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.