Just finished up the series. Easily better than any other release after T2. The story gets really cool in the back half.
According to the awful Genisys, Skynet is seemingly well aware and already exploiting it to some degree. I believe that was the plan going forward for that particular cancelled trilogy.I think it's funny that no one tells Skynet about the multiverse.
Skynet is a dumbo.
According to the awful Genisys, Skynet is seemingly well aware and already exploiting it to some degree. I believe that was the plan going forward for that particular cancelled trilogy.
...Depending on how one views a multiverse, I guess. Terminator uses timelines, as opposed to "everything that could ever happen does happen in an alternate reality".
Superman fought Terminators once, so there is that? (It was absolutely terrible.)
Did it? What in the released movie indicates that?Then there's the fact that whatever version of Skynet that was in T3 and sent back the T-X, seemed to give it a zip file of it's core processes or whatever, which it then uploaded to it's past self
I tended to assume that Skynet was well aware it was creating divergent timelines from day one. For starters; a detail people often seem to forget is that Skynet was defeated by John Conner in the future. When Reese was sent back, the resistance had already won.
This is even elaborated on in the deleted future prologue sequence for T2. Cameron's script has some background radio chatter of Cheyenne being taken out. Skynet was already dead. How else would the resistance be able to commandeer the time-displacement complex and start reprogramming inactive T-800s? So it wasn't trying to change it's present, it was trying to create a new present where Conner didn't exist. That it waited until literally the 11th hour shows that it was a desperation move and one it didn't think had a high probability of working, or else it would have acted sooner. That or it was unsure of the metaphysics of itself as an individual entity, and how that relates to an earlier iteration of itself in an alternate timeline. Could have been pondering that one right up until the resistance were knocking at it's door, and by which point; "fuck it, nothing to loose!"
Then there's the fact that whatever version of Skynet that was in T3 and sent back the T-X, seemed to give it a zip file of it's core processes or whatever, which it then uploaded to it's past self, thus giving it a head-start (presumably because a slightly older John Conner was on the verge of killing it again.) Or indeed totally overwrote it, thus killing it's own past-self in the interests of continuing it's continuity of intelligence. Whether machine intelligences would even think in those terms is of course up for debate, but the fact that Skynet hardwired the T-800s' CPUs to read-only when sent out alone does indicate that it considered itself a discrete entity and didn't want competition.
So yeah, I'd say the alternate timeline/causal multiverse shenanigans has arguably been going on since at least T3, if not T2 or even T1 itself. While T1's ending seems to imply a predestination paradox, John's "The future is not set" message seems to imply otherwise. Or put another way; T1 left it an open question, while T2 answered that question.
When the T-X arrives, the virus is already out in the wild. It has "infected half the civilian Internet as well as secondary military apps" and they are already making steps to try to deal with it.The Terminatrix released a virus that panicked the humans into unleashing Young Skynet the antivirus.
When the T-X arrives, the virus is already out in the wild. It has "infected half the civilian Internet as well as secondary military apps" and they are already making steps to try to deal with it.
We have to shut down Skynet.
Where's the system core? In this building?
Skynet. The virus has infected Skynet.
Skynet is the virus! It's why everything's falling apart!
Skynet has become self-aware.
In one hour it will initiate a massive nuclear attack on its enemy.
What enemy?
Us!
That's not the following day. It's later the same evening (heading into night). Before the 'scanner' scene John falls off his bike, after it he's getting dropped off at a closed vet to care for his injuries.Next scene is the following day where the scanner at the wedding registry is not working.
That's not the following day. It's later the same evening (heading into night). Before the 'scanner' scene John falls off his bike, after it he's getting dropped off at a closed vet to care for his injuries.
Do I think the movie should have the T-X explicitly upload something? Yes.
Did the hack writers mean for it to be that way? Doesn't appear so.
(IMO as ever, natch.)
Admittedly it's been a very long time since I've seen T3 (for obvious reasons) but in my head I always just assumed that whatever she uploaded most likely was Skynet in some form or another, as that's the only thing that makes sense. It's not like humans would be able to tell the difference between a sentient AI loose on the net and a really scary virus, especially when it's plan is to pretend to be a virus so they open the hardline from the internet to the defence mainframe, allowing it to assimilate it's younger incarnation and trigger Judgement Day.
It's all open to interpretation of course, but with such poorly written movies, I'm more inclined to head-canon it do it at least makes some semblance of sense.
So where was the supposed "virus" coming from? Seems a little bit too much of a coincidence for it not to be Skynet Shenanigans, no? It's possible I made a connection that wasn't intended, but I certainly don't intend to go and double check, since that would require watching that movie ever again.You have to remember that the script is a few years older than the Premier date, and written by cavemen. That was a dial up connection which she was making to the internet. What she did next was look for targets online. We never actually saw her upload anything.
Tosk was right.
So where was the supposed "virus" coming from? Seems a little bit too much of a coincidence for it not to be Skynet Shenanigans, no? It's possible I made a connection that wasn't intended, but I certainly don't intend to go and double check, since that would require watching that movie ever again.
Either way, like I said; it's not good enough of a movie to sweat the details too much. I mean clearly the people that made it didn't bother to, so why should we?
I think for me the crux of it is that Skynet sent back a Terminator, and then Judgement Day happened. I don't see any reason why it would wait until the 11th hour to start going after the future resistance leaders unless they're just the secondary objective, and the primary mission is somehow helping it's past self. Maybe the full data and schematics on time-travel so it can start firing off Terminators into the past much earlier. Maybe it's a full copy of future Skynet. Maybe it's just a tactical data packet to give it a head-start on future engagements. I mean it can pick any time it wants to target resistance leaders, whatever the writers intended; that it chose Judgement Day itself is far too much of a coincidence to ignore.
In a weird way, Skynet has become a sort of temporal von neumann machine, only it's self-replicating fourth dimensionally instead of three. Though one has to wonder why with all of it's capabilities, Skynet doesn't just bugger off into deep space. What's so great about Earth that it feels the need to stick around?
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