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"Conspiracy theories are big because they're comforting. Any conspiracy is infinitely less multiplex than the real deal, which is multiplex to the point of being unknowable."
- William Gibson

Wall Panel Mosaic  
  A wall-sized checkerboard-style display showing the status of dozens of robots.  


(Wall panel mosaic from 'The Fatal Quadrant' by Arthur J. Burks)

Now I understood — at least as far as the purpose went — the white squares that made the wall panel look like a checkerboard. Under each was a number. That number corresponded with one of the robots who marched this very minute along one of twenty-six compass bearings. into the deeper heart of Antarctica — and what his glaring eyes saw in the wastes. all of us there in the laboratory saw in the white square above that robot’s number. If, for instance, I wished to see what the eyes of Mr. Twenty were seeing at that identical moment, all I had to do was look at the white square on the wall panel above the figure twenty. It seemed almost as though I were walking in the place of Mr. Twenty...

Immediately I wondered if Sherman Geddes had thought to equip his robots with memory. I turned and asked him.

“Of course." he said. "Indelible records are made — within the brain of each robot — of everything he sees. When they come back we can further check our work by checking the brain of the robot whose photographic eyes saw those things. All we have to do is seat him and tell him to repeat his findings for us — and there it will be. on the square above his number!"

...The black squares in the panels had their uses, too. They were studded with infinitely small meters. Geddes told me that in addition to the photographs, each robot sent back the wind velocity and its direction, which those little meters recorded. Also the depths of the ice with every step taken. The temperature and barometric reading followed as a matter of course.

Technovelgy from The Fatal Quadrant, by Arthur J. Burks.
Published by Astounding Science Fiction in 1938
Additional resources -

Compare to the Zoom Call Visaphone System from John Jones's Dollar, by Harry Stephen Keeler, published by Black Cat in 1915.

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Additional resources:
  More Ideas and Technology from The Fatal Quadrant
  More Ideas and Technology by Arthur J. Burks
  Tech news articles related to The Fatal Quadrant
  Tech news articles related to works by Arthur J. Burks

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