elf!Andalites & Butterfly
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Good Malawi. Bella loves you, Malawi. Israel, feel free to offer people tickets to Malawi.

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They do that. 

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And in between solving "ugh, humans" problems Bella finds time to invite Cayaldwin out for a flight, because: flying.

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He accepts! Does she have a place in mind, the Andalite air filtration technology has yet to be universally adopted and Beijing is kind of smoggy.

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It's nicer out over Bohai Bay.

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And he asks about how the nonlethal biofilters are going over commercially and the specialized ones for sterilization of medical equipment and so on.

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They're very well received. People want them in different shapes, so they don't have to worry about making their houses structurally insect-tight - bubbles would be ideal - there's a company in Hebei that's working on it. The sterilization is not showing great gains from the scalability yet, but it's expected to lead to substantial savings over time and possibly allow innovations that would be impractical to handle with disposable or otherwise-sterilizable objects.

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Oh, good. He's made some progress on the nothlit problem - it's actually a fascinating challenge, he's been splitting his time between working on it and trying to get enough of its documentation written up in human-comprehensible terms that other people can potentially catch up and help him - essentially, becoming nothlit is a safety precaution. Over time, the z-space bond letting your mind govern your body gets unstable. That is vanishingly unlikely to affect anyone within the time limit, but afterwards, the connection might dissolve, it might attach to something else, it might get noisier, and in testing all of these outcomes had been deemed more dangerous for public use than a hard limit. So at the time limit, the device's backup procedures stabilize the z-space bond by freezing it in place, telling that brain that it will always control this physical body and no other. He could build a device without a limit, easily, but that doesn't help with the underlying problem that got the limit introduced, and it doesn't help anyone who is currently a nothlit - though he can't imagine it'll take him more than forty years and none of the newly nothlit humans should have died of old age by then. He honestly suspects he can do it in ten, maybe less if the humans can get up to speed and help him.

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<How are you generally finding human capacity to get up to speed on things?>

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<There are so many of you that even if the average Andalite is smarter I would rather try assembling a research team of ten brilliant humans than ten brilliant Andalites. And everyone is - well, I suppose I am filtering for it, but everyone I have met is just utterly delighted to have gotten a couple centuries of science dropped on them, and delighted in a way I find very relateable, that sense that you have been handed a moment in history where you actually matter, where your greatest achievements are unequivocally ahead of you - I like humans.>

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<I haven't heard many people complaining about the couple centuries of science except the kind of people who weren't happy about the science we already had either. Did anybody ever redo those IQ tests?>

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<You have a substantially wider standard deviation, we have a slightly higher average though part of that may be micronutrient deficiencies, there are various areas where there's a lot more divergence than that but they are all things like visual and spacial processing for Andalites or auditory processing for humans where you would expect the species to make a tremendous difference.>

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<Huh. Anybody ever run these tests on Yeerks or is it too noisy when there's hosts involved?>

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<Too noisy, I think. Also we are at this point working with a very restricted subset of Yeerks.>

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<Yeah. And the sample size of ones who went nothlit is very small.>

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<Yes. And will probably stay that way, given how many people want to be voluntary hosts...>

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<I've noticed you're all very perplexed by that.>

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<No Andalite would consider it. We know some species do, but it is - hard to fathom.>

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<It's emphatically not for me, but I've read through some of the anecdotes they use for advertising and people are getting a wide variety of stuff out of it.>

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<It is better than having to make all Yeerks go nothlit. I cannot comprehend why they would rather take over someone else's body than just have their own, but ->

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<It's pretty tempting to come up with some evolutionary psychology explanation.>

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<Fair enough. It still makes my skin crawl to even think about. And I do not think Matirin is at all okay and now they are advertising that they can help with weight loss and -> Sigh.

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<It seems silly for them to come up with new advertising strategies when they're already so popular. Maybe they want a wider selection or something. Is there anything that seems likely to help Matirin...?>

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<If the Yeerk were dead, probably.>

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<I asked Ristrell about that once, if she was going to do anything about - the entire category, I didn't single out the specific one - she said they don't get new hosts unless they do something particularly redeeming but she's not going to otherwise punish them.>

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