T-Chip

 

What is the T-chip?

T is for translator. It allows an agent to instantly 'know' any language in the world; to understand it when it is spoken to them and to read it. They cannot, however, instantly speak the language, nor write in unfamiliar characters without first teaching the muscles in their mouths and hands how to do so.

 

What is it made out of?

For details, read about the I-chip. Both are nano devices containing the codes needed to grow the necessary hardware in the agent's brain. It is inserted in a vector.

 

What part of the brain is it in?

The T-chip is attatched to the hippocampus, towards the center of the cerebrum.

 

How does the information get from the device into the agent's memory?

The information is encoded in the DNA. Once the T-chip is in the brain, it 'grows' the memories into the brain. A T-chip contains 90% of translated information, the rest the agent has learned, will learn, or downloads off the C-chip.

 

Which came first, the I-chip or the T-chip?

The T-chip was around long before the I-chip, which is a hundred times more complicated. The problem with the I-chip is that it has to be sensetive to the DNA already there, and everyone's brain is different, sometimes by a lot. The T-chip, however, simply creates memories everyone's brain is capable of understanding.

 

Click here for more info of real life T-chips