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#RealityTVDeep
Transcript
00:00:00This is what infuriates me. Don't you see? So painfully obvious.
00:00:04Why do you think our stock's in the toilet?
00:00:06Because you're cutting research and development in half.
00:00:09You've forgotten what the adventure's all about.
00:00:12Like it or not, the industry's changing. We need to make some hard choices.
00:00:15You saved a soundbite for the press.
00:00:17Let's not relive the stockholders' meeting again.
00:00:19Don't you get it? You're killing me! You're killing my company!
00:00:24Urisco is not your company, Brad. Not anymore.
00:00:27And you damn well better grow up and get used to it.
00:00:31You can regret this.
00:00:40New paragraph.
00:00:42As I'm sure everyone on the board will agree,
00:00:45Urisco has to face head-on the realities of an increasingly competitive world.
00:00:51Since the unfortunate departure of Brad Wilczek,
00:00:54I have made certain recommendations which I believe will reposition Urisco as an industry leader.
00:01:02At the top of this list is the immediate termination of the COS project.
00:01:08Its disastrous performance over the past three quarters
00:01:11and projected losses well into 1994.
00:01:16Leave us no other choice.
00:01:18Go ahead.
00:01:19I'll make it.
00:01:21I'll make it.
00:01:21Oh, my God.
00:01:51Hello? Hello?
00:01:54At the tone, Eastern Standard Time, 7.35 p.m.
00:01:59What the hell?
00:02:10Damn.
00:02:21File deleted.
00:02:39File deleted.
00:02:41File deleted.
00:02:42File deleted.
00:02:44File deleted.
00:03:14To be continued...
00:03:44Mulder.
00:03:57Jerry?
00:04:02You're Dana Scully, right?
00:04:04Jerry Lamont.
00:04:05Jerry and I work together in violent crimes.
00:04:07Work together? We're talking work together.
00:04:09We were partners.
00:04:11That's 850, please.
00:04:12So, Jerry, what are you doing here?
00:04:15Looking for you, and I'm buying you two lunch.
00:04:17No, really.
00:04:18No, it's on me.
00:04:24Cause of death was electrocution.
00:04:26And it wasn't accidental.
00:04:27It looks like some kind of elaborate booby trap,
00:04:30but we don't know a whole lot more.
00:04:32Building engineer just found him 12 hours ago.
00:04:34Who's running the investigation?
00:04:37Either of you or Nancy Spiller.
00:04:38The forensics instructor at the academy?
00:04:40How?
00:04:42I used to call her the Iron Maiden.
00:04:44On a good day.
00:04:45Well, anyway, she's putting together the squad,
00:04:47and, well, I took the liberty of mentioning your name.
00:04:53Look, Jerry, I'd like to help you out,
00:04:56but we're not on general assignment.
00:04:59Because of the X-Files.
00:05:03Look, the truth is I could use a little help on this.
00:05:07I don't want to drop the ball on this one.
00:05:08You won't drop the ball.
00:05:11Drake wasn't just a CEO of a Fortune 500 company.
00:05:14He was a good friend of the attorney general's.
00:05:17Another feather in my cap would be really nice right now,
00:05:20because one I got is looking a little mangy.
00:05:21Yeah, but Jerry, look.
00:05:22I wouldn't ask if it wasn't important.
00:05:28How come you two went to a separate way?
00:05:31I'm a pain in the ass to work with.
00:05:33Seriously?
00:05:34I'm not a pain in the ass?
00:05:36We had different career goals.
00:05:38Jerry wanted the fifth floor.
00:05:40And you?
00:05:41I was gunning for a basement office with no heater windows.
00:05:45Well, I know where you ended up.
00:05:48I was married.
00:05:49He ran into a little bad luck in Atlanta working hate crimes.
00:05:52What a bad luck.
00:05:54He misplaced the piece of evidence, bagged and everything,
00:05:57sent it to the cleaners.
00:05:58By the time he got it back,
00:05:59a federal judge had lost both his hands and his right eye.
00:06:0229?
00:06:11Uh-huh.
00:06:13Going up.
00:06:15Must be for the visually impaired.
00:06:17How do you like that?
00:06:18A politically correct elevator.
00:06:20Third floor.
00:06:22Fourth floor.
00:06:24You okay?
00:06:26Yeah.
00:06:28What was that?
00:06:32Yes?
00:06:39Hello?
00:06:40Security.
00:06:40This is Agent Dana Scully.
00:06:43Scully, do you have a problem?
00:06:44Fifth floor.
00:06:46Sixth floor.
00:06:46Seventh floor.
00:06:47Actually, I think everything's okay.
00:06:49Ninth floor.
00:06:50Tenth floor.
00:06:52Eleventh floor.
00:06:52Eleventh floor.
00:07:02See here?
00:07:04Someone has tampered with the servo.
00:07:06They switched the ground to the negative,
00:07:08so that when he put the key in the lock...
00:07:11He completed the circuit.
00:07:12It's fused.
00:07:13Yeah.
00:07:13It takes a lot of juice to melt a steel key.
00:07:16And to throw a 180-pound man ten feet.
00:07:20The servo switch.
00:07:21Could it have been moved manually?
00:07:24We didn't find any prints in the surrounding area.
00:07:27Sure, it could have been switched manually.
00:07:29But whoever did it would have had to override the COS.
00:07:32What's the COS?
00:07:33The central operating system that runs the building.
00:07:37Regulates everything from energy output to the volume of water in each toilet flush.
00:07:41This is Claude Peterson.
00:07:42He's a building systems engineer.
00:07:44He discovered the body.
00:07:45If somebody wanted to override the COS, what would they...
00:07:49Well, first you'd have to break the access codes, which...
00:07:52Well, let's just say it wouldn't be easy.
00:07:54Well, we're gonna need a list of all the people with that kind of know-how.
00:07:58I can tell you right now, it'd be a pretty short list.
00:08:00Would you be on it?
00:08:02Me?
00:08:04Hey, look, I'm just a glorified building super.
00:08:08All I do is monitor the system, make sure it's functioning properly.
00:08:11Like when I saw the overload at Mr. Drake's office.
00:08:14What about the phone lines?
00:08:16Does the COS monitor all phone calls?
00:08:19Yes, it does.
00:08:20What?
00:08:20I'm just wondering.
00:08:23Okay, uh, can I go now?
00:08:26Okay.
00:08:30Why'd you ask him about the phones?
00:08:33Phone's off the hook.
00:08:38Maybe Drake was talking to somebody right before he did his Ben Franklin impersonation.
00:08:44I taught him everything he knows.
00:08:55Come in.
00:08:58How's three?
00:08:59I'm just looking for my profile notes.
00:09:03Maybe if you cleaned your desk more than once a year.
00:09:05They were right here.
00:09:07I'm telling you.
00:09:07Come on, we're late.
00:09:21Now, there are a couple elements for us to consider here.
00:09:24Both the statistical rarity of homicidal electrocution and the complexity of the crime indicate a certain devious premeditation.
00:09:35After all, there are much simpler ways of killing someone.
00:09:38All of which leads me to believe that our guy was some kind of sociopathic game player.
00:09:47Maybe even a recluse.
00:09:49Since he designed a trap not only to avoid detection, but to avoid contact with the victim.
00:09:57Is that your profile?
00:09:59Forget it.
00:10:00Drake's final phone call supports this theory.
00:10:04At the tone, Eastern Standard Time will be 7.35 p.m.
00:10:10Drake's estimated time of death.
00:10:12Why would Drake call for the correct time just before he died?
00:10:15It was an incoming call from somewhere in the Urisco building itself.
00:10:20Whoever set the trap wanted to make sure that Drake took the bait.
00:10:26Excellent work, Agent LaMana.
00:10:37Jerry?
00:10:38What the hell are you doing?
00:10:40Hey, don't get all bent out of shape.
00:10:41Jerry, that was my profile.
00:10:43Look, I didn't think you'd mind.
00:10:48Anyway, they were just notes.
00:10:50I filled in the blanks.
00:10:51Jerry, you went into my office and you stole my work.
00:10:55Look, you're on this case because I asked you to help me out, and you helped me out.
00:11:00What is the big deal?
00:11:07What did he say?
00:11:08He apologized in his own way.
00:11:13I just got off the phone with Peterson, the systems engineer.
00:11:16One name, Brad Wilchick?
00:11:20He said it would be a short list.
00:11:22And it's headline news how much this guy despised Drake.
00:11:25That just seems too obvious.
00:11:26To kill Drake would be so brazenly egomaniacal.
00:11:29And fully consistent with Jerry's excellent behavioral profile.
00:11:33Fully?
00:11:34This is what a 220 IQ and a $400 million severance settlement buys you.
00:12:03Yes?
00:12:16Brad Wilchick?
00:12:18We're with the FBI.
00:12:20What took you guys so long?
00:12:26Don't you mind taking off your shoes?
00:12:27You can divide the computer science industry into two types of people.
00:12:35Neat and scruffy.
00:12:37I take a Benjamin Drake fit into the first category.
00:12:40Neat people like things neat.
00:12:42They wear nicely pressed suits and work on surface phenomena.
00:12:45Things they can understand.
00:12:47Market shares and third quarter profits.
00:12:50And you had a different vision for the company?
00:12:52I started Yurisco out of my parents' garage.
00:12:56I was 22 years old.
00:12:57I just spent a year following around the Grateful Dead.
00:13:01You know what Yurisco means?
00:13:04That's from the Greek, isn't it?
00:13:05Um, I learn things.
00:13:08Not exactly.
00:13:09It means I discover things.
00:13:11Unfortunately, Ben Drake wasn't interested in discovery.
00:13:14He's a short-sighted, power-hungry opportunist.
00:13:17Let me show you something.
00:13:22Smart home.
00:13:23From this prototype, I have access to every square foot of my house.
00:13:27This place is as safe as Fort Knox and as energy efficient as your average igloo.
00:13:31We were two years ahead of Microsoft and SEBUS when Drake, in his infinite wisdom, killed the program.
00:13:37Mr. Wilczek, is this system related to the one in your corporate building?
00:13:42Variation on a theme.
00:13:43In your opinion, how many people know the system well enough to override it?
00:13:47Finally, the bonus question.
00:13:49Not many is the answer.
00:13:52Could someone have, uh, hacked into the system?
00:13:55Well, not your average phone freak, that's for sure.
00:13:58But there's plenty of kooks out there.
00:14:00Data travelers, electro-wizards, techno-anarchists.
00:14:04Anything's possible.
00:14:06Could you have done it?
00:14:08Of course.
00:14:10I designed the system.
00:14:13That's why you guys are here, isn't it?
00:14:14I'm your logical suspect.
00:14:18You don't seem too worried.
00:14:20It's a puzzle, Miss Scully.
00:14:23And scruffy minds like me like puzzles.
00:14:26We enjoy walking down unpredictable avenues of thought, turning new corners.
00:14:30But as a general rule, scruffy minds don't commit murder.
00:14:35Some see genius as the ability to connect the unconnected, to make juxtapositions, to see relationships where others cannot.
00:14:49Is Brad Wiltschek a genius?
00:14:52I don't know.
00:14:54But I do know this for certain.
00:14:57He has a predilection for elaborate game playing.
00:15:00He has an intimate knowledge of the Yuriska building.
00:15:02And he has a demonstrable motive for killing Benjamin Drake.
00:15:05The question remains.
00:15:09But if he's so clever, how do we nail him?
00:15:14End of Field Journal, October 24th, 1993.
00:15:17End of Field Journal, October 24th, 1993.
00:15:47File opened.
00:16:17From the outset, I knew that Yuriska would expand effectively.
00:16:21Not by traditional Western structures, but by employing certain Zen beliefs and other Eastern philosophies.
00:16:30And other Eastern philosophies.
00:16:35Eastern philosophy.
00:16:38Eastern.
00:16:39Give me a second.
00:16:53Look, I'm here with my hat in my hand.
00:16:56I screwed up.
00:16:56I'm sorry.
00:16:57What more can I say?
00:16:59All you had to do was ask.
00:17:01I would have helped you with the profile.
00:17:04You'll know what it's like, Mulder.
00:17:06What what's like?
00:17:06You heard about Atlanta?
00:17:09Yeah.
00:17:09They got me on six months probation.
00:17:11I gotta file daily reports like some cherry new agent.
00:17:14That was bad luck.
00:17:15That could have happened to anybody.
00:17:18Not to you.
00:17:22Don't run yourself down, Jerry.
00:17:24You're a good agent.
00:17:25We did some good work together.
00:17:27Let's face it.
00:17:28I was tagging along.
00:17:29That's not how it was.
00:17:30How would you know, Mulder?
00:17:31You were too busy dazzling them up there on the high wire.
00:17:35Mulder.
00:17:36Take a look.
00:17:45We borrowed this from the Voice Biometrics Lab at Georgetown.
00:17:49It's a computer spectrogram capable of identifying individual speech patterns.
00:17:53Now this is the recording the central operating system made of the phone call Drake received
00:17:58just before he died.
00:17:59At the tone, Eastern Standard Time will be 7.35 p.m.
00:18:07And this we spliced together from a series of lectures Brad Wilczek gave at the Smithsonian
00:18:12last year.
00:18:15At the tone, Eastern Standard Time will be 7.35 p.m.
00:18:18You're saying this is the same person?
00:18:31I'm saying that both voices are Brad Wilczek's.
00:18:34He may have disguised his voice electronically, but he couldn't alter the form that's unique
00:18:38to his own speech patterns.
00:18:39Which means that he was the one that killed Drake.
00:18:42He had the motive and the means.
00:18:46And now we have the physical evidence.
00:18:52Judge Benson lives in Washington Heights.
00:18:54I can get a warrant in less than an hour.
00:18:56Someone has to make sure Wilczek stays put.
00:18:58I'll go with you.
00:18:59No.
00:19:00Let me bring him in along.
00:19:01I need this one, Mulder.
00:19:05All right.
00:19:20Come on.
00:19:21Come on.
00:19:22Let me in.
00:19:23Let me in.
00:19:53Mr. Wilkett!
00:20:23Going up, second floor, third floor, fourth floor.
00:20:39Can I help you?
00:20:40FBI.
00:20:41Welcome back, Brad.
00:21:02You're not equipped with a voice synthesizer.
00:21:08What is my user level?
00:21:13That is now at the discretion of the operating system.
00:21:17Going up, second floor, third floor, fourth floor, fifth floor, sixth floor, seventh floor,
00:21:34eighth floor, ninth floor, tenth floor, eleventh floor, twelfth floor, 14th floor,
00:21:4315th floor, 16th floor, 10th floor, 18th floor, 19th floor, 19th floor, 19th floor, 19th floor,
00:21:49What are you doing?
00:21:50Sorry.
00:21:51Those commands are not available at your current user level.
00:21:54second try again
00:22:01what are you doing!
00:22:04What are you doing!?
00:22:11Thank you
00:22:1439,39,39,39,39
00:22:24I'm telling you, Drown.
00:22:45No! Don't do this, boy!
00:22:54He's gone!
00:23:06Program executed.
00:23:24It's not my heart.
00:23:29The answer, please.
00:23:33I'm sorry.
00:23:34I didn't use our own spirit.
00:23:37I didn't use our own spirit.
00:23:46I heard about Jerry.
00:24:01I'm sorry.
00:24:04I don't think Wilczek did it.
00:24:09What?
00:24:11It doesn't make sense.
00:24:14Why would he go back to Yurisko?
00:24:16To destroy evidence to cover his tracks.
00:24:20If you were going to destroy evidence, would you pose for the cameras?
00:24:37Mulder.
00:24:40You've been through a lot.
00:24:42More than I think even you realize.
00:24:44I think Wilczek is smarter than this.
00:24:59He just signed a confession.
00:25:03How much proof do you need?
00:25:05I did it.
00:25:16Excuse me.
00:25:17This is a crime scene.
00:25:20Excuse me, this is a crime scene. You're gonna have to leave.
00:25:32Yeah, I know. I ordered the subpoena.
00:25:34That subpoena's been obviated.
00:25:37What are you talking about?
00:25:39Unless you've got a code 5 clearance, I'm gonna have to ask you to turn back.
00:25:50Thanks for coming.
00:26:12I'm here against my better judgment.
00:26:15In the future, I must insist that you respect the terms of our arrangement.
00:26:19I need to know why Brad Wilczek is the subject of a code 5 investigation.
00:26:23What the defense department wants with him.
00:26:25What do you think they'd want with the most innovative programmer in this industry?
00:26:30Software.
00:26:32For years, Wilczek has thumbed his nose that any contract involving weapons applications is a bleeding heart.
00:26:40What kind of software?
00:26:42How much do you know about artificial intelligence?
00:26:46I thought it was only theoretical.
00:26:49It was.
00:26:50Two years ago.
00:26:51You remember Helsinki the first time that a chess-playing computer ever beat a grandmaster?
00:26:55That was Wilczek's program.
00:26:57And the rumor was that he did it by developing the first adaptive network.
00:27:03An adaptive network?
00:27:05Some learning machine.
00:27:06A computer that actually thinks.
00:27:11And it's become something of a holy grail for some of our more inquisitive colleagues in the Department of Defense.
00:27:20They make me wear shoes all the time.
00:27:25What else do you want from me?
00:27:27I want you to tell me why you're willing to spend the rest of your life in prison for a crime you didn't commit.
00:27:32What are you talking about? I'm guilty.
00:27:34I know you're innocent.
00:27:36You're protecting a machine.
00:27:39The central operating system that you risk up.
00:27:43If I'm protecting anything, it's not a machine.
00:27:47Then what?
00:27:50After the bomb was dropped on Hiroshima, Nagasaki, Robert Oppenheimer spent the rest of his life regretting he'd ever glimpsed an atom.
00:28:04Oppenheimer may have regretted his actions, but he never denied responsibility for them.
00:28:09He loved the work, Mr. Mulder.
00:28:13His mistake was in sharing it with an immoral government.
00:28:18I won't make the same mistake.
00:28:21But your machine killed Drake.
00:28:24And it killed my friend.
00:28:27I'm sorry about what happened.
00:28:32But there's nothing I can do.
00:28:35And you talk about morality.
00:28:37You're afraid of the government, but you're willing to accept the risk that your machine will kill again.
00:28:42The lesser of two evils.
00:28:45What about a third option?
00:28:50You created that machine.
00:28:52Now you tell me how to destroy it.
00:28:54Wiltshire can create a virus that will destroy the system.
00:29:01Mulder, don't you see? Blaming the machine is an alibi. And a bad one.
00:29:05But it's the only thing that makes sense. The COS project was posting big losses for Eurisko, and Drake was about to terminate the program.
00:29:12So the machine killed Drake out of self-defense?
00:29:15Self-preservation. It's the primary instinct of all sentient beings.
00:29:19Mulder, that level of artificial intelligence is decades away from being realized.
00:29:24And why was our government trying to usurp Wiltshire's research?
00:29:29Mulder, I think you're looking for something that isn't there. And I think it has something to do with Jerry.
00:29:36Maybe it wouldn't be such a bad idea if you talked to someone.
00:29:44You're probably right.
00:29:48Where are you going?
00:29:49To talk to someone.
00:30:06How much time do you need?
00:30:36Bling.
00:30:38Bling.
00:30:39Bling.
00:30:40Bling.
00:30:41Bling.
00:30:42Bling.
00:30:43Hello?
00:30:44Hello.
00:31:00Oh my god.
00:31:06This is Special Agent Dana Scully.
00:31:11ID number 2317-616.
00:31:14I need you to run a quick trace on a number for me.
00:31:17Yeah.
00:31:19202-555-6431.
00:31:22Yeah, that's my number.
00:31:23Somebody's accessing my computer.
00:31:36Mulder!
00:31:52Scully, what are you doing here?
00:31:54Someone or something's been scanning my computer files, tapping my phones.
00:31:58I traced a line.
00:32:00It came from somewhere in there.
00:32:04It's the machine.
00:32:06How can we get in?
00:32:14Remember the Trojan horse?
00:32:32Open sesame.
00:32:33Oh, what the?
00:32:46So much for the element of surprise.
00:33:08What do you say we take the stairs?
00:33:2528 down.
00:33:26One to go.
00:33:27Oh, great.
00:33:35Fuller?
00:33:43Trick or treat.
00:33:44No.
00:33:45What are you doing?
00:33:56I want to make the same mistake, Drake.
00:33:58No.
00:33:58No.
00:33:58No.
00:33:58No.
00:33:59No.
00:34:00No.
00:34:01No.
00:34:02No.
00:34:03No.
00:34:04No.
00:34:05No.
00:34:06No.
00:34:24No.
00:34:26No.
00:34:27No.
00:34:28Where you looking at?
00:34:58That should be a way for you to drop down and open the door.
00:35:28That should be a way for you to drop down and open the door.
00:35:58Come on, Scully.
00:36:10Scully?
00:36:28What are you doing here?
00:36:36What are you doing here?
00:36:56What are you doing here?
00:37:26What are you doing here?
00:37:56The machine's been acting all crazy.
00:38:00Power surges, shutoffs.
00:38:02That's why I'm here so late.
00:38:04Where's the B port?
00:38:06Oh, it's right back here.
00:38:08Look, are you sure you know what you're doing?
00:38:20Because if you don't, it's my job on the line.
00:38:22Oh, it's my job.
00:38:30Oh, it's my job.
00:38:34Oh, it's my job.
00:38:46Oh, it's my job.
00:38:48Oh, it's my job.
00:38:50Oh, it's my job.
00:39:02Oh, it's my job.
00:39:04Oh, it's my job.
00:39:05Oh, it's my job.
00:39:06Okay.
00:39:07Oh, it's my job.
00:39:08Oh, I'm here.
00:39:09Okay.
00:39:10Oh, it's my job.
00:39:11Granted, user code level 7.
00:39:15Now I can put in the virus.
00:39:18Not bad, Agent Mulder.
00:39:20You know, I've been trying to access the CPU for the past two years.
00:39:24Now, please, take out your gun and remove the clip.
00:39:34Careful.
00:39:34Defense Department?
00:39:42Let's just say our paychecks are signed by the same person.
00:39:45Now give me the diskette and step away from the console.
00:39:51You don't want to test my resolve, Agent Mulder.
00:40:00Put down the gun.
00:40:05Look, you may think you know what you're dealing with.
00:40:08Shut up and drop the gun.
00:40:14You're making a mistake, Agent Scully.
00:40:22Compromising your sworn duty.
00:40:24This operation is more sensitive than you can possibly imagine.
00:40:28Don't listen to him.
00:40:29The technology in this machine is of enormous scientific interest.
00:40:34The machine's a monster, Scully.
00:40:35It's already killed two people.
00:40:37They won't be able to handle it any better than Wilczek did.
00:40:39Make no mistake.
00:40:41You will be held accountable.
00:40:47Mulder, put it in the disk.
00:40:48What are you doing, Brad?
00:40:53Don't do this, Brad.
00:40:57Bad command or file name.
00:41:00Sector 7, not file tone.
00:41:02Bus terror standard times.
00:41:04735.
00:41:05Not PR.
00:41:06499.
00:41:08Insufficient division.
00:41:09399.
00:41:09I'm going to run.
00:41:10I'm going to run.
00:41:10I'm going to run.
00:41:10We're going to run.
00:41:11Exec.
00:41:1110 on the 4 double set.
00:41:13Full memory.
00:41:14Fail of the bag.
00:41:143.
00:41:14Enter copy.
00:41:155.
00:41:151.
00:41:16I'm going to run.
00:41:16Dreamers.
00:41:17I'm able to drop.
00:41:184.
00:41:19Failure at 0.
00:41:203.
00:41:20Don't hit the business.
00:41:21Swap.
00:41:22Reproduction.
00:41:22Failure at 0.
00:41:238.
00:41:24Not everything.
00:41:24Failure at 0.
00:41:268.
00:41:26Failure at 0.
00:41:289.
00:41:29Overload.
00:41:30Failure at 0.
00:41:316.
00:41:31Failure at 0.
00:41:336.
00:41:3410.
00:41:3510.
00:41:3510.
00:41:3610.
00:41:37Brad!
00:41:39Brad?
00:41:41Why?
00:42:07They checked with Congressman Klebin on the Department of Corrections subcommittee.
00:42:12I even petitioned the Attorney General's office.
00:42:14You won't find him.
00:42:16They can't just take a man like Brad Wilczek without an explanation.
00:42:20They can do anything they want.
00:42:25Where is he?
00:42:27In the middle of what we in the trade call hard bargaining.
00:42:31Wilczek won't deal.
00:42:33He'll never work for them.
00:42:35Also, freedom does funny things to a man.
00:42:37And remember, Wilczek confessed to two murders...
00:42:40...and you effectively destroyed the only evidence they could have exonerated him.
00:42:47What else could I have done?
00:42:49Nothing.
00:42:50Unless you were willing to let the technology survive.
00:42:56The Department of Defense still hasn't found anything?
00:42:59They'd been on it for five days.
00:43:01Wilczek's virus was thorough.
00:43:03Left no trace of the artificial intelligence.
00:43:08The machine is dead.
00:43:10We've pushed the pulse code modulation to the limit.
00:43:27Nothing.
00:43:32A big board crashed.
00:43:33We've combed the parsing subroutine.
00:43:36Yes, sir.
00:43:37Twice.
00:43:38Nothing in the parallel process.
00:43:39No, sir.
00:43:40Still nothing.
00:43:41But I'd like to request...
00:43:42I did.
00:43:43Right on the subprogramming.
00:43:44Yes, sir.
00:43:45No, I understand.
00:43:46Yes, sir.
00:43:47Six more hours before we have to consign the whole damn thing to the metal shredder.
00:44:00We'll do what we can, sir.
00:44:02I'm gonna figure this thing out if it kills me.
00:44:03I'm gonna figure this thing out if it kills me.
00:44:32No, sir.
00:44:33Let's do itteralled.
00:44:34I'm gonna figure it out once honestly gets opinions from theppa.
00:44:35I'm gonna figure it out if it hits hands.
00:44:36But I can find the null.
00:44:38Did you not miss anyone it?
00:44:41Theyyoub, you shared this radio on your table on your behalf.
00:44:43It's funny, but I think it's funny, but it's funny.
00:44:44It takes every time, itしい, but thismeet happens to get Miller.
00:44:46For me to talk about 100% space.
00:44:48It is when you get었어요.
00:44:49Yes, sir.
00:44:50You marry that part locations on your team or to the other seas.
00:44:51But it's like a various Slowly and Treasure do the night.
00:44:52It's gonna lead to its mission.
00:44:54If you go after seven days of the night plugin away,
00:44:56to be a pretty trendy reason
00:44:59I made this!
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