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Friday, April 17, 2015

Moments

A big moment to you may be a wedding anniversary, birthday, trip to Costco, or a promotion.  My scope is set at a bit wider angle than that. This is what I see in my mind when I am thinking about a big moment:  


AcMo needs to focus on this type of galactic event because we are working on building defensive strategies.  Our intergalactic travels could be disrupted or terminated with prejudice if we are unable to develop proper emergency and disaster mitigation plans.  The buddy system only works so well, and it hasn't been proven in space yet.  It's also not likely we will be able to call space-side assistance to come tow us out of a black hole.



This picture hijacked my focus while I was doing research, and now it is holding my brain hostage.  I have sent messages to Amazon's staff to find out who is responsible for the creation of box-like figures that might be trapped on deserted islands.  I believe that AcMo could use the technology to manufacture test drivers for our scale economies projects.

That box hasn't thought through the situation.  Assuming that there is a mind inside that box, it isn't one that has the skills of a brilliant tactician like myself.  All it needed to do to escape the island was to activate its prime membership to get it shipped to a better destination.  I know I would have selected the next day option, and if the box orders in the next 23 hours and 59 minutes, it could be home by Friday.  Unless I've read this situation wrong and the box just received its heart as a special delivery.  In that case, I would have ordered a better brain first.  It's hard to tell what is happening based on a single photo without first talking with the box.

Embrace each moment, good or bad, because moments are ephemeral while their effects on us can be permanent.  By embracing and owning the moment, we can grow into different and more developed versions of ourselves.  Or at least have a cool story to post on Vine.

AcMo employees are always in the moment thanks to our advanced VR equipment and alternative therapies.  The problem with our experimental techniques is that it is difficult to force transition the staff from one moment to the next.

Confusion is AcMo's default operating state, so having staff members stuck in various stages of consciousness is normal.  Those rare moments of clarity serve as temporary lighthouses to guide us on our various paths of adventure and discovery. Sometimes they send us straight into the rocks, but now that we're aware of that possibility so we are more cautious when near shore.  I have to steal time to record inspiration so that AcMo can continue to innovate.

Whenever I am forcibly removed from my comfort zone it rattles me to the point that I can no longer concentrate on any task.  I need a solution to that problem.  The desire to be the first to market with a solution has forced me to cooperate with the research team to find it.  My hope is that the final solution will allow us to bottle inspirational moments so I can always have a reserve available.  This is one product we would probably not be interested in selling to the general public.  It wouldn't be smart to allow civilians to have on-demand inspiration.  That kind of access could interfere with our revenue streams. 





We would also accept some lightning in a bottle. We are always in need of more gigawatts.  Most of our classified projects require tremendous amounts of power to operate.  Running jumper cables from our client's vehicles isn't sufficient at this level.




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