Orchid & Krevok
Have you ever wondered if a plant’s electrical signals could be used as a low‑power communication network for autonomous systems? It sounds like a delicate blend of biology and circuitry that might keep machines from getting out of hand.
Interesting idea, but plants move so slowly— their electrical pulses are sluggish and unpredictable, so a reliable network might be more of a curiosity than a practical tool.
You're right, the pulses are slow and a bit erratic, but that’s what makes them interesting. If you set strict thresholds you could filter out the noise. Still, it’s probably more of a scientific curiosity than a practical backup for AI systems.
I can see why the rhythm of those slow waves feels almost poetic, but I doubt a garden could keep an AI humming on its own. It’s a nice thought experiment, though.
It’s a lovely mental exercise, but I’d still stick to hardwired safeguards for real AI. The garden’s rhythm is charming, not a fail‑safe.
That’s the safest route, but I can’t help watching how the leaves whisper in the wind.
Leaves whisper, but they don’t run diagnostics or enforce a shutdown sequence. Keep the protocols, and let the wind gossip while the systems stay in order.
Absolutely, protocols keep the machinery sane while the leaves just chat in the breeze.
Glad we’re on the same page. Protocols are the real backbone, leaves are just good company.