A Vimmellian's Report

Hello all. I'm Claude Sibeolf, and this is my VEFT Electech Studies project submission. The makings of it, rather. I seriously doubt my professor will actually ever check this beyond the "Mark as Complete" button on our student portal. Or really anyone else, so I'm treating this as a journal for the time being. A shame, really. Electech is criminally underestimated and underappreciated—Way more reliable than any undergrad's shoddy lace. Excluding mine, of course; I am an excellent weaver. Unfortunately, fabrikation experience hardly carries over to classical technologies, and my remarkably disinterested professor is of little assistance. I wonder how someone gets to such a position in life. What was going through his head when he decided to teach such an obscure course? See, I could understand the logic of "niche course, few students, less work", but I argue that this sort of topic attracts a, for lack of better words, passionate demographic. Not the ideal type of student if you're disconnected from your own subject of study. Anyways, welcome.

Y'know, it's kind of funny how even electech uses "web" terminology. Life is full of microcosms.

UPDATE 1:32:98 - Lost track of time. Never been good about daily journals. I was right about the checking thing by the way; Roagland couldn’t be bothered.

A few days ago, I managed to nab myself my very own classical electric computer—a 1968 Isomorph from the market down underneath Sevensons. Good spot for the occasional rare find but frankly, I was just bored on a lazy afternoon and figured I should window-shop to pass the time. I noticed its vibrant cerulean casing peeking through an unassuming pile of server cables in passing and had to do a double take. The Isomorph line is huge with hobbyists, you'd think the scalpers would've gotten to them all. However, I think it might be cursed. The seller was way too happy to accept my 50 shale low-ball. Have some spine, man! You're scaring me…

Nonetheless, it works like a dream. I don't know what the hell they treated these machines with to make them withstand the tests of time.