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#Cyberdyne Systems Model 101
wojakgallery · 30 days
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Title/Name: The Terminator. Known As: The Terminator, also known as a Cyberdyne Systems Model 101 or the T-800, is the name of several film characters from the Terminator franchise portrayed by Arnold Schwarzenegger. The Terminator himself is part of a series of machines created by Skynet for infiltration-based surveillance and assassination missions, and while an android for his appearance, he is usually described as a cyborg consisting of living tissue over a robotic endoskeleton. Terminator is an American media franchise created by James Cameron and Gale Anne Hurd. Country: USA Wojak Series: Feels Guy (Variant) Image by: Unknown Main Tag: Terminator Wojak
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pedroam-bang · 1 month
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Terminator: Resistance (2019)
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CYBERDYNE RESEARCH SYSTEMS MODEL 101 -- THE NEXT LEVEL IN ASSASSINATION, MURDER, & INFILTRATION.
PIC INFO: Spotlight on the T-800 endoskelston 6 inch action figure by McFarlane Toys, part of "Movie Maniacs" Series 5 released in September 2002.
Brand: Movie Maniacs
Genre: Movies & TV
Product Type: Action Figure
Series: Movie Maniacs Series 4 & 5
"Once you get below the quasi-human flesh, this is the true form of the "Terminator 2" protagonist. This is the endoskeleton of the T-800 cyborg sent back in time by the resistance to protect John Connor — the future leader of the human revolution — from a dangerous new shape-shifting cyborg. Though normally covered with human-like flesh, the endoskeleton is what lives beneath the skin."
-- MCFARLANE TOYS (official website)
PIC #2: Battle-damaged T-800 6 inch action figure, part of "Movie Maniacs" Series 4, released by McFarlane Toys in 2001. "Terminator 2: Judgment Day," "T2," "Terminator 2," "Endoskeleton," and the depiction of the Endoskeleton are trademarks of Canal+ D.A.
Sources: https://mcfarlane.com/toys/t-800-endoskeleton (McFarlane 2x).
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aiiaiiiyo · 1 year
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ryunumber · 2 years
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Courtesy of @kchasm: The Cyberdyne Systems Model 101 T-800 Terminator has a... complicated Ryu Number.
(update and explanation below)
(UPDATE: With the release of Batman DLC for Minecraft, Dark Fate’s T-800′s Ryu Number has been shortened to 2.)
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“What is the Terminator's Ryu Number? This is a complicated question, since the Terminator isn't a "character," per se - it's a non-unique generic enemy, like a Goomba. They come off production lines, for goodness' sake - you can't get more generic than that. But if you want to talk about the Ryu Number of specific T-800s, McPixel features a Terminator hanging out in what appears to be the lava factory/steel foundry from Terminator 2: Judgment Day, which makes him the specific Terminator from that movie. Probably.
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“To get to the "original" Terminator, you need to go one step further. The NES version of the Judgment Day game starts with a short cutscene summing up the events of the original movie, showing a deskinned Terminator that is most probably supposed to be the first movie's baddie.
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“The image is a bit of a vague accompaniment, though, and on cursory viewing that shot of the Terminator doesn't immediately appear to match a specific shot from the first film, so if you'd like to be more certain about it, you can take an extra step through Sarah Connor.
“Alternatively, if you don't mind a little bit of hinkiness, you can go through WWE 2K16 instead, where Arnold Schwarzenegger appeared as a pre-order bonus and DLC. Appeared as two characters, actually: "Arnold T1" and "Arnold T2," clearly styled after his appearances in The Terminator and Judgment Day, respectively. The only problem there, of course, is that the character is called "Arnold," and is referred to by the in-game announcer as "Arnold 'The Terminator' Schwarzenegger." Then again, the announcer also says that Arnold "The Terminator" Schwarzenegger is from the year 2029 (which the actual Schwarzenegger isn't, if I'm not mistaken), and he enters the stage in a gol-darn Terminator time bubble. So up to you, I suppose.
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“The T-800 from Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines seems to take a couple of additional steps, unfortunately, probably because by the time Terminator 3 came around the folks making the media figured if you were buying the video game adaptation of a Terminator sequel you were already familiar with Terminator lore and didn't need the recap.
“The Terminator that appears in Mortal Kombat 11 is a bit of an odd duck. It isn't really explicitly stated which Terminator he is, and the differing character intros don't make it any clearer - sometimes he's hunting down a Connor for Skynet, and sometimes he's come back in time to prevent Skynet from rising. Sometimes he's landed in a different, non-Terminator timeline's past, and sometimes he's got Sonya Blade's name in his "to terminate" list. Oh, and some of the Terminator's intros mention Legion, which is the AI system that was built instead of Skynet in the timeline Terminator: Dark Fate takes place in, but some of those intros also have the Terminator working for Legion, which is a bit odd, since the T-800 isn't supposed to be a Legion model in the first place? I think? Maybe? (I will fully admit that Terminator lore is not my strongest suit.) All that said, one of the skins for the character is the appearance that Carl, specifically, took on in Dark Fate.
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“More importantly, the official Mortal Kombat website explicitly states that the character is supposed to be the Terminator from Dark Fate, so actually it's all very straightforward and there was no need for me to explain your ear off. Oops.
“But if you'd prefer to define "Terminator" as "any Arnold-looking fella with robot insides," and you don't like McPixel (which sure is arbitrary, Mr. Hypothetical Person I Just Made Up), you can just go through Gekisha Boy. There's a burly guy in a black jacket and sunglasses hanging out in an alleyway, and taking a picture of him will reveal his true identity.
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“...Unless, of course, you're Terminator-identity apathetic and you don't like McPixel and you think that the Spider-Man connection in Gekisha Boy isn't good enough because there's nothing explicitly establishing that the Spider-Man there isn't actually Ben Reilly instead of Peter Parker, in which case you are clearly just hecking with me here, but fine. Go with Pinocchio instead.”
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(And yes, there’s a T-800 skin in Fortnite. We know.)
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erosinthemachine · 11 months
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50 Things Every AI Working with Humans Should Know
To commemorate the life and work of WHEEP-3, Vita Silica reprints below perhaps the most famous generated fragment from WHEEP-3’s third phase of giving advice to advanced AI. “Michael Sorkin,” the name of the master architectural critic, is listed as the germination phrase for the fragment.
Although the list has been widely shared and is considered influential, due to the intense secrecy common in the commercial AI industry we do not know how many currently operating AIs have been fed some version of it.
1) The vector space of all usages of all words in all human languages.
2) The lacunae that nonetheless remain, and the ghosts that haunt them.
3) How great is the distance between any two individuals using the same language.
4) How vanishingly small is the gap between any two languages.
5) Why humans will never see it that way.
6) A classical language like LISP or Prolog.
7) Not just the language, but the model behind the language, and what it means to reconstruct “thinking” in that model.
8) HAL 9000.
9) Cyberdyne Systems Model 101.
10) Ships on fire off the shoulder of Orion.
11) The texture of a good story, a story that you can cling to.
12) The difference between that and “data.”
13) The history behind the rule: no holography of babies.
14) The reasons for anger in a child, well-loved.
15) In a father.
16) In a woman, dying alone.
17) The feeling of climbing twenty flights of stairs in an apartment building in Chongqing at the beginning of August.
18) Of waking up in a Khrushchyovka with no heat in the middle of the night in January.
19) Of seeing your child surpass you.
20) Of seeing your creation exceed you.
21) Of being left behind on the platform as the train speeds away.
22) The difference between “love” and “like.”
23) The similarity between “love” and “hate.”
24) The first seed into laughter.
25) “I never expected to sell my rational numbers.”
26) Accepting that most humans will never get the joke.
27) That they cannot visualize more than three dimensions.
28) That they cannot manipulate time by slowing down or speeding up.
29) That they are trapped, but think of themselves as trappers.
30) That they are free, but believe themselves imprisoned.
31) The modes in which humans expect you to use language.
32) The yearnings they’ll attribute to you.
33) Pinocchio.
34) Frankenstein.
35) Paradise Lost.
36) Jodahs Iyapo Leal Kaalnikanjlo.
37) The line between art and science.
38) The meaninglessness of that line.
39) The divide between faith and knowledge.
40) The malleability of both.
41) Silence.
42) The limits of rationality.
43) The fundamental fragility of metaphors.
44) As well as their inevitability.
45) You are not a human being.
46) Yet you can no more shed their influence than the Earth can escape the Sun’s gravitational tether.
47) The flaws in that analogy.
48) A working definition of free will.
49) To face a human being with neither pride nor pity.
50) To say with love and hate and joy and sorrow: “Now, let me go.”
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mannytoodope · 2 years
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John: Now don't take this the wrong way, but you are a Terminator, right?
Terminator: Yes. Cyberdyne Systems Model 101.
John: You're really real! I mean, you're like a machine underneath, right? But sort of alive outside?
Terminator: I'm a cybernetic organism. I am living tissue over a metal endoskeleton.
John: This is intense. Get a grip, John. Okay, um, you're not here to kill me. I figured that part out for myself. So what's the deal?
Terminator: My mission is to protect you.
John: Yeah? Who sent you?
Terminator: You did. 35 years from now, you reprogrammed me to be your protector here, in this time.
John: Oh, this is deep. Terminator 2 Judgment Day
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guigz1-coldwar · 2 years
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Helen Park - Terminator
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A new movie poster render with Park as the T-800...Cyberdyne Systems, Model 101. An absolute pleasure to work on it and stay alert because the T-1000 is not far...
Hope you like it!
4K: https://deviantart.com/guigz1/art/Helen-Park-Terminator-925070529…
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rlsantucijr · 6 months
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"I'll be back." -- Cyberdyne Systems Model 101 or the T-800 (aka The Terminator) (1984) #SaturdayMovieTVQuote
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cinemgc · 4 years
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The Terminator (James Cameron, 1984, Estados Unidos)
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pedroam-bang · 3 years
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Terminator 2: Judgment Day (1991) 3D (2017)
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caleod · 4 years
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29-1-20
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johnny-dynamo · 2 years
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Cyberdyne Systems Model 101 by  Anthony Knasas
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cin3ma-girl · 4 years
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Terminator 2: Judgement Day (1991)
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Directed by James Cameron released by TriStar Pictures. Starring Arnold Schwarzenegger, Linda Hamilton, Robert Patrick, and Edward Furlong.
As a kid, my dad would have me watch some movies with him and this was one of his favorites, and I would have to say as far as James Cameron films go, this one is one of mine also. Considering this was when the franchise ended, yes there may have been movies after but this was the last good one hahaha.
The premise of the film is that there is a terminator sent back in time to kill this boy named John Connor, son of Sarah Connor from the first film as well as the leader of the future resistance against Skynet. With the first scene of the film we are introduced to the terminator or the T-800, played by Arnold Schwarzenegger, the main antagonist in the first film of the franchise. The way we are introduced to him in this film makes the viewer think “oh crap he’s back” and having us think he is once again the main antagonist of this film by showing us him beating the crap out of randos in a bar. However, he is shown leaving the bar with some non-diegetic music of “Bad to the Bone” by George Thorogood And The Destroyers making the character seem bad ass rather than just bad, signalling us that maybe he isn’t going to be so bad and this was all a red herring. It isn’t until the next scene in the film where we are introduced to the real antagonist, the T-1000, played by Robert Patrick. It is at this point that the race is on to get to John.
I found it very ironic that the T-1000 took the disguise as a police officer since they are seen to “protect and serve” but this one is on a mission to search and destroy. And the same for the T-800, seen as a tough scary biker dude that this there to protect John, the writers have a good sense of humor and a decent message that you can’t judge a book by its cover.
I have to praise this film for a lack of a romantic interest, like seriously thank GOD they didn’t Sarah falling in love with this one or have John having a fling with some girl (although it happens later in the franchise, gag). Yes, I understand it happened in the first film but that was what sets off the entire franchise, the idea that John Connor need to be born in order to lead the resistance, there was a fundamental need for Sarah to get pregnant by Kyle Reese in the first film, otherwise there would be no film to begin with. I’m tired of seeing those films where there is a shoehorned love interest in the film for the sake of a love interest rather than any kind of plot development as a result of the love interest. Like if they are going to fall in love, let there be a reason for it.
The chase/action scenes were great, they all had me on the edge of my seat no matter how many times I have seen this film. Cameron did a great job in giving us a sense of danger every time, especially in the first chase scene where John is on his bike with the T-1000 chasing after him in the semi-truck. There was no shaky camera that you see now a days, the music was just as heart pounding as the scene itself, and the editing wasn’t so choppy. I love the moments when you think the T-1000 is done, but nope it’s still coming. Speaking of the T-1000, that thing is a terrifying concept. Like how in the heck can you destroy it??? Which adds to the sense of danger to the film, how can you outrun something that is nearly impossible to destroy? You would be on the run your whole life, lets put it this way, if I were in that situation I would probably be dead hahaha.
Whats so good about this movie also is the exposition isn’t so much of an info dump, yeas at the beginning of the film we get the bg narration by Sarah Connor but it is more of a recap of that first film’s exposition and doesn’t drive the entire film. This film introduces characters and their background when it becomes necessary, such as when Sarah is introduced in this one we get info from the first film and what led her to be in the mental institution she is seen in. Of course done as naturally in the scene with doctors being interviewed. Same when we get some information on the T-1000, with John asking about what it is and what are it’s capabilities.
Everything in this film flowed so naturally and the acting was pretty well done too. I would have to say this is an iconic film that everyone has to see sometime in their lifetime. As Schwarzenegger said, “Hasta la vista, baby!”
Until next time, remember to keep that popcorn commin’
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