Context: He’s in the files

  • givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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    11 hours ago

    You know what they say: the best time to build a time machine is 50 years ago.

    I think that’s basically the movie Primer too, they’d turn the machine on, go hide in an apartment for X amount of time, then go back to the machine and emerge 5 minutes after they turned it on and just walked away.

    But gravity effects time, sticking close to a planet isn’t going to be hard.

    Ironically enough the first (if we ever get them) time machines are going to be a hell of a lot like modern “UFOs” are described. You couldn’t risk landing on the planet, elevation changes are what’s really a nightmare to account for. Show up and hour early and everything is a foot higher because of how fast we’re spinning.

    So you’d want a space craft, because space is big and empty. And realistically it’s going to take something bigger than a telephone booth or even the 1980s embodiment of Florida on four wheels with a hood designed to do cocaine off of to house a time machine.

    • marcos@lemmy.world
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      10 hours ago

      Show up and hour early and everything is a foot higher because of how fast we’re spinning.

      Any actual process for doing it would probably be continuous in some way. Even if it’s just the machine making that part of the trip. Just living existence at some time and arriving at a different one doesn’t make a lot of sense.

      So, just more reason to do it in space.

      • TeamAssimilation@infosec.pub
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        8 hours ago

        Imagine your time machine has spiders at the time of your arrival, because it had a small defect that grew into an opening after several years.

        “Ha ha, I can’t see anything, but it seems like time travel tickles”