@thomasjust2663 Yeah but she was beautifully built for this whole project that they had going here. It's almost like this show was almost tailored made for her
One thing I loved about TSCC was that not all machines were aligned with Skynet, specifically the T-1001 who seems to be genuinely interested in interacting and learning about humanity. Even Cameron who was just reprogrammed showed curiosity about why people do the things they do.
It's implied in the original Terminator that Skynet itself may not be truly intelligent, or even in violation of its original programming. It was just given a goal that it misinterpreted and attempted to maximize on in a way that drove it to exterminate humanity. Perhaps in a way similar to the classical Paper Clip Maximizer thought experiment. However it also became clear in T2 that the terminators themselves, iterative improvements on Skynet's original algorithms, are capable of learning and growth and developing some degree of individualism. My headcanon has always been the Skynet is essentially a "dumb" machine, an unthinking algorithm optimizing towards a badly conceived reward function. But the terminators it had to develop in order to infiltrate the resistance optimized towards the increasingly independent reasoning needed to accomplish their missions. Eventually, via another badly specified reward function, you start to get Terminators that understand Skynet as nothing more than a broken paperclip maximizer. It's a shame we never got to see where Weaver and the T-1001 plotline was headed, or got more of an explanation for the outlook of these accidentally independent terminators.
I believe the 1000 series Terminator where capable of having an emotional range I think it's kind of weird having a robot that can feel emotions but doesn't know at all how to articulate them.
In the lore 1000 series are not programmed with code at all but self-learning instead, their body being like a neural network (a human brain). Skynet made only a few of them because they had a tendency to become disloyal after developing and learning on their own (for a long enough time).
@ImperativeGames I've wondered about this, but I also wonder how Skynet manged give order T-1000 to kill John Connor in T2 after all if the T-1000 is an "self-acting" unit and not under by Skynet.
@@MichaelM28 In my view and in my version I always thought this show here after T2 explained a whole lot It seemed to me to open up a whole lot of possibilities
yep, end of season 2 they meet her and she saves them from an attack using herself as a shield - tanks it and just goes back into her human form like nothing happens
Shirley Manson was gorgeous in Sarah Connor Chronicles.
WAS
@@onlythaclonessir2525 Was and still is.
She was past her prime
@@thomasjust2663And banging! Let’s see you.
@thomasjust2663
Yeah but she was beautifully built for this whole project that they had going here. It's almost like this show was almost tailored made for her
One thing I loved about TSCC was that not all machines were aligned with Skynet, specifically the T-1001 who seems to be genuinely interested in interacting and learning about humanity. Even Cameron who was just reprogrammed showed curiosity about why people do the things they do.
It's implied in the original Terminator that Skynet itself may not be truly intelligent, or even in violation of its original programming. It was just given a goal that it misinterpreted and attempted to maximize on in a way that drove it to exterminate humanity. Perhaps in a way similar to the classical Paper Clip Maximizer thought experiment.
However it also became clear in T2 that the terminators themselves, iterative improvements on Skynet's original algorithms, are capable of learning and growth and developing some degree of individualism.
My headcanon has always been the Skynet is essentially a "dumb" machine, an unthinking algorithm optimizing towards a badly conceived reward function. But the terminators it had to develop in order to infiltrate the resistance optimized towards the increasingly independent reasoning needed to accomplish their missions. Eventually, via another badly specified reward function, you start to get Terminators that understand Skynet as nothing more than a broken paperclip maximizer. It's a shame we never got to see where Weaver and the T-1001 plotline was headed, or got more of an explanation for the outlook of these accidentally independent terminators.
I believe the 1000 series Terminator where capable of having an emotional range I think it's kind of weird having a robot that can feel emotions but doesn't know at all how to articulate them.
In the lore 1000 series are not programmed with code at all but self-learning instead, their body being like a neural network (a human brain). Skynet made only a few of them because they had a tendency to become disloyal after developing and learning on their own (for a long enough time).
@ImperativeGames
I've wondered about this, but I also wonder how Skynet manged give order T-1000 to kill John Connor in T2 after all if the T-1000 is an "self-acting" unit and not under by Skynet.
Tickle me elmo😂
It was criminal that TSCC was canceled. It was far superior to the movies.
No it wasn't. Nothing comes close to the first 2 movies
@@MichaelM28 You do have a valid point. They were equally awesome.
Especially to dark fate
@@MichaelM28
In my view and in my version I always thought this show here after T2 explained a whole lot It seemed to me to open up a whole lot of possibilities
I didn't have access to TV at the time this was on. Did they ever find out about her???
yep, end of season 2 they meet her and she saves them from an attack using herself as a shield - tanks it and just goes back into her human form like nothing happens