting that a mech could be more than a machine? Like... being alive?" Alto thought to himself. But surely this could not be the case. Mechs were machines, not actually living beings. They were tools.

All these theories took him to his final subject: circuitry. This was simply about building the right pathways within the mech’s inner workings to ensure that all of its commands were carried out without fault. If a mech were to be engaged in a dangerous battle and had one of its circuits damaged, it would not show much. But if multiple circuit pathways were damaged, it would surely affect something within the mech.

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