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Monday, October 2, 2017

Jackpot!

I like to build stuff out of carbon fiber when I'm bored.  To be more accurate, I like to build stuff that other people have already spent the development time perfecting.  This improves AcMo's efficiency because we don't waste hours on the wrong approach.  Sometimes we can even use stuff I've built on customer's cars--usually without their knowledge.  I've never met a performance car owner who got upset with owning a lighter car.  Sometimes we are able to add lightness by removing the wheels and engine, but that is an extreme case.  The video below told me everything I needed to know when the creator said that his mech suit could be driven like a car.  All we do at AcMo is drive other people's cars, so driving a mech suit that operates like a car shouldn't be a problem.  Soon we'll be doing more than driving them through your living room.




This product needs a lot more development before AcMo would feel comfortable copying the design, but things are moving in the right direction faster than I anticipated.  This is how we're going to position ourselves to win the future.  The mech suit featured in the video has too many exposed belts and is not aerodynamic enough for our intended combat purposes.  It also has no speed at the moment, and that is an AcMo prerequisite.

Do not worry, we have the technology required to improve the design and make it fly.


These models will be available in various color schemes and armament levels.  The only restriction in terms of options is your budget.  You will never have to endure your neighbor's barking dog in the middle of the night again.  You'll never again be late to anything because nothing will start before you arrive in your mech suit.  The world will soon be able to forget about misunderstandings, hurt feelings, and wars once AcMo brings our peacekeeper mechs online.

What we're attempting to do here is save humanity from itself by taking control of everything.  Once we're finished we can get back to what we were supposed to be doing which was modifying cars to make them temporarily go faster than they should.  That's another thing that will soon disappear:  traffic enforcement.  That way we can do our testing on public roads with impunity.

Standing on the cusp of a new way of life is so exciting!  I just hope there is enough time to build an army of these before the robots become self-aware and start their attack on us.

The above pictured models have been around for a long time and have proven their battle effectiveness and flight capabilities.  All we're going to do is reverse engineer their propulsion systems and flight controls so that we can deliver the total package.  To whom we'll deliver that package is a difficult question to answer at the moment.  My business sense is telling me that a few hundred of these would allow AcMo to form our own private military company, and then we could do whatever we wanted.  However, these peacekeepers would be a problem in our competitor's hands, or anyone who has an ongoing disagreement with us.  Sometimes sales need to be sacrificed for the health of the organization.

It is important for everyone to understand how close we are to realizing the dream.  I have also been working on plans to miniaturize the mechs so that they can fit through standard doorways and park in most garages.  A smaller size along with our upcoming stealth enhancement packages could give us an insurmountable competitive advantage.

This is the most exciting project AcMo has ever undertaken, and it all originated from the desire to rid the world of traffic.  It has grown into so much more since that initial design briefing to create a trafficide system.  Evolution is a wonderful process.   I can’t wait to get our beta tester into one of our garage compatible prototypes. It is going to transform his commute...and yours if you obstruct traffic by improperly using the left lane. 

I neglected to mention one minor detail regarding the cockpits.  The first couple of prototypes are being designed to such tight tolerances that once a tester is installed in the cockpit the situation becomes permanent. This is why we increased the stealth aspects while reducing the suit’s size. We want our testers to be able to continue with as much of their daily routine as possible while in their new permanent home.  I doubt our beta tester will mind since he’ll probably have a functioning railgun and flight capabilities. 

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