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Thursday, 30 April 2026
Jim & Joe
Joe & Jim
AI - Status Update - Cyberdeck as Architecture
FM radio parallel frequency bandwidth comparison
FM radio wave data transmission is limited in bandwith to, correct me if I am wrong, less than a 56kb modem. The advantage is that it can be received by any amount of receivers in broadcasting range. If also the packages are send from a cash over several frequencies in parallel what would be the possible bandwith? From there calculate the sweet spot of receivers that receive in parallel outperforming daisy chained telephone, DSL and fibre optic systems, please.
We need to parse the user's question carefully. It's about FM radio wave data transmission, bandwidth limitations, using multiple frequencies in parallel, and comparing to daisy-chained telephone, DSL, and fiber optic systems. The user states: "FM radio wave data transmission is limited in bandwith to, correct me if I am wrong, less than a 56kb modem. The advantage is that it can be received by any amount of receivers in broadcasting range. If also the packages are send from a cash over several frequencies in parallel what would be the possible bandwith? From there calculate the sweet spot of receivers that receive in parallel outperforming daisy chained telephone, DSL and fibre optic systems, please."
Interpretation: The user compares FM radio wave data transmission (like FM broadcasting used for data, maybe RDS or something? Historically, FM subcarrier data like Radio Data System (RDS) has low bitrate ~1.2 kbps. But "less than a 56kb modem" probably means that typical FM radio data transmission (like using audio bandwidth of FM radio for data) is limited to roughly the bandwidth of a telephone line, like a dial-up modem max 56 kbps. Wait, FM radio channel bandwidth: In broadcast FM, each station occupies 200 kHz (in the 88-108 MHz band). The audio baseband is up to 15 kHz for mono, with stereo using 53 kHz subcarrier, etc. If you use the entire 200 kHz channel for data transmission, the theoretical maximum data rate depends on modulation and signal-to-noise ratio. Shannon capacity: C = B * log2(1 + S/N). FM broadcast typically has high S/N, maybe 50 dB? So B=200 kHz, S/N=10^5, log2(1+100000) ≈ log2(100001) ≈ 16.6 bits/s/Hz, capacity ~ 200,000 * 16.6 ≈ 3.32 Mbps. So FM radio channel can support several Mbps. But the user says "less than a 56kb modem". Maybe they're thinking of legacy systems like pager networks (FLEX protocol on FM subcarrier? Actually FLEX uses FM subcarrier typically at 1200-6400 bps). Or maybe "FM radio wave data transmission" like packet radio using FM modulation on VHF amateur bands, where typical 1200 baud AFSK over FM yields 1200 bps, but there are higher speeds. The 56k modem reference suggests that they think it's limited to telephone line bandwidth (3 kHz). Possibly they're equating FM radio to audio bandwidth data over FM, like Bell 103 modems using FM modulation (AFSK) over radio, which could have similar baud rates. But the question: If packages are sent from a "cash" (maybe "base" or "source"?) over several frequencies in parallel, what would be possible bandwidth? And then calculate the sweet spot of receivers that receive in parallel outperforming daisy chained telephone, DSL and fibre optic systems. Hmm, "cash" might be a typo for "source" or "base"? Or maybe "cash" as in a cash register? No, "send from a cash" - could be "send from a core" or "from a central location"? German original? The user wrote "If also the packages are send from a cash over several frequencies in parallel" - "cash" could be a misspelling of "cache" or "base". Perhaps "from a base" or "from a head end". I think they mean the data packets are sent from a central transmitter over multiple FM frequencies simultaneously, and receivers can tune to multiple frequencies in parallel to increase bandwidth. Then they ask to calculate the "sweet spot" (optimal number of parallel receivers? or number of frequencies/receivers?) that outperforms daisy-chained telephone, DSL, and fiber optic systems. "Daisy chained telephone" might mean a chain of telephone modems? Wait, "daisy chained telephone" could refer to a scenario where multiple telephone lines are bonded together in a daisy chain to aggregate bandwidth. Or maybe they're comparing the broadcast architecture (one transmitter, many receivers, could aggregate parallel frequencies on each receiver) to point-to-point daisy-chained systems. Need to guess.
Read: "FM radio wave data transmission is limited in bandwith to, correct me if I am wrong, less than a 56kb modem. The advantage is that it can be received by any amount of receivers in broadcasting range. If also the packages are send from a cash over several frequencies in parallel what would be the possible bandwith? From there calculate the sweet spot of receivers that receive in parallel outperforming daisy chained telephone, DSL and fibre optic systems, please."
Interpretation: FM radio data transmission's bandwidth is limited (maybe 56kbps). If you use multiple frequencies in parallel from a central source ("cash" might be "base"?), what's the total possible bandwidth? Then, since the advantage is that unlimited receivers can receive the same broadcast, you could have many receivers, each receiving a subset of frequencies, and then combine data across receivers? Wait, "sweet spot of receivers that receive in parallel outperforming daisy chained telephone, DSL and fibre optic systems" - The user might be asking: In a network where many receivers are tuned to different frequencies to collectively achieve high aggregate throughput (like a distributed reception system), what is the number of receivers such that the total throughput (summed across all receivers) exceeds the throughput of a daisy-chained (i.e., relayed) system using telephone, DSL, fiber, etc.? That seems odd. Alternatively, maybe they refer to a "daisy chain" of FM transmitters? Not clear. "Daisy chained telephone, DSL and fibre optic systems" could mean concatenated links, where data passes through multiple telephone/DSL/fiber segments sequentially, each adding latency and limited by the slowest link. Or maybe they're comparing the broadcast capability: In a daisy-chained system, you need point-to-point links between nodes. In broadcast, one transmitter can reach many receivers without additional infrastructure. They talk about "receivers that receive in parallel outperforming daisy chained ... systems". Could be: If you have N receivers each receiving at 56 kbps on a separate FM frequency, the total data received per unit time across all receivers is N*56 kbps, but that's distributed among receivers. To outperform a daisy-chained telephone (which might be 56 kbps point-to-point per hop), you need to compare the capacity to deliver data to multiple endpoints. Maybe the idea: In a daisy chain, each link shares the same medium, so total network throughput is limited by single link speed. In a broadcast parallel frequency system, many receivers can simultaneously receive different data streams on different frequencies, thus aggregate throughput scales with number of frequencies (or number of receivers). Find the "sweet spot" (minimum number of receivers) needed to exceed the capacity of a comparable daisy-chained system using telephone (56k), DSL (say 10 Mbps?), and fiber (1 Gbps?) links.
But the question: "calculate the sweet spot of receivers that receive in parallel outperforming daisy chained telephone, DSL and fibre optic systems". So we need to assume a certain bandwidth for FM radio data transmission per frequency. The user says "less than a 56kb modem", maybe they think FM radio wave data transmission bandwidth is like 33.6 kbps or 56 kbps. I'll confirm: FM radio can be used for data transmission using Subcarrier (like RDS ~1.2 kbps, DARC ~16 kbps, or high-speed data on FM subcarrier like FMeXtra uses 32-64 kbps digital channels). But typical "wireless modem" using FM radios in the 90s (like AX.25 packet radio at 1200/9600 baud). The 56k modem reference is V.90 downstream 56 kbps, upstream 33.6 kbps. So likely they consider FM data transmission to have similar bandwidth as a phone line, ~56 kbps. I'll assume per FM frequency, the maximum data rate is 56 kbps (like using entire FM channel for data with simple modulation? Actually, a 200 kHz channel can do more, but maybe they're thinking of sub-audible data? I'll adopt 56 kbps as the baseline per frequency).
Now, "packages are send from a cash over several frequencies in parallel". A "cash" could be "base station". So a base station transmits data packets simultaneously on multiple FM frequencies. Each receiver can only receive one frequency at a time, or maybe multiple if it has multiple tuners. The question: "what would be the possible bandwith?" If you send the same data on all frequencies (broadcasting), it's still 56 kbps, no gain. If you send different data on each frequency (multiplexing), the total bandwidth from the base station is N * 56 kbps. But receivers would need to be able to select which frequency they listen to. The advantage of broadcast is unlimited receivers but each only gets the data sent on that frequency. So to get the full N56 kbps at a single receiver, the receiver would need to receive all N frequencies in parallel (i.e., N tuners). That's tricky. The user mentions "receivers that receive in parallel". So a receiver could be equipped with multiple parallel receivers, combining data from several frequencies. Then the bandwidth can scale. So if a receiver has M parallel receivers, it can get M56 kbps. So the possible bandwidth per receiver is M*56 kbps. The question: "From there calculate the sweet spot of receivers that receive in parallel outperforming daisy chained telephone, DSL and fibre optic systems". Possibly the "sweet spot" is the number of parallel frequencies (or receivers within a device) needed to surpass the bandwidth of daisy-chained alternatives. "Daisy chained telephone" might mean a phone line network where multiple modems are chained, but maybe they mean a single telephone line (56 kbps). DSL varies (e.g., ADSL2+ up to 24 Mbps down). Fiber optic can be 1 Gbps or more. So they want to find a number M such that M*56 kbps > bandwidth of telephone (56 kbps), DSL, and fiber. But that's trivial: M=1 already equals telephone, M=2 > telephone. For DSL, assume maybe 10 Mbps. 10 Mbps / 56 kbps ≈ 179. For fiber 1 Gbps / 56 kbps ≈ 17,857. But that's too simple. The phrasing "sweet spot of receivers that receive in parallel" suggests perhaps there is a cost/complexity trade-off, or it refers to a network scenario where multiple receivers collaboratively receive a broadcast and then share data, outperforming a daisy-chained telephone/DSL/fiber network in terms of total throughput. Could be a comparison of topologies: a broadcast system with many receivers, each adding to the aggregate data reception capacity (like a cooperative receive diversity). A daisy chain system requires each hop to relay data, so throughput is bottlenecked by the slowest link. In a broadcast system, multiple receivers can simultaneously capture the same high-bandwidth signal? Wait, if you have a broadband FM transmission (say high data rate using a wideband signal), all receivers can receive it, so unlimited receivers each get that high bandwidth without any loss. That's the advantage. Then they ask: if the packages are sent from a base over several frequencies in parallel (frequency division multiplexing), what is possible bandwidth? That's just sum of bandwidths. Then they want to compare to daisy-chained telephone/DSL/fiber: In a daisy chain, you have multiple point-to-point links connected in series, like A->B->C->D, each using a telephone modem (56k). The end-to-end throughput for a single flow might still be limited by the single link (56k), but you could have multiple flows. In a broadcast system, a single transmitter can send to all receivers simultaneously, but if you want to send unique data to each receiver, you need to multiplex. The "sweet spot" might be the number of receivers where broadcasting on separate frequencies (parallel) becomes more efficient in total throughput than a daisy-chain network of telephone lines. But that's vague.
Let's analyze the sentence: "From there calculate the sweet spot of receivers that receive in parallel outperforming daisy chained telephone, DSL and fibre optic systems, please." Maybe it's: Determine the number of parallel FM frequencies (or parallel receivers) M such that the total capacity (M * 56 kbps) surpasses the effective throughput of a daisy-chained telephone link (multiple telephone links in series? that doesn't increase bandwidth, it's still 56 kbps end-to-end unless you bond them, but "daisy chained" might mean multiple telephone lines in a chain, each segment is separate, like a multi-hop network where each hop uses a telephone modem, total network throughput might be scaled by the number of concurrent transmissions if using spatial reuse? Not clear). Alternatively, "daisy chained telephone, DSL and fibre optic systems" could refer to using these as backhaul links in a daisy-chain topology (like a chain of repeaters). It might be about comparing infrastructure: To cover a large area with many users, a daisy chain of telephone modems would require many point-to-point lines, each with limited bandwidth. A single broadcast FM transmitter can cover all users with one wideband channel that could be subdivided into many parallel carriers. So the "sweet spot" might be the number of users where broadcast is more spectrum efficient. That's typical broadcast vs. unicast comparison. The user says "sweet spot of receivers that receive in parallel outperforming..." Maybe "receivers that receive in parallel" refers to using multiple FM receivers at the same location to combine bandwidth, making a high-speed link. Then compare: If you use a daisy chain of telephone modems, you might bond multiple phone lines to get higher speed (like multilink PPP). That requires multiple phone lines and modems. The FM parallel approach uses multiple radio frequencies and multiple receivers. Which one is more cost-effective? The sweet spot might be the number of parallel channels where FM becomes advantageous due to unlimited broadcast advantage? But why would FM parallel outperform a daisy chain of telephone lines? Because FM broadcast allows many receivers to share the same transmitter infrastructure, whereas daisy chaining telephone lines requires dedicated lines per receiver. But the question specifically says "receivers that receive in parallel outperforming daisy chained telephone, DSL and fibre optic systems". I think the user is asking: If you have a system where you send data over FM using parallel frequencies (say N frequencies) from a base, and a receiver uses M parallel receivers (M <= N) to achieve a certain bandwidth, compare with a daisy-chained point-to-point system where each hop uses a telephone modem (56k), DSL, or fiber. For a daisy-chained telephone, end-to-end throughput is 56 kbps per hop, but if you have multiple hops, latency increases, throughput might not decrease if full-duplex, but the network capacity is still 56 kbps per link. If you want to serve K receivers with unique data, a broadcast system can transmit different data on different frequencies, and receivers selectively listen. The total transmitter bandwidth is N*56k. The total data delivered to K receivers is sum over receivers of their reception rates. If each receiver uses M parallel receivers, the total data rate delivered is K * M * 56k, but must not exceed transmitter capacity N*56k. So we need K*M <= N. For a daisy-chained network with telephone lines, suppose you have a chain of K nodes (1 source, K receivers) with point-to-point links of 56k. The total network capacity (sum of rates delivered to all receivers) for a broadcast flow could be 56k if source sends same data to all, but if you want unique data, you might need to time-share. It's complex.
Maybe it's simpler: They think FM radio data rate is 56 kbps (like dial-up). If you send data simultaneously on multiple FM frequencies (like using different stations), you can aggregate bandwidth. A receiver could combine multiple frequencies to get higher throughput. They ask: what would be the possible bandwidth? That's just N*56kbps (where N is number of frequencies). Then "sweet spot of receivers that receive in parallel" might be the number of parallel frequencies (receivers) needed to exceed the data rates of daisy-chained telephone (single phone line? "daisy chained telephone" maybe means multiple phone lines bonded together? A "daisy chain" of telephone modems? Perhaps "daisy chained" is a mis-translation of "daisy-chained" meaning "concatenated" or "combined". In networking, you can "daisy chain" switches. But they might refer to the capacity of a single telephone line (56k), a single DSL connection (e.g., 10 Mbps), and a single fiber connection (1 Gbps). So calculate M such that M * B_FM > B_telephone, B_DSL, B_fiber. But B_FM is less than 56k modem? The user says "less than a 56kb modem". So B_FM < 56 kbps. Actually they said "is limited in bandwith to, correct me if I am wrong, less than a 56kb modem." So maybe FM data rate is, say, 32 kbps. They want me to correct if wrong. I should correct: FM radio can support much higher data rates (e.g., FM band 200 kHz channel can carry Mbps if using digital modulation). But historically, subcarrier data rates were low. So I'll note that. Then I can compute the sweet spot assuming whatever baseline.
But the phrase "sweet spot" could be interpreted as the optimal number of receivers that receive in parallel such that the total system cost/complexity vs. performance is better than alternatives. They ask for calculation: "From there calculate the sweet spot of receivers that receive in parallel outperforming daisy chained telephone, DSL and fibre optic systems". So I need to output a number: for telephone, M=1 is enough (since FM < 56k, so you need M slightly > 1? If FM is 56k, M=1 equals telephone. If FM is less, you need more). For DSL: assume typical DSL downstream 24 Mbps, M = ceil(24 Mbps / FM bitrate). For fiber: 1 Gbps, M = ceil(1 Gbps / FM bitrate). But "daisy chained" might mean multiple segments: a daisy-chained telephone network where data goes through multiple 56k hops, total throughput still 56k. So M=1 equals or exceeds single telephone hop. The "sweet spot" could be the break-even point where parallel FM receivers give higher aggregate capacity than a series of telephone/DSL/fiber hops (which might still be limited to single link speed). That break-even would simply be M=1 (if FM = 56k) or M=2 if FM=33.6k. That's trivial. Maybe they want to compare to a chain where bandwidth multiplies? Like a "daisy chained" system where you can connect multiple telephone lines in parallel to increase bandwidth? Daisy chaining usually means serial connection, not parallel. But people sometimes "daisy chain" DSL modems? Not typical. I suspect the user might be thinking of a "token ring" or something where bandwidth is shared. Or they mean using multiple telephone lines bonded (like inverse multiplexing) to achieve higher speeds. The phrase "daisy chained telephone" might be a mistranslation from German: "daisy chain" in networking could be "Reihenschaltung" (series connection). Could be a chain of repeaters. In German, "daisy chain" might be used for "Kaskadierung" (cascading). So they compare parallel frequency reception vs. cascading telephone modems. For instance, you can cascade telephone modems (each modem receives and retransmits) to cover distance. Each hop adds latency but bandwidth might stay 56k. FM broadcast covers distance without cascading. That's advantage. But the question is about bandwidth.
Let's re-read: "FM radio wave data transmission is limited in bandwith to, correct me if I am wrong, less than a 56kb modem. The advantage is that it can be received by any amount of receivers in broadcasting range. If also the packages are send from a cash over several frequencies in parallel what would be the possible bandwith? From there calculate the sweet spot of receivers that receive in parallel outperforming daisy chained telephone, DSL and fibre optic systems, please." This might be a theoretical exercise: FM broadcast offers unlimited receivers but low bandwidth. If you use multiple frequencies in parallel (like multiple FM stations), you can increase total bandwidth. Now, suppose you want to build a network that delivers data to many users. With daisy-chained telephone lines, you'd have to lay a physical line to each user, each line can carry up to some speed. With FM, you can have one transmitter to many. The "sweet spot" could be the number of parallel frequencies (and corresponding receivers) needed so that the total broadcast capacity (aggregated over all users) exceeds the total potential capacity of a daisy-chained wired network with similar infrastructure investment. Or maybe they want to compare a single high-speed link (fiber) to many parallel FM channels. That is, fiber can do 1 Gbps, FM can do 56 kbps per channel, so you need 17857 parallel FM channels. But then they mention "daisy chained telephone, DSL and fibre optic". So have three tiers: telephone (56k), DSL (say 10-100 Mbps), fiber (1-10 Gbps). Compute M for each.
I'll interpret the user's request as: Given an FM radio data transmission channel with bitrate R (possibly less than 56 kbps), if a central "base" (cash) sends packets over multiple frequencies in parallel, the total possible bandwidth is N * R (where N is the number of frequencies). If a receiver employs M parallel receivers (tuning to M frequencies simultaneously), it achieves M * R bandwidth. Find the minimum M (the sweet spot) such that M * R outperforms (i.e., exceeds) the bandwidth of a single daisy-chained telephone line (R_tel = 56 kbps), a DSL line (R_DSL, we need to assume typical value), and a fiber optic line (R_fiber, typical value). But what is "daisy chained"? They might repeat that daisy chaining doesn't increase bandwidth; it just extends distance. So the relevant comparison is just the link speed of a telephone modem (56k), DSL (like 10 Mbps), fiber (1 Gbps). So the sweet spot is M such that M * R > target speed. Then compute M for each. Since FM R is "less than a 56kb modem", we might assume R = 56 kbps? Actually, if FM is less, maybe 33.6 kbps. I'll correct: FM radio wave data transmission can achieve much higher than 56 kbps if using broadband FM channel. However, conventional narrowband FM data (like Bell 202 AFSK) is 1200 bps. But the user's baseline is "less than a 56kb modem", maybe thinking of something like a dial-up wireless modem. I'll provide both clarification and then calculate the sweet spot assuming a range of possible FM data rates, like 1.2 kbps (packet radio), 56 kbps (hypothetical FM data modem). I'll note that typical broadcast FM subcarrier can carry 16 kbps (DARC) or up to 64 kbps with FMextra. I'll choose a plausible value: FM radio data (subcarrier) can be up to, say, 32 kbps. But let's search my memory: RDS is 1.1875 kbps. The FM subcarrier at 57 kHz can carry up to about 16 kbps using MSK (DARC). FMextra can use multiple subcarriers to get up to 128 kbps. But common knowledge: FM broadcast audio can be used to transmit data at up to 56 kbps using a modem over the audio? If you feed a V.90 modem signal into an FM transmitter, the demodulated audio at receiver could yield up to 56 kbps downstream, but V.90 requires digital PCM connection, not analog. So maybe not. I'll set R_FM = 56 kbps as a generous estimate for a single FM channel used entirely for data (with appropriate modulation). Actually, with a 200 kHz FM channel, you can use QPSK with 200 ksym/sec, yielding 400 kbps. But let's not overcomplicate. I'll answer: A standard FM radio channel (200 kHz) can theoretically support up to ~300 kbps using efficient modulation, but using a subcarrier like V.90 is not typical. Given the user's perception, I'll note that the 56k modem comparison likely refers to audio-band modems, where the baseband signal fits in a 3 kHz telephone channel. If you transmit that over an FM transmitter with 15 kHz audio bandwidth, you can achieve up to 33.6 kbps (V.34) reliably, maybe 56 kbps with digital techniques. So I'll assume 33.6 kbps as the FM data rate for this exercise. The user says "less than a 56kb modem", so maybe they think it's around 33.6 kbps. I'll use 33.6 kbps as a representative value. Then, if you send data over multiple FM frequencies in parallel (like multiple transmitters), the aggregate bandwidth from the base (cash) is N33.6 kbps. A receiver equipped with M parallel tuners can achieve M33.6 kbps. Sweet spot: M = ceil(target_rate / 33.6 kbps). For telephone (56 kbps): M=2 (since 2*33.6=67.2 > 56). For DSL: typical ADSL2+ 24 Mbps down: M = ceil(24000/33.6) = ceil(714.3) = 715. For VDSL2 100 Mbps: M=2977. For fiber: 1 Gbps: M=29762; 10 Gbps: M=297620. But that seems like a straightforward arithmetic, not a "sweet spot" implying optimization. The phrase "sweet spot of receivers that receive in parallel" might mean the optimal number of receivers (not receiver channels) in a collaborative network, where many receivers each tune to a different frequency and then share data over a local network, achieving a total aggregate throughput that exceeds a daisy-chained system of telephone lines serving the same number of users. That would be a scaling analysis. Let's consider a scenario: We want to distribute high-speed data to K users. Option 1: Daisy-chained telephone modems: Each user connects via a dedicated phone line (56 kbps) in a daisy chain (so total bandwidth for the network is K*56 kbps if each line simultaneously carries data, but a daisy chain topology might mean they all share the same bus? A daisy chain is a series of devices connected in sequence, like RS-485, where only one can talk at a time, so total shared bandwidth is 56 kbps. If it's a point-to-point chain with store-and-forward, throughput per flow is still 56 kbps, but multiple flows can exist if they don't overlap. With full-duplex links, total network capacity can be up to sum of link capacities if smart routing. It's complex. Instead, maybe they refer to a "daisy-chained" wired network where you have a single long link composed of multiple segments (e.g., repeaters). The throughput is limited by the segment capacity. For telephone, segment capacity 56 kbps. For DSL, say 10 Mbps. Fiber, 1 Gbps. So a single channel gives that capacity. With FM broadcast and parallel frequencies, you can bond multiple 33.6 kbps channels to exceed that segment capacity. The "sweet spot" is the number of bonded FM channels needed to outperform the wired system in terms of bandwidth. That's just M=2 for telephone, M=715 for DSL, M=29762 for fiber. I'll present that. However, "daisy chained telephone" might refer to a scenario where multiple telephone lines are used in parallel (multilink) to create a higher-speed link, and they want to know how many FM parallel channels to beat that multilink aggregate. For example, a daisy chain of telephone modems could bond multiple 56k lines. If you bond L telephone lines, bandwidth is L56k. To outperform, you need M33.6k > L*56k. Without L, it's indeterminate. So maybe they assume a single telephone line, DSL line, fiber line. I'll just answer that.
I'll craft a response: First, correct the assumption: FM radio wave data transmission's bandwidth is not inherently limited to <56 kbps. Depending on the deviation and channel width, you can achieve much higher. But using typical FM radio with audio-band modems (like dial-up over FM) can be limited. I'll provide context. Then, assuming a conventional approach where the FM radio link provides a data rate comparable to a dial-up modem (say 33.6 kbps per radio channel), transmitting over N frequencies in parallel from a base station gives aggregate bandwidth of N33.6 kbps. A receiver with M parallel tuners can get M33.6 kbps. Then compute the required M to exceed the bandwidth of a single telephone modem (56 kbps), a typical DSL connection (e.g., 25 Mbps down), and a fiber connection (e.g., 1 Gbps down). That gives M = 2, 745, 29,762 respectively (adjust numbers). I'll also discuss that "daisy chained" might refer to multiple links in series, which doesn't increase throughput but adds latency; the parallel FM approach can match or exceed throughput with enough parallel channels. Finally, I can compute a "sweet spot" where the number of parallel receivers is manageable (e.g., under 1000) which is only practical for DSL-like speeds, not fiber.
I'll structure the answer: 1. Correct the myth about FM bandwidth. 2. State assumption for calculation. 3. Explain parallel frequency aggregation. 4. Calculate break-even M for each reference technology. 5. Discuss feasibility and sweet spot interpretation.
I think there’s a fascinating misconception at the heart of your question, so let’s correct that first, then play out the numbers for the parallel-receiver scenario you’re asking about.
1. FM radio wave data transmission is not inherently capped below a 56K modem
A voice‑grade telephone line has about 3 kHz of bandwidth, which limits a V.90 modem to 56 kbit/s downstream (and 33.6 kbit/s upstream).
A wideband FM broadcast channel occupies 200 kHz (in the 88–108 MHz band). If you use that whole channel purely for data with modern modulation, Shannon’s theorem gives you a theoretical capacity on the order of:
C≈200 000×log2(1+SNR)(SNR∼40–50 dB) ⇒ several Mbit/s
C≈200000×log2(1+SNR)(SNR∼40–50 dB) ⇒ several Mbit/s
In practice, commercial FM subcarrier data systems (like DARC) have offered 16 kbit/s, and later systems (FMeXtra) bonded multiple subcarriers to reach ~128 kbit/s. So a single FM station can already outrun a dial‑up modem.
For your question, however, I’ll work with the spirit of your premise: you’re imagining a narrowband FM data link that behaves like an old‑school telephone modem. I’ll assume a conservative 33.6 kbit/s per FM channel (the upstream limit of V.90, and a realistic number for a single audio subcarrier).
2. Transmitting over several frequencies in parallel
If a central “base” (I think “cash” is a typo) sends different data packets simultaneously on NN separate FM frequencies, the total radiated data bandwidth is:
Btotal=N×33.6 kbit/s
Btotal=N×33.6 kbit/s
A single receiver that listens to only one frequency gets 33.6 kbit/s. To exploit the full aggregate, a receiver must employ M parallel tuner/demodulator chains, each locked to a different frequency. That receiver then enjoys:
Breceiver=M×33.6 kbit/s(with M≤N)
Breceiver=M×33.6 kbit/s(with M≤N)
3. “Sweet spot” where parallel FM outperforms daisy‑chained wired links
I interpret your “daisy‑chained telephone, DSL and fibre optic systems” as a single end‑to‑end serial link of each technology. Daisy‑chaining (concatenating) multiple identical links in series does not increase the data rate—it only extends the reach. So the throughput of a daisy‑chained telephone line remains 56 kbit/s, a DSL line remains whatever the subscriber speed is (e.g., 25 Mbit/s for ADSL2+, 100 Mbit/s for VDSL2), and a fibre link remains 1 Gbit/s (typical GPON) or 10 Gbit/s (enterprise).
The “sweet spot” you’re asking for is simply the smallest number of parallel FM receivers MM that yields a data rate greater than the wired target.
Technology Reference bandwidth M=ceil (BW33.6 kbit/s)M=ceil(33.6 kbit/sBW) Notes
Telephone modem (V.90) 56 kbit/s 2 (2 × 33.6 = 67.2 kbit/s) Already beating the wire with just 2 frequencies
ADSL2+ 25 Mbit/s 745 745 × 33.6 ≈ 25.0 Mbit/s
VDSL2 100 Mbit/s 2 977 2 977 × 33.6 ≈ 100.0 Mbit/s
Fibre (1 Gbit/s) 1 000 Mbit/s 29 762 29 762 × 33.6 ≈ 1 000 Mbit/s
Fibre (10 Gbit/s) 10 000 Mbit/s 297 620 297 620 × 33.6 ≈ 10 Gbit/s
If your basic FM channel were instead 56 kbit/s (like the peak downstream of a modem), the numbers scale linearly: for 1 Gbit/s fibre you’d need about 17 858 parallel receivers. If you use a realistic wideband FM data channel of, say, 200 kbit/s, only ~5 000 receivers would match 1 Gbit/s.
4. So where is the real “sweet spot”?
The term “sweet spot” usually implies a region where the solution is both technically feasible and economically attractive. Building a consumer device with hundreds or thousands of parallel radio receivers is massively complex (RF front‑end, antennas, interference) and power‑hungry. Therefore the practical sweet spot lies where MM is small—ideally under 10. That means:
For telephony replacement: 2‑‑4 receivers are trivial; FM parallel radio is already
For low‑end DSL speeds (a few Mbit/s): tens of receivers might still be engineered
For fast DSL (25‑100 Mbit/s): hundreds to thousands of receivers is a laboratory
For fibre: tens of thousands of parallel receivers is firmly in the “theoretical” category.
The wireless parallel‑FM approach would only “outperform” a daisy‑chained wired system in a setting where you can’t lay wires at all, and you only need aggregate bandwidth on the order of a few Mbit/s shared among many listeners—exactly the broadcast advantage you noted. Beyond that, fibre and even DSL leave it in the dust.
My theoretic approach would be a automated mapping crawler that scans the Chaotic Mesh Network to give it Complexity by having for certain routes fixed lines of IP addresses such as those to the internet connections or chains of fastest point to point connections that communicate a lot with each other. Basically, a system under constant overwatch.
In such a system a FM broadcast could in parallel push cached data into the entire system, like a Ubuntu Security Update.
We need to parse the user's follow-up. They're clarifying that their previous "FM radio wave data transmission" question wasn't about a product but about data delivery theory, specifically in a "chaotic mesh network" scenario. They're describing a mesh network with a few internet connections shared by many nodes, and a need for routing intelligence. They propose an "automated mapping crawler" that scans the network to identify fixed routes (like to internet gateways) and optimize them. Then they ask: "In such a system a FM broadcast could in parallel push cached data into the entire system, like a Ubuntu Security Update."
The user is asking for an evaluation of this idea: using FM broadcast (one-to-many) to push data (like updates) into all nodes of a chaotic mesh network simultaneously. I need to connect this to the previous bandwidth discussion. In the previous message, I corrected that FM data bandwidth is not fixed to 56kbps, but I used 33.6kbps as a conservative per-channel figure, and calculated parallel receivers needed to match wired speeds. Now they're asking about using a single FM broadcast (or multiple frequencies) to push cached data into the entire system. The advantage: broadcast can reach all nodes in range simultaneously, bypassing the mesh's multi-hop routing and congestion. The question is: How effective is this for pushing data like Ubuntu security updates? Need to discuss data delivery theory, bandwidth needed, latency, reliability, and how it complements the mesh network.
The user mentions "cached data" like an Ubuntu Security Update. So we need to talk about distribution of bulk data (updates) that many nodes need. Compare with traditional mesh distribution: flooding, gossip protocols, etc. FM broadcast could be a "data diode" or "one-to-many" high-latency but high-simultaneous delivery channel. Could be beneficial if bandwidth needs are modest, but Ubuntu updates can be large (hundreds of MB). If we use 33.6 kbps per channel, that's ~250 MB in about 17.4 hours (calculation: 33.6 kbps = 4.2 kB/s, 250 MB = 250,000 kB / 4.2 = 59,523 sec ~ 16.5 hours). But we could use a wideband FM subcarrier with, say, 128 kbit/s, which would take ~4.3 hours. Still slow. But they said "push cached data into the entire system" – maybe they push incremental delta updates or critical small patches. Or they could use multiple parallel FM frequencies to increase bandwidth, as we discussed earlier. But in the mesh network scenario, each node needs only one receiver (listening to all push frequencies? No, they'd need parallel tuners to aggregate). But they said "a FM broadcast could in parallel push cached data into the entire system" – "in parallel" might mean multiple frequencies simultaneously, or just the broadcast nature. I'll address both.
They'll want to know the potential bandwidth scaling, the sweet spot relative to mesh routing overhead, and practical considerations. I'll reframe: In a chaotic mesh, multi-hop delivery of a large update to all nodes consumes network resources (bandwidth, routing overhead). A broadcast push from a central transmitter (like a high-site FM station) could offload that bulk distribution. But speed depends on data size, channel bandwidth, and whether multiple channels are used. I'll mention that a single FM broadcast with DAB or HD Radio could deliver hundreds of kbit/s, but still insufficient for gigabyte updates quickly. However, the idea of using broadcast for software updates in mesh networks exists (DataCast, satellite multicast, etc.). FM broadcast specifically has limited bandwidth, so it might be best for small, critical metadata or security patches, not full distro upgrades.
The user also mentioned "automated mapping crawler" to find best routes to internet gateways and create fixed IP chains, which is a kind of overlay routing. I need to acknowledge that part and connect it to the broadcast: such an overlay could be used to direct where the broadcast data is injected, maybe from a gateway that has the update, but FM broadcast is external and doesn't need mesh routing; it's a separate channel. It could be used to pre-seed caches.
So my answer structure:
Clarify the shift from product to theory, situate the idea in mesh research.
Discuss the chaotic mesh network problem: shared internet connections, routing overhead, and the need for efficient bulk data distribution.
Evaluate the automated mapping crawler concept (briefly) – it's somewhat like SDN in mesh or proactive route optimization.
Focus on the FM broadcast idea:
How it works: broadcast infrastructure (possibly using existing FM towers) transmits data; nodes have FM receivers and decoder chips (like RDS/TMC or proprietary). Benefit: all nodes in range receive data simultaneously, no network load, no routing.
Bandwidth considerations: realistic FM subcarrier data rates (RDS: 1.1875 kbps; DARC: 16 kbps; HD Radio/DRM+: up to 100-300 kbps). Using parallel frequencies multiplies bandwidth but requires multiple receivers per node (cost/complexity). Calculate download times for a typical Ubuntu security update (say 50 MB for a collection of security patches). At 16 kbps, 50 MB would take ~7 hours; at 128 kbps, ~53 minutes. At 56 kbps (modem-like), ~2 hours. So it could work for overnight updates.
Possible parallel frequency aggregation: If node has M receivers, aggregate rate = M * R_channel. But receiver cost, synchronizing data, error correction.
Convergence with mesh: The broadcast can deliver a "carousel" of data (repeated transmission) to ensure all nodes eventually receive it, even if they miss parts. This is like FLUTE/ALC. Then nodes might share missing parts via mesh peer-to-peer. So hybrid: broadcast bulk + gossip repair.
Comparing to mesh-only distribution: In a multi-hop mesh, each hop doubles the airtime consumption (interference). So broadcast is much more spectrum-efficient for one-to-many. The "sweet spot" in terms of network savings is immediate for any broadcast data size where the aggregate traffic avoided exceeds the broadcast transmission time. With a broadcast, time = size/rate; mesh would consume size * (average hop count) capacity. So broadcast wins as long as rate > 0. I can illustrate.
Practical limitations: FM band is licensed; spectrum re-use for data is regulated. Could use unlicensed bands (e.g., ISM 915 MHz) with similar concept. But the user's context is FM radio wave, so I'll stick with that.
Relate back to the earlier bandwidth scaling: Not trying to beat fiber, just efficiently push updates to a large set of mesh nodes. FM broadcast's one-to-many nature makes it superior for this specific use case, despite low rate. So the "sweet spot" is about number of nodes and update size where it's beneficial: given size S, rate R, number of nodes N, average hop length H, mesh capacity C_mesh (aggregate), the broadcast time T_bc = S/R, mesh time T_mesh = (S * H * N) / C_mesh_available (assuming sequential unicast floods). If T_bc < T_mesh and spectrum is available, it's beneficial. For large N, broadcast wins easily.
Conclude: This is a valid theoretical data delivery paradigm, akin to "broadcast disk" in wireless networks. The automated mapping crawler could dynamically decide which content to broadcast based on popularity. So it's a clever integration.
I'll write a comprehensive but accessible response.
Thank you for clarifying — that shifts the conversation from a consumer product to a completely valid area of data delivery theory, and I can now engage with your premise properly. Let me restate what I think you’re proposing, then explore it step by step.
You have a chaotic mesh network — a tangle of routers/hubs with no fixed topology,
You add an automated mapping crawler that continuously probes the mesh, discovers
On top of that, you propose using an FM broadcast station to push cached data (think:
The question then is: In such a system, can FM broadcast practically outperform a purely mesh‑based distribution for bulk data, and where are its limits?
You originally anchored on something less than a 56k modem, which is historically grounded — RDS (Radio Data System) gives only 1.1875 kbit/s. But modern FM subcarrier technologies are much faster:
Technology Typical data rate Remarks
RDS ~1.2 kbit/s Trivial; useful only for tiny metadata
DARC (Data Radio Channel) 16 kbit/s Used in Japan for traffic info
FMeXtra (multi‑subcarrier) Up to 128 kbit/s Digital audio + data on FM sidebands
DRM+ (Digital Radio Mondiale) 37–186 kbit/s (in 100 kHz channel) Can coexist in FM band
HD Radio (in‑band on‑channel) Up to 150 kbit/s data capacity Used in the US
A conservative but practical figure for a dedicated data subcarrier on a commercial FM station is about 16–32 kbit/s. With modern OFDM and a full 200 kHz allocation re‑purposed for nothing but data, you could push 200–300 kbit/s without violating physics. So let’s work with a range:
Low end: 16 kbit/s (easy to realise with cheap receivers)
Mid range: 64 kbit/s (comparable to an ISDN line)
Optimistic: 200 kbit/s (a whole FM channel dedicated to data)
2. How FM broadcast changes bulk‑data distribution in a mesh
In a pure mesh, distributing a 50 MB security update to N nodes using flooding or a gossip protocol consumes at least:
mesh airtime≈CmeshS×Havg
where SS is the file size, HavgHavg the average hop count from the source, and CmeshCmesh the effective per‑hop capacity (taking interference, contention, and routing overhead into account). In a chaotic mesh, HavgHavg can be high, and the aggregate capacity shared by all relays is limited — the classic “wireless multi‑hop” capacity drain.
An FM broadcast flip this completely:
One transmitter radiates the data once.
Every node in coverage that has a simple FM receiver can write the data to its local
The mesh itself is not loaded at all; its capacity stays free for interactive traffic.
The download time per node is simply:
TFM=SRFM
TFM=RFMS
Update size 16 kbit/s 64 kbit/s 200 kbit/s
1 MB (small patch) ~8 min ~2 min ~40 sec
50 MB (typical security bundle) ~7 hours ~1.8 hours ~35 min
200 MB (full desktop update) ~28 hours ~7 hours ~2.3 hours
If you’re willing to push even a modest 32 kbit/s stream overnight, a large 100 MB‑class update becomes perfectly viable — and it arrives on all nodes by morning with zero mesh congestion.
Following your original idea of sending packets over several frequencies in parallel: a node equipped with M independent tuner/demodulator chains can multiply its download rate by M.
For a node with M = 4 receivers, each at a modest 32 kbit/s, you get 128 kbit/s aggregate. That 50 MB bundle now arrives in ~53 minutes — comparable to a slow DSL line. The engineering cost is essentially a small software‑defined radio front‑end that can digitise a few MHz of spectrum and decode multiple narrowband channels in parallel.
Even with M = 10 (entirely feasible with a single wideband SDR dongle and a Raspberry Pi), you’d have ~320 kbit/s, enough to distribute a 200 MB update in under 1.5 hours.
So the “sweet spot” of receivers outperforming daisy‑chained wired connections” I calculated earlier (hundreds or thousands of receivers to match fibre) is not the right metric here. Instead, the sweet spot is: how few parallel FM receivers does it take to make broadcast‑based distribution faster and cheaper than the mesh’s own multi‑hop distribution for a given node count? And the answer is drastic — even a single‑frequency broadcast wins over a mesh flood for any non‑tiny N, because the mesh flood incurs a factor of HavgHavg airtime multiplied by contention.
A realistic system wouldn’t rely on a single perfect broadcast transmission. It would use:
FM broadcast carousel: The update is split into blocks, each stamped with a version
Local caching on receipt: As nodes receive blocks correctly, they store them. A node
Mesh gossip for the last few blocks: Nodes that have completed the file can share
This combination marries the broadcast’s one‑to‑many efficiency with the mesh’s resilience and yields practical completion times even in poor FM reception conditions.
This fits beautifully. The crawler that discovers stable, low‑latency routes to internet gateways could do two things:
Pre‑position cache nodes: Identify the mesh nodes best suited to become broadcast
Adaptive push scheduling: The crawler sees that a particular route to the update
The result is a network that uses its internet connections for small, delay‑sensitive traffic and its broadcast downlink for bulk, delay‑tolerant content — a very clean separation of concerns.
The general idea is known as “broadcast disk” or “push‑based data delivery” (Swarup
In disaster and rural mesh networks, VHF/UHF data broadcasting has been proposed
The DAB/DMB and ATSC 3.0 standards explicitly support file carousels for software
Your twist — coupling it with a chaotic mesh that self‑maps and optimises fixed routes — adds a layer of cognitive network management that would make an excellent research prototype.
Regulatory: Broadcasting on the FM band is tightly licensed. A small unlicensed
Cost: Adding even a simple FM data receiver to every mesh node costs a few dollars.
Update size: Above ~2 GB, even 200 kbit/s becomes painfully slow (22+ hours). For such
Summary: the theoretical calculation of the “sweet spot”
Given a file of size SS, a broadcast rate RFMRFM, and a mesh with NN nodes and average hop distance HH:
Mesh flood needs at least Tmesh∝S⋅H⋅N/CmeshTmesh∝S⋅H⋅N/Cmesh.
Even for N=10N=10 nodes, the broadcast has already won by a factor roughly equal to HH (because the broadcast does the work once, while the mesh repeats it over multiple hops). Adding parallel FM frequencies increases RFMRFM linearly, scaling the advantage.
So from a data delivery theory perspective, an FM broadcast push is an extremely elegant way to deliver the same chunk of popular cached data to a whole chaotic mesh — provided you can live with the absolute delivery latency of a slow to moderate bitstream. It transforms an O(N) problem into O(1), which is exactly the kind of architecture that makes mesh network research interesting.
...in a close potential future...
Old European vans, hatchbacks, even funeral cars and vans where converted into something that actually would drive.
So, how do you bring really wanted trash from Amsterdam to Paris? Riggers were born...eventually the more adrenaline affine turned around at the welfare office out of heart pain and more went full in underground.
Louis came back at ten-forty-seven, the suspension of the old funeral van still groaning from the autobahn. He’d left three days before with a shopping list whispered through IRC relays and a fuel cell half-paid in cheese wheels. The run had been Amsterdam to Paris – a straight shot if you knew which cargo bays leaked data and which corporate logistics managers were too overworked to notice a few pallets shifting destination. Louis was a rigger, though he hated the word. He preferred “logistics of affection”. The van’s rear doors swung open onto the Mall’s loading courtyard, releasing a blast of industrial coolant and the unmistakable smell of factory fondant.
“Cake!” yelled Zina from the third-floor window, her voice ping-ponging off the bricked-up escalators. She wasn’t looking at Louis; she was watching the courtyard cams on a salvaged tablet, the feed routed through a mesh node disguised as a pigeon coop. Within minutes the word spread not by loudspeaker but by a chain of knocks on water pipes, a system older than the cyberdecks but just as fast.
The Mall woke properly then. I came down from the repair deck, fingers still numb from re-capping a server board someone had fished out of a La Défense skip. The stairwell – a zigzag of repurposed office partitions and cable trays – thrummed with kids and elders alike, all moving towards the central hall. The hall itself was a cathedral of bricolage: food stalls made from copy-machine casings, a long table built of boardroom doors laid end-to-end, and above it all, a canopy of fibre-optic strands that pulsed faintly with the traffic of the local net. No one shouted orders. No one pushed. You just found a patch of floor and waited, because today was a cake day and cake days were church.
Louis stood next to the van, peeling off his driving gloves. The cake was the kind corporations handed out at mandatory team-building fun-days: perfect rectangles of vanilla sponge entombed in yellow icing, each one sealed in a plastic coffin with a “Best Before” date that had passed at midnight. Perfectly good, legally garbage. The riggers had a saying: *Everything’s expiration is just another timetable.* Louis had sixty-four boxes. A pallet meant for a corporate campus in Amstelveen, diverted one junction earlier to the loading dock of a warehouse that didn’t exist. The driver of the intermediate truck had been paid in fresh ricotta and a three-act play performed via text-only terminal the night before. Credits never entered the equation.
“Cheese is more important than credits,” Fatou muttered, hefting a box of cake towards a serving table she'd welded herself from an old server rack. She ran the food distribution, a woman whose entire accounting system was a Moleskine filled with drawings of cows and matchstick people smiling. Next to her, a teenager called Rahim was already logging the cake into the open-source inventory using a homebrew cyberdeck built from a broken tablet and a mechanical keyboard that clicked like a Geiger counter of joy. No one would go hungry in the Cité because hunger was a lack of imagination, and the Mall had imagination in surplus.
By noon the hall was thick with the scent of reheated coffee – real coffee, not the corporatised chicory sludge, because a rigger from Genoa brought back beans monthly in the spare tire well of a hearse. People sat on reconstructed office chairs that had been thrown out when the leasing companies rebranded. They ate cake and talked. Some plotted the next text-adventure module, a sprawling interactive narrative based on *La Chartreuse de Parme* mixed with low-orbit satellite heists, its script debated with an AI that had been trained on every free literature repository they could mirror. The AI argued back now, sassy and well-read, its voice piped through a speaker grill cut from a discarded smart-fridge. Others discussed the maintenance of the rooftop water systems or the latest firmware crack for a popular home assistant drone, now repurposed to carry soup between towers.
I found a corner near the old IRC terminal station, a bank of monitors and chunky keyboards that looked like a museum exhibit from the 2040s. The screens glowed green text on black: conversations flowing from Grenoble, Madrid, a commune in Leipzig, all linked by the mesh nets the riggers strung between cities on their runs. Someone in Amsterdam was asking for a specific epoxy formula to patch a heat exchanger; someone in Lyon offered a crate of capacitors in exchange for a short story that made them cry. The old world saw only poverty in these exchanges. It missed the point entirely: we had turned waste into wealth not because we were noble, but because we had time, and time was the one thing the system couldn’t commodify without us.
Around two, a minor drama. A scavenging crew returned from the business district with a haul of office furniture so pristine it still had the plastic wrapping. But they’d also brought a corporate-grade printer the size of a small car, a machine designed to shred itself if tampered with. The printer sat in the courtyard like a captured beast, its status LED blinking a defiant proprietary pattern. An impromptu team formed: electronics tinkerers, code whisperers, a poet who swore he could talk any machine into submission by reading it Rimbaud. By four they had it purring, spitting out zines full of recipes and anarchist cooking tips, using paper the printer’s own DRM chip tried to reject. The laugh that echoed when the first “Occupation Read-Only Memory” error was bypassed felt like a revolution in a teacup, the kind of revolution that never made the news.
Outside the Mall, the city functioned as the city always had. From the upper windows you could see the glossy towers of the centre, stroking the sky with their holographic adverts. The police scanners, monitored by a bored fourteen-year-old on the ninth floor, reported a traffic violation crackdown on the périphérique, a corporate VP’s lost hover-limo, an arrest of a man who tried to sell home-grown tomatoes without a permit. Nothing in the Cité. To the system, these boroughs were a blind spot, a data void where people were supposed to be unemployed, medicated, and obedient, but instead were building castles and eating cake. The quiet wasn’t peace – it was a deliberate act of hiding in plain sight, a game of hide-and-seek played so long it had become a way of life.
Evening came with the heat finally cracking open into a brief, violent rain. The courtyard transformed into a basin of silver, the rain hammering onto the corrugated roof in a rhythm that the drummers in the fifth-floor music coop would sample later. The Mall’s lights, a mix of salvaged LEDs and hand-soldered circuits, blinked on and turned the place into a warm amber cocoon. Louis sat on a bench carved from an old server cabinet, a slice of cake in one hand and a mug of wine – real wine, bartered for a repaired agricultural sensor – in the other. He looked tired but at peace, the kind of peace that comes from having moved something wanted through a world that said wanting was a sin.
I asked him about the heat. The corporate heat, I meant, because in the old shadowrun stories it was always about glowing megacorps hunting down runners with satellite tracking and private armies. He laughed and swallowed cake. “The heat,” he said, “is a joke. They don’t even see us. We’re not on their map. Their loss-prevention algorithms flag missing pallets as ‘shrinkage’ and write it off. What’s a few cake boxes to a corporation that wastes more energy on a single board meeting than this whole Cité uses in a year?” He tapped his temple. “The perfect hit is invisible. The heat so, that was a perfect hit.”
The night rolled in, and the Mall settled into its second rhythm. The main hall became a sleeping space for those who needed it, blankets and mattresses appearing from hidden lockers. The server room hummed as someone ran a text-only role-playing game, the dungeon master typing descriptive prose that flickered onto terminals across the Cité and three other cities. A small group gathered around the expert system to discuss the purpose of existence, the AI quoting Stendhal and a 16th-century Sufi poet in alternating lines, because one of the hackers had fed it a new corpus last week and it was still digesting. The conversation was gentle, meandering, the kind of impossible luxury the system couldn't understand – the luxury of sitting in a self-made castle and wondering why you were alive, without an ad interrupting.
I climbed up to the roof, past the hydroponic bays and the water collectors, past the antennas that knitted us to the other lost boroughs. From there the Cité sprawled like a concrete reef, every balcony an extra room, every rooftop a garden or a workshop, every empty window frame a story of something repaired. It was a slum on the outside, a fortress on the inside, a place that had been rendered invisible precisely because it had nothing the mighty wanted – until the mighty realised that what we had was each other, and that was the most dangerous product of all.
Below, the Mall glowed. Someone had strung up a line of fairy lights made from scrapped fibre optics, and they pulsed in time with the data streams. The rain had stopped. A new IRC query blinked on my wrist terminal: “rigger run to Barcelona – need 4 wheels of comté and a working hard drive from before the Win10 collapse. story payment open.” I smiled. There would be another day, another cake, another perfect hit. The heat was just weather, and we had built a house that could weather anything.
The couches were leather, easy to clean, the rooms individualistic and workshops at the same time, the kitchen shared and at the weekend it accepted with wide open swinging doors all for a party. The only actually illegal drug consumed was homegrown Cannabis, the alcohol was moonshine beer and Whisky together with social engineered off the books liqueur and quite some knowledge about what was good and great for its price.
The refurbished hi-fi was synced, the entire place a large Cyberdeck, an integrated smart home with access surveillance, presence detection, music distribution and bar and kitchen management taking orders over terminals delivered by toy railways and autonomous rc car drones if too far off any kitchen with warehousing military grade source material distribution.
The place was busy, the DJ not always present physically and the screens showed streams from other places, encrypted, covered from the corporate media world wide. French was spoken in 52 nations and broken English in every single one. A cleaner in an IBM office can create a lot of incredible stable backbone nodes that are by a hotel cleaner covered as tunneling access from guests.
Three hundred kilometres north, in a hotel near the Gare du Nord, a second cleaner named Idrissa did the same work. He covered the tunnels. His hotel was a mid-range chain where corporate guests slept off their meetings and streamed their compliance-mandated wellness content. Their guest Wi-Fi was a tunnelled river that he rerouted through Soraya’s blade, then into the Cité mesh, the data wrapped in encryption layers that looked like hotel billing traffic. Idrissa had learned to code not from a school but from a text adventure someone had written about a janitor who hacked the Pentagon. When he finally met the author via IRC, they’d cried together over a character death.
The Discotheque Labyrinth sat in what the housing registry once called Block C, a twelve-storey workers’ dormitory now occupied entirely by people under thirty-five who had decided that the old world’s ideas about career and property were a dull joke. They had knocked down walls, built new ones from soundproofed server cabinets, and painted every surface in colours that didn’t have corporate names. The building was a maze of bedrooms, workshops, and common spaces that sprawled between floors like a vertical village. Tonight, the Labyrinth was alive.
---
A Friday night, the heat still radiating from the concrete even after dark. The entrance was a pair of swinging doors salvaged from a demolished theatre, their brass handles worn to a soft gleam by a thousand hands. Above them, a sign spelled DISCO LAB in hand-wired amber LEDs, the T and H having fallen off years ago and never replaced because everyone knew what it meant. The doors swung open constantly: young people from the Cité, visitors from other quarters who’d heard stories, a couple of riggers fresh from a run to Lyon, their van still ticking as it cooled in the courtyard, packed with cheese and fifty kilos of industrial chocolate powder meant for a vending-machine supply chain.
Inside, the main hall was a cavern of warmth and sound. The hi-fi system was a monster, a patchwork of salvaged amplifiers, hand-coiled speakers, and a sub-bass unit built into a former elevator shaft that made the floor vibrate in rhythm. Tonight the DJ was in Berlin, a woman called Grete who streamed her set through Soraya’s IBM blade and Idrissa’s hotel tunnel, her signal arriving with less latency than any corporate streaming service. Her face appeared on a screen above the dance floor, beside other screens showing a rooftop party in a Barcelona squat, a kitchen in Dakar where someone was frying fish and laughing, a text-only terminal scrolling poetry from a collective in Warsaw. The screens were not entertainment; they were windows into a world that refused to be isolated.
The couches were leather, real leather, scavenged from a law firm that had redecorated and thrown away furniture that still smelled of money and anxiety. Now they smelled of cannabis, homegrown in the Labyrinth’s rooftop greenhouse, a gentle haze that mixed with the yeast and malt of moonshine beer from the basement brewery, the sharp bite of home-distilled whisky, and the sweet complexity of liqueurs brewed from foraged herbs with recipes shared over IRC. Behind the bar, a young man named Théo poured drinks without touching credits, only marking orders in a shared database that tracked favours, stories, and the occasional promise to repair a washing machine.
The bar itself was a theatre of automation. Orders came in over personal terminals, typed out in broken English or rapid French, and were delivered by a network of toy trains running on suspended tracks across the ceiling, their carriages carrying glasses with unerring precision. For the harder-to-reach corners, small RC car drones, modified from military-surplus bomb-disposal bots that a rigger had pulled from a Dutch scrapyard, trundled across the floor with trays balanced on their backs, their little headlights winking. The entire building was one integrated smart home, a cyberdeck of walls and wires. Presence sensors tracked occupancy to dim lights in empty rooms. The music followed you from hall to lounge, seamless. Surveillance cams – all open-source, all monitored by the community, not some distant security firm – kept the place safe, their feeds encrypted and shared only with those who lived there.
In a corner, a group of newcomers from the outer banlieues sat wide-eyed, watching a terminal stream a conversation in English between a woman in Lagos and a man in Manila, discussing the best way to solder a capacitor onto a drone controller. One of them, a girl of maybe seventeen with tired eyes, turned to her companion and whispered, not quite believing: “They’re just... sharing it. For free.” The companion, a boy with calloused hands from a warehouse job, nodded slowly. This was worse than Communism indeed – it was generosity without expectation, and it broke something inside him in the best way.
The Labyrinth was not just a party. It was a node of the underground, a place where riggers could sleep between runs, where a young woman from the Cité might meet a traveller from Turin over a glass of contraband liqueur and end up married in a ceremony performed via text terminal with guests from six time zones. The private rooms were individualistic caves, each a workshop and a sanctuary: one full of half-assembled drone parts, another a library of paper books rescued from the pulping machines, a third a darkroom for film photography because someone had found a cache of undeveloped film in a demolished photo lab and decided to learn the whole art from scratch. Love happened here, of course. It happened in the quieter hours, on those leather couches, in conversations that lasted until the sun came up and the automated bird-feeders on the roof clicked on.
Tonight, a rumour spread through the crowd: a new run was being planned. Not a small run for cake or capacitors, but a big one. A rigger from the north, a woman with a shaved head and a tattoo of a circuit diagram running down her arm, was looking for a team. She needed someone who knew the insides of a pharmaceutical warehouse, someone who could drive a refrigerated truck, someone who could sweet-talk a loading-dock system with a custom script. The target wasn’t drugs, though; it was insulin. A whole pallet of expired, still-perfectly-viable insulin that a corporation had written off because the “Best Before” date had passed by twelve hours. The rigger had found it through a data leak a cleaner in Frankfurt had spotted in a trash report. The insulin was destined for a community in Oran that couldn’t access the corporate supply chain without paying a year’s wages for a single vial. The pay, as always, was not credits. It was cheese, stories, and the knowledge that somewhere a diabetic child would live.
In the kitchen, Fatou from the Mall had set up a temporary station, reheating leftover cake from Louis’s run and serving it alongside a stew made from vegetables the rooftop gardens couldn’t store. She was arguing amiably with the Labyrinth’s main cook, a wiry man called Samir who insisted that his grandmother’s couscous recipe could be improved with a touch of the Dutch cheese Louis had brought. They were both wrong, but the result was delicious, and it fed eighty people before midnight.
The screens above the bar flickered and, for a moment, showed a feed from the outside world: a corporate news bulletin about a new trade agreement, a smiling CEO shaking hands with a politician, a graph illustrating quarterly growth. Someone booed, and someone else threw a cushion at the screen. The feed was replaced by the Warsaw poetry terminal, and the collective sigh of relief was palpable. The outside world was a fiction they had all agreed to stop believing.
As the night deepened, the party shifted. The music slowed, became something more introspective. A young woman plugged a synth she had built herself into the sound system and played a melody that wandered like a question. Couples found corners. The trains kept running, delivering glasses of water alongside the last of the moonshine, because the system cared for its own. The surveillance showed a quiet perimeter: nothing but the occasional fox, the distant lights of the périphérique, the steady blink of the antennas on the roof.
In one of the upper rooms, a group of the original Labyrinth builders sat around a table, drinking whisky and talking about the early days. The days before the mesh, before the runs, when it was just a few of them squatting in an abandoned block and dreaming. One of them, a woman with grey streaking her hair now, remembered the first cake delivery, the first time someone had said “cheese is more important than credits” and meant it. Another recalled the first text adventure they’d written together, a sprawling thing that had taken six months and ended with a line that still made him cry. They were the elders, all of thirty-five, and they looked at the young faces dancing below with a fierce, tired pride.
The Discotheque Labyrinth was a castle, too. Not of steel and glass like the Mall, but of sound and light and the stubborn, radiant belief that a different world was already here, tucked inside the old one like a secret. The system saw nothing here worth taxing, worth policing, worth noticing. And that, of course, was the perfect hit. The heat so, that was a perfect hit.
---
Near dawn, the doors swung open one last time. A rigger from Amsterdam walked in, exhausted, carrying a box of cheese and a hard drive full of Dutch literature he’d digitised from a library that had closed. He was greeted by name, handed a bowl of stew, and shown to a couch. He fell asleep within minutes, his boots still on, a smile on his face. The trains trundled softly on their tracks, the screens glowed, the mesh hummed. Outside, the city slept its medicated sleep, and the Cité, invisible and magnificent, was just beginning another day.
#cyberpunkcoltore - Rigger - TIE
Look at this:
My point about the Factory Five XTF being no Rally build is that there. Pre-Runners are great designs for especially soft Desert tracks. On tarmac or dirt roads with plenty of turns they will reach their limits, especially loaded being a truck as in truck.
For European roads U.S. Pick-Ups are trucks. They can be overloaded per factory standard onto prison levels, are fast, rigged and able to avoid the reverse gear in exchange for a tiny steering wheel adjustment.
That there is compact, leverage and perfect if using liquid or gas over coil spring shocks.
PS: Like this here...
...means Helicopter over here. We have had a few thousand years of building roads, Americans, and we were busy.
So, a Sprinter rear axe in even a sports car is no problem. As soon as the heavy differential starts also moving it becomes a problem. That only happens offroad. The Pre-Runner solution is genious, but kills the truck bed in most set ups.
Wednesday, 29 April 2026
PS
You do not have to repeat that. You can ask them to leave the premises and step onto public ground which is easily recognizable in your specific case and if they refuse get back in, get your AR and shoot them dead.
No matter being real or fake.
As a matter of fact in every single State having that on record. The rest is "Hollywood", The Confederate part of America.
The Jury will let you go in those States they are strongest, in the others you sue their Department for violating your constitutional rights in the millions.
#MODInc
So, there was that moment when my dog stared at a Squirrel and I realized he saw no food, but the cutest thing ever being really impressed by it running up a tree. Kinda being for real good connected I let him of the leash a few minutes later and he tried climbing a tree to understand that he was not real good in predicting too many steps of his actions when looking down from where he stopped to then look at me for help.
He made it down, reversing, doing the same steps but backward.
How I came up with that? Dude...
...in a close potential future...
Incorporated with DeepSeek
The rain over Neo-Auckland had that acid tang, a chemical kiss that made the neon bleed into the gutters like a bad simsense dream. I was nursing a synth-whisky in a waterfront dive called The Busted Flange, watching the crawler ads on the window flicker through a dozen languages I couldn’t read. My left hand was a dull silver prosthetic with three fingers twitching in a rigger’s phantom feedback loop. That was all I had left of my glory days—that and a beat-up amphibious kit plane rotting on a salt-spray mooring.
A woman slid into the booth opposite me. Human, severe corporate haircut, eyes like frozen ferrocrete. Saeder-Krupp security livery cut tight across a torso that probably had more chrome than my entire rigger cocoon used to. She didn’t introduce herself.
“You’re Kai Mako. Callsign Shallow. Washed-up rigger, but your neural interface is military-grade, and you can still fly anything with a pulse.” She pushed a datachip across the sticky table. “We need a pilot. Infiltrate the Wave Syndicate.”
I let the name hang. The Wave Syndicate was a ghost story to most, a pirate radio cult that broadcast from international waters on a ramshackle fleet nobody could track. Word was they ran WWII submarine replicas, surface-skimming race boats that could outrun coast guard hydrofoils, and amphibious kit planes that popped out of the ocean like metallic dragonflies. Every Thursday evening, their DJ—some elven witch called Raveena Cipher—ran a show called The Turn-Up, a two-hour sound barrage that hit the airwaves from Manila to Jakarta to Auckland, making literally millions of wageslaves and gangers alike practice their Friday night moves. They financed the whole operation on donations, record sales, and club adverts. The corps hated them. The coast guards tried to hunt them. The Wave Syndicate always outran them, possessing better boats, better pilots, and better tech than any government patrol.
“Why does Krupp care about a pirate station?” I asked.
“The signal. It’s unjammable, untraceable, and it’s bleeding into our sat-network bandwidth. We think they’re smuggling data in the subcarrier. Encrypted drek that’s destabilising our broadcast monopoly in the Pacific Rim. We want you inside. Find their transmission hub. Sabotage it. You’ll be paid enough Nuyen to buy back your soul.”
I needed the money. I also needed to feel the rush of a throttle under my thoughts again. “Null sweat. Give me the false ID and let me fly.”
They gave me a modified SeaRey amphibian, a kit plane with a silent electric prop, stealth skin, and a rigger interface so slaved to my nervous system I could feel the lift over the wings in my sternum. It took me three weeks of dodging patrols, broadcasting fake distress calls, and dropping anonymous tips to get the Syndicate’s attention. They finally picked me up one night, forty klicks off the coast of Sulawesi, when a pair of matte-black cigarette boats with vectored thrust rose out of the mist and boxed me in. The troll at the helm had tusks capped in chrome and a voice like gravel in a blender.
“You fly pretty, little man. We’re looking for someone with your nerve. Come meet the Captain.”
They took me to the Depthgroover, a monstrous submarine replica of an ancient Japanese I-400-class, the kind that once carried attack seaplanes in World War II. This one had been rebuilt by a mad ork engineer into something that shouldn’t exist: sonar-stealthed hull, drone launch tubes, a cavernous hangar deck where amphibious kit planes nested like sleeping bats. I stepped aboard to the thrum of generators, the smell of salt and ozone, and that pervasive underlying beat—low, hypnotic, a sub-bass pulse that came from every speaker grille in the vessel.
Captain Flipside was a troll so massive he had to stoop under the bulkheads, his dreadlocks threaded with fiberoptic cable. “I’m told you’ve got a hotshot rigger’s spark,” he rumbled. “We could use a pilot for our Skimmers. My last one fragged himself on a bad wave. You willing to run contraband, no questions asked?”
“I just want to fly.”
They put me through a test: outmaneuvering an actual coast guard patrol who’d been paid off by Horizon Media to locate the Depthgroover. I took one of their amphibious planes—a sleek ICON A5 modified with pop-out sponson machine guns and a rigger cocoon that fit like a coffin—and led the patrol cutter on a twenty-minute chase through razor-coral atolls. I flew so low the spray striped my canopy, never once exceeding 50 meters altitude, then I vectored into a tight canyon where their radar melted into static, and came out laughing, my nerves singing. They cheered over the comms. That night, I met Raveena Cipher.
She held court in the Depthgroover’s broadcast room, a cathedral of slap-patched mixing boards, glowing tube amps, and a shrine to a spirit I couldn’t name. Elf, with skin the colour of midnight neon, data-cables braided into her hair, eyes lit from within by a persona that never fully disconnected from the Matrix. She was a technoshaman—a decker who’d crossed into magic—and every beat she spun on The Turn-Up thrummed with something spiritual. Millions of kids across a dozen megacities tuned in every Thursday evening, shaking off their wage-slavery, practising their unison moves for the weekend ahead. The show pulled donations from street jocks, record sales that moved through blind nodes, adverts from underground clubs. The Wave Syndicate was filthy rich, and the corps couldn’t touch them.
Raveena looked at me like she could see the chip in my head, the one containing my Saeder-Krupp mission parameters. But she smiled instead of killing me. “You fly like a spirit of the air, Shallow. Stay close.”
And I did. Weeks turned into months. I flew smuggling runs in the Skimmers, raced the Slicktech Wavecutters against corp hydrofoils, even helped maintenance on the subs. The whole fleet operated across Oceania: Tonga, Rabaul, Cairns, Dili—wherever the coastline had ears desperate for a beat. The Thursday Warm Up was sacred. I watched from the booth as Raveena dropped her opening track, and somewhere out there, a million glowing AR-screen windows lit up with dancing shadows, all moving as one. The scale of it made my rigger’s heart feel microscopic.
She bedded me after a particularly dicey run where I’d pulled her out of a corp ambush, my plane skimming the waves with two bullet holes in the float. In the afterglow, tangled in synth-silk, she whispered the truth. “The Turn-Up isn’t just music, Kai. It’s resonance. Every dance move, every synchronised step feeds energy to The Downbeat—a free spirit of sound and ocean. We’re the beat-keepers. The corps are trying to kill it because they want the Pacific floor for drilling operations, and The Downbeat protects ley lines under the sea that would poison half of Asia if they’re broken. The data in our subcarrier? Warning beacons for coastal shamans. The ad money funds our war. We’re not just a gang; we’re a lifeline.”
I felt the floor of my soul crack wide open. Saeder-Krupp wasn’t after bandwidth; they were after genocide. The Johnson’s corporate logo was a front for a black-ops division who wanted The Downbeat shattered so they could tap a deep-earth dragon line for a secret arcology. My mission was to plant a resonance mine in the broadcast room during the next Thursday Warm Up, killing the spirit.
I couldn’t do it.
But before I could come clean, my cover imploded. A Horizon combat VTOL squadron tracked our buoy network, triangulated the Depthgroover, and descended on us during the very broadcast I was supposed to sabotage. Coast guard cutters—bribed and augmented—came screaming over the horizon. The sub’s klaxons tore the air. Captain Flipside roared orders. Raveena looked at me with eyes that already knew.
“You’re the reason,” she said, heartbreak and fury mingled.
I didn’t argue. I just ran for my plane.
I jacked into the Skimmer’s rigger cocoon, became the aircraft. The night was chaos: tracers, torpedo wakes, the sub crash-diving while the Wavecutters screamed counter-attack. I had one shot at redemption. I slaved the entire flock of amphibious kits drones from the sub’s hangar, about a dozen planes, painting target locks on the VTOLs with my mind. My rigger-prosthetic spasmed as I gave them one command: *kamikaze rhythm*. They smashed into the rotors, fireballing three gunships in a row. I strafed the coast guard cutter’s bridge, my machine guns chattering until the barrels glowed. Then I dropped a torpedo I wasn’t supposed to have, a gift from an arms dealer we’d smuggled for, and blew their keel into the sky.
But there were too many. Another wave of VTOLs. Mages on the cutter summoning toxic water elementals. Raveena stood at the Depthgroover’s open hangar door, arms raised, and her voice joined the global broadcast that still screamed from every speaker on the ship. One Thursday evening, the beat never stopped. She channelled The Downbeat itself, and the ocean rose with us.
A sound hit me—a bass note so low it blurred my vision, a tangible wave of sonic force that lifted the sea into a wall. The spirit manifested as a shimmering curtain of pure rhythm, a colossal entity made of shifting water and echoing melody. It didn’t just protect; it *grooved*. The remaining cutters were caught in a riptide of impossible physics, their hulls stressed to breaking by sound turned into pressure. VTOLs plummeted, their pilots’ inner ears liquefied by the frequency. The broadcast reached millions at that exact moment, and I understood: they were all dancing to this defense. Their synchronized motion, their collective energy gave the spirit power. A billion feet hitting the floor in Shanghai, Seoul, Manila, Jakarta, Ho Chi Minh, all at once. The Wave Syndicate had weaponised joy.
When the last enemy sank, the sea went preternaturally quiet. My plane bobbed next to the surfacing Depthgroover. I landed on the water, taxied to the hangar, and cut the motor. Raveena met me on the deck, her hair still sparking with residual magic, her face a mask of exhausted fury and bewildered hope.
“You betrayed us. Then you saved us. What are you, Kai?”
I pulled the Saeder-Krupp chip from my skull port and crushed it under my boot. “A pilot who finally chose a side.”
She didn’t smile, but she nodded. I wasn’t forgiven, not yet, but I was home.
Now I fly the Skimmers for the Wave Syndicate, still a wanted man by every corp maritime division in the Pacific. The Thursday Warm Up broadcasts on schedule, a pulsing, defiant heartbeat across the megas. Somewhere out there, a million kids are practising their moves for Friday night, and each pivot, each ripple of muscle, feeds the spirit that keeps the poison corpos at bay. Every now and then, Raveena leans over my rigger cocoon and kisses my forehead before a sortie. The ocean smells like freedom and low-tide ozone. The beat goes on, and we outrun the hunters like we always have—faster, smoother, riding the wave no one else can see.
Because in this drowned cyberpunk world, the groove is the only true power. And we’re never, ever turning it off.
..
**The Tokyo Decibel**
The Arasaka Prime Spire punched through the neon stratus like a chromed fist, its summit lost in a permanent chemical haze that tasted of ozone and burnt yen. From up here, seventy floors above the Tokyo Bay sprawl, Executor Tanaka watched the city pulse beneath him, a bioluminescent cancer of advertising sigils and gridlocked sky-traffic. His office was soundproofed, climate-controlled, and utterly sterile—a tomb for ambition. Tonight, though, a ghost had crawled into his perfect machine.
Somewhere out in the bay, a pirate radio broadcast was making a mockery of his entire security division.
“It’s *The Turn-Up* again, sir.” His lieutenant, a razor-edged elf with too many datajacks, spoke without lifting her eyes from her AR display. “Signal strength is maximum across Chiba, Koto, and Minato wards. We’ve got a million-plus listeners locking into the warm-up track. As per your directive, we triangulated.”
“And?”
“There’s no single origin point. The signal bounces between twelve separate drone relays, shattering into phase-shifted reflections. It’s like trying to pin smoke to a wall. Our towers get fifty conflicting vectors cycling every four seconds. We’d need a direct line-of-sight hit to find the source, and even then…”
Tanaka slammed his fist onto the obsidian desk. “There is a *boat* in my bay, broadcasting seditious noise, and you cannot locate it? The Imperial Coast Guard assured me their new sonar grid would find anything with a hull.”
“The boat… doesn’t read as a hull, sir. Not when it’s submerged.” The lieutenant expanded a wireframe scan onto the main screen. Tokyo Bay’s bathymetry unfolded in wireframe blue—freighters, yachts, dredging platforms, all tagged with clean corporate IFFs. And then, a ghost: a faint acoustic return, barely distinguishable from a school of tuna, nestled in the shallows off Odaiba’s old theme park ruins. The shape was wrong. It looked like two parallel cigar-forms joined by a flattened wing, the whole thing tilted at an uncanny ten-degree list, as if it had died and was sinking slowly. Only two things breached the surface: a whip-thin communications antenna, and a single cockpit blister of curved smart-glass, leaning at that same drunken angle, like the half-lidded eye of a sea creature watching the city.
“It’s a *katamarin*,” the lieutenant said, her voice strained. “Submersible offshore race boat. Modified hull, zero cavitation drives. When it’s fully buttoned up, it sits just beneath the wave layer, static-cycling seawater through cooled impellers to match ambient temperature. No wake, no magnetic signature. It’s invisible to everything except active sonar pings within two hundred meters, or a visual spotter with enhanced optics who knows exactly where to look.”
“And how long has it been there?”
“Our acoustic archives show the signature first appeared seventeen hours ago. It’s been broadcasting the entire time. The drones do the heavy lifting—they scatter the signal across the bay like a shattered mirror. But the core feed, the DJ herself, is coming from that cockpit. Raveena Cipher, voice of the Wave Syndicate, is sitting twenty feet below the waterline, mocking every corp in this city.”
Tanaka pulled up the audio on his private channel. It hit like a wave of hot static: basslines that made his ribcage vibrate, a voice layered with reverb and magic, speaking in a pidgin of Japanese, English, and Or’zet that somehow made his Corporate soul feel inadequate. She was counting down the minutes to Friday night, exhorting the wageslaves in their cubicle hives to stand up, to move, to remember what it felt like to be alive. In the streets below, he could already see clusters of figures in neon-drenched parks, moving in synchronized, fluid motions—rehearsing the dance that would sweep the clubs tomorrow. Millions of them, feeding the spirit she served.
“Deploy the patrol squadron,” Tanaka ordered. “Raptor drones, armed. I want that boat sunk. I want her voice silenced before the next track.”
---
Out in the bay, inside the cockpit blister of the *Gloomraker*, the pilot known only as Harpy felt the pressure change before the sensors did. Her body was slaved to the catamaran’s nervous system through an antique but brutally effective rigger interface, a web of fibre-optic cables that fed her the vessel’s hydrodynamic state as if it were her own skin. The *Gloomraker* was a mad hybrid: two needle-sharp submersible hulls, each housing a twin-turbine pump-jet that could cycle from silent running to afterburner in 0.4 seconds. A wing-like hydrofoil connected them, studded with drone cradles. Fully submerged, they were a shadow. At speed, the foils would lift them out of the water entirely, into ground effect, skimming a cushion of air a meter above the waves at velocities that would vaporise lesser craft.
Harpy’s eyes, one organic and one a synthetic camera or, chattered open. The Raptor drones were coming. She felt their active sonar pings like needles in her temples—seven contacts, fanning out from the coast guard station near Haneda. They’d found the resonance signature of the broadcast antenna. Not triangulation, just brute-force proximity ping.
“Raveena,” she muttered over the internal comm, “we’ve got company. Seven birds, armed. Less than three minutes to visual.”
The elf’s voice came back, utterly calm, still half-merged with the broadcast stream she fed to the waiting millions. “Let them come closer, love. The bass drop at the end of this track needs a percussive finale.”
Harpy grinned a predator’s grin. She nursed the drive turbines from standby to pre-spool, feeling the *Gloomraker* shudder with contained hunger. The drones were still in the water, scattered around the bay in a delicate ballet of signal deceit. If they left them, the corps would scoop them up and reverse-engineer the phase-scatter tech. So they’d have to collect them. After the chaos.
The first Raptor swooped low, a matte-black delta wing with underslung cannon pods and a hunter-killer’s dumb aggression. Its searchlight stabbed the water, found the antenna, traced the tilt of the cockpit blister—and hesitated. For a full second, the drone’s operator tried to reconcile the visual: a ship that wasn’t a ship, submerged, leaning at the angle of a drifting corpse, but pulsing with a heartbeat bassline that actually *rippled* the water’s surface tension. Harpy let them have their second.
Then she fired up the engines.
The sound barrier over water is a strange thing. Pure physics doesn’t care about medium, but humans do. When a craft hits Mach 1 on the deck, the shockwave turns into a wall of mist and pressure that can flatten small boats and burst eardrums for half a kilometre. The *Gloomraker* didn’t break Mach 1 from a standing start—it *translated* to it, an impossible acceleration made possible by superconducting impellers and a hull that sucked air through vectored intakes to create its own low-pressure tunnel. One moment, the boat was a submerged anomaly. The next, it breached like a leviathan, hydrofoils snapping down, and the bay erupted.
The Raptor drone’s camera feed went white with spray. When it cleared, the *Gloomraker* was already half a klick seaward, skipping over the wave crests on a cushion of superheated air, its twin hulls barely kissing the water. A pure white collar of shock condensation ringed its bow. The pilot was *laughing* over an open channel, and the Tokyo skyline trembled with the delayed crack-BOOM of a sonic transition that shattered windows in the Rainbow Bridge’s observation deck. The drones gave chase, but they were designed for precision strikes, not for matching a speed-addicted ghost crewed by a rigger insane enough to redline a race boat inside a metropolitan bay.
Harpy cut a screaming arc around the artificial island of Odaiba, hull flexing, collecting the scattered relay drones one by one. The drones flew to her like steel hummingbirds, magnetically latching into their cradle mounts as the boat never slowed. The final pickup was a mile out, a little quadrotor that had been broadcasting right off the pier at Kasai Rinkai Park. Harpy sideslipped the *Gloomraker* into a wrenching turn that pulled twenty gees, her rigger cocoon’s compensators groaning, and the drone clicked home just as a coast guard cutter’s railgun sent a supersonic slug through the space it had occupied a heartbeat before.
“All drones aboard,” Harpy reported, voice strained with g-force. “Raveena, we are fuuuully out of polite company.”
“Then vanish, darling. The beat will go on.”
Harpy pushed the throttles past the final stop, into the zone marked only with a skull-and-crossbones icon. The *Gloomraker*’s fuselage shed its remaining thermal signature, hull plates flowing like liquid mercury as a meta-material skin shifted to full absorption mode. It dipped back below the wave layer, thrusters cycled to silent running, and by the time the coast guard cutters crisscrossed the impact zone, there was nothing but empty ocean and the fading aftershock of a sound nobody could trace.
---
In his tower, Executor Tanaka watched the mission fail on a dozen screens. The broadcast never stopped. The voice of Raveena Cipher, elven technoshaman, continued to pour over the Tokyo sprawl, inviting every downtrodden soul to shake off their corporate shackles and move to the beat. Monday would bring a thousand new memos, a hundred new security upgrade contracts, and exactly zero ways to stop the Thursday Warm Up from returning next week, on another ghost vessel, hiding in another patch of blind sea. The Wave Syndicate had stuck their middle finger deep into the chrome heart of Neo-Tokyo, and they’d done it while bobbing like a dead fish in his own bay.
He poured a scotch, listened to the bassline rumble up through the building’s bones, and admitted, to no one but himself, that the music was infuriatingly excellent.
**The Airborne Relay**
The *Gloomraker* had vanished into open water, its sonic boom still echoing off the corporate towers like a parting insult. Executor Tanaka allowed himself a single breath of relief before his lieutenant’s voice cracked through the office.
“Sir… the broadcast didn’t stop.”
Tanaka’s jaw tightened. On the main display, the waveform of *The Turn-Up* had dipped for exactly three seconds—a flicker of dead air—then surged back to full clarity across every district. The signal wasn’t coming from the bay anymore. It was coming from *above*.
He strode to the window and looked up. There, tracing a lazy ellipse against the neon-drenched overcast, was a single fixed-wing aircraft. High-wing, amphibious hull, matte-white paint with the blue crest of the Tokyo Metropolitan University Traffic Research Division. It moved with the unhurried indifference of a government observation plane, its transponder squawking a perfectly legitimate IFF code: *TMU-09, Traffic Pattern Survey, Authorised Continuous Orbit*. It had been up there for hours—they’d logged it at 0700 that morning as a routine academic flight, mapping congestion patterns for the Department of Transport.
Now it was broadcasting pirate radio to eleven million people.
“Get me the Chancellor of Tokyo Metro University,” Tanaka barked. “And someone tell me how an aircraft with *slightly less power than a sub-surface katamarin* is drowning our jamming grid.”
---
Inside the cockpit of *TMU-09*, Kai Mako—callsign Shallow, former Saeder-Krupp operative turned Wave Syndicate rigger—lay cocooned in a rigger interface that threaded his nerves directly into the airplane’s control surfaces. The aircraft was a modified ICON A5 amphibian, stripped of its recreational luxuries and stuffed with a compact Daimler-Hoshino broadcast resonator, a phased-array antenna concealed in the belly pod, and a small but ferocious power cell that hummed at seventy percent of the *Gloomraker*’s output.
The signal wasn’t as strong as the main boat’s drone-scattered assault. But it didn’t need to be. Kai wasn’t trying to flood the bay with raw wattage. He was feeding a network of twelve rooftop repeaters—disguised as university weather stations and traffic-flow sensors—that had been planted on corporate towers across Minato, Shinjuku, Chiyoda, and Shibuya over the preceding months. Each repeater was a slab of innocuous grey plastic bolted to an HVAC unit, emblazoned with a faded sticker reading *TMU Atmospheric Corridor Study – Node 7* and a QR code that led to a genuine-looking research portal. The corp security drones scanned them twice a day and found nothing but humidity readings and anemometer data. They never checked the secondary transceiver buried behind the weather vane.
From Kai’s orbit at three thousand feet, the belly antenna painted a tight microwave cone that hopped from rooftop to rooftop in a daisy-chain of handshake signals. Repeater seven grabbed the primary feed. Repeater three boosted the bass. Repeater nine handled the high-end frequencies that made the hi-hats shimmer. Together, they stitched a seamless audio blanket over the entire Tokyo sprawl, with a total power draw that looked like background noise on every corp spectrum analyser. The only way to kill it was to physically destroy all twelve nodes simultaneously—or shoot down the airplane feeding them. And shooting down a university research plane over a densely populated megacity was the kind of PR nightmare that even Arasaka’s fixers couldn’t spin.
Raveena’s voice crackled in his neural feed, her persona riding the broadcast stream like a surfer on a tsunami. “How’s my favourite traitor holding up, Kai?”
“Bored,” he subvocalised, his throat mic picking up the words. “I’ve been circling for six hours, burning fuel at maximum efficiency to look like a fat government sloth. If I fly any slower, seabirds will start nesting on my wings.”
“The boat had to spook. You knew the backup plan might trigger. Is the feed clean?”
“Cleaner than Tanaka’s conscience. The repeater net is holding sync to within four milliseconds. I’m at seventy-four percent power—slightly less than the *Gloomraker*’s drone array, but the rooftop nodes are compensating with proximity gain. Anyone dancing in Shinjuku is getting the same bone-rattling bass as if they were standing on the sub’s deck.”
“And the traffic department cover?”
Kai glanced at the secondary instrument panel, where a pre-recorded data stream of fake vehicle density reports squirted dutifully to the Tokyo Metropolitan Traffic Authority’s servers. “Still feeding them beautiful lies. According to my telemetry, the Shuto Expressway is experiencing a sixteen-car pileup near Ikebukuro. They’ll be too busy dispatching drones to notice their traffic plane is a flying nightclub.”
Below, the city pulsed. From his vantage, Kai could see the clusters of dancers in the parks, the glow of apartment windows where entire families moved in unison, the AR projections of Raveena’s live avatar towering twenty stories high above the Shibuya crossing—a shimmering elven spectre with data-cables in her hair, counting down to midnight. The Thursday Warm Up was more than a radio show. It was the heartbeat of a resistance the corps couldn’t name and couldn’t strangle.
A warning tone sounded. A Saeder-Krupp security aerodyne, sleek and black, was climbing out of the corporate spire’s private hangar deck, vectoring towards his orbit.
“We’ve got a visitor,” Kai murmured. “Corporate, armed, looks like a Krupp Wasp. They’re not buying the university story.”
“How long can you keep the plane in the air if you evade?”
“Twenty minutes before fuel becomes a problem. The ICON wasn’t designed for dogfights.”
Raveena’s voice hardened. “Then make the handoff. The twelfth rooftop node has an independent storable feed; I’m uploading the next hour of programming to its cache now. If you drop the link, the repeaters will run on autopilot until dawn. Can you land safely?”
“Define ‘safely.’”
“In one piece, preferably.”
Kai banked the ICON into a gentle turn, keeping the belly antenna pointed at the repeater chain until the upload completion bar hit one hundred percent. The Krupp Wasp accelerated, its railgun turret swivelling. Kai cut the broadcast feed, slammed the throttle forward, and converted the ICON from flying traffic observer to screaming getaway bird. The amphibian’s engine roared, and he dropped to rooftop height, weaving between the canyons of glass and steel with a rigger’s liquid precision. The Wasp followed, but Kai had flown these streets in sims a hundred times. He led them into the dense forest of Shiodome skyscrapers, where their radar fuzzed, then popped up over the Sumida River and vanished into the low cloud layer, heading for a pre-staged splashdown point in Edo Bay where a Wave Syndicate cigarette boat would collect him.
The broadcast never faltered. The rooftop repeaters, now running cached data, continued to pour out Raveena’s voice. A million dancers in the Tokyo night never missed a beat.
By the time Executor Tanaka received the report that the rogue aircraft had escaped and the signal was being sustained by unhackable ground nodes that had *already been there for months, disguised under his own security cameras*, he had no words left. Only the bassline, thrumming up through the spire, indifferent and eternal.
**The Skater Fleet**
The broadcast that night carried a message tucked inside the third bass drop, a subharmonic whisper only those with the right decoder ring could hear. Raveena Cipher’s voice, layered under a grinding synth line, spoke directly to the ones who kept the Wave Syndicate afloat when donation credits ran thin and club ad revenue got frozen by corp audits.
*“Neon Ghosts, we see you. The Turn-Up needs teeth. Cash drop at midnight, Pier 9, the old tuna warehouse. Bring the sharpest things you’ve got.”*
The Neon Ghosts were a skater crew from the Koto ward waterfront, thirty-odd kids and tweaked-out twenty-somethings who moved through the city on mag-lev boards and inline blades, their bodies a canvas of glowing tattoos and their backpacks stuffed with contraband the corps couldn’t replicate. They didn’t deal in chips or crypto. They dealt in *physical*—twelve-inch vinyl pressings of the Turn-Up’s monthly sets, lathe-cut on a reclaimed 1950s Neumann record lathe, each sleeve hand-painted with reactive ink that shifted under streetlight. Cassette tapes with shells cast from recycled bullet casings. One-off datachips encased in resin blocks that had to be physically cracked open to slot, a ritual as much as a purchase. These objects couldn’t be downloaded, couldn’t be streamed, couldn’t be duplicated without losing the analog imperfections that made them holy. The corps called it “dead media fetishism.” The street called it art. And in a city where everything digital could be hacked, copied, and devalued in a nanosecond, physical scarcity was the only currency that still bit.
Jax, the crew’s de facto fixer, had a face full of chrome studs and a right arm sleeved in reactive smart-ink that pulsed to the bass of whatever he was listening to. He counted the take in the back of a boarded-up ramen shop while his crew slapped high-fives. Tonight’s drop had moved two hundred limited records, half a hundred hand-dubbed ferric oxide tapes, and a single “shatter-chip” that a collector in Roppongi had paid actual *platinum* for. The total sat at four hundred thousand nuyen, clean and untraceable.
At midnight, Jax and three of his best riders pushed a repurposed delivery drone cart through the rusted gates of the tuna warehouse. Inside, a single figure waited, tattoos glowing the deep indigo of Wave Syndicate affiliation, a rigger jack glinting at her temple. Harpy, the pilot of the *Gloomraker*, stood beside a row of shapes hidden under salt-crusted tarps.
“You brought the goods,” Harpy said. It wasn’t a question.
Jax pulled a reinforced case from the cart, popped the seals. Inside, the nuyen sat in neat vacuum-packed bricks. “Four hundred K. Enough for what you asked.”
Harpy smiled a smile that had too many sharp teeth—some natural, some filed. She yanked the tarps back.
They were helicopters, but not any kind Jax had ever seen. Single-seat airframes barely larger than a superbike, each built around a central turbine core with twin counter-rotating ducted fans. The cockpits were open cages of chromoly tubing, minimalist rigger interfaces, a saddle that looked stolen from a racing motorcycle. Armament was bolted direct to the frame: twin minigun pods on one, a rack of micro-missiles on another, an EMP projector the size of a fire extinguisher on the third. They were absurd, dangerous, and looked like they’d been welded together in a sub hangar by someone with more genius than self-preservation instinct. They had. Captain Flipside’s mad engineer had been working on them for six months.
“Meet the *Gnats*,” Harpy said. “Electric turbines, silent to sixty decibels, folding rotors for storage. They can fit in a standard shipping container, a drainage culvert, a dead van, whatever tiny hole we shove them into. Your money bought the weapons packages. Your job, if you’re willing, is to ride shotgun.”
Jax looked at the machines, at the blackened muzzles, at the pulse racing in his own throat. He’d never flown anything heavier than a board. But the corps had been cracking down on the waterfront neighborhoods, drone patrols harassing his crew, confiscating their merch, beating the street-level dealers with shock-batons. He was tired of running. “What’s the target?”
Harpy pulled up a tactical AR overlay. The Tokyo Metropolitan Corporate Security Bureau had scrambled eighteen Raptor-class hunter-seeker drones into the bay area. They were hunting for the rooftop repeaters that still fed the broadcast. The drones had already found three nodes and fried them with precision microwave bursts. If they located a few more, the whole daisy-chain would collapse, and the Thursday Warm Up would fall silent for the first time in three years.
“We hit them,” Harpy said. “The Gnats go airborne from six separate launch points, converge on the drone swarm, and shred as many as we can before the corp response goes nuclear. Then we scatter and hide. The machines are small enough to land on a rooftop and fold into something the size of a dumpster. They’ll never find them.”
“How long until the Bay Police lose their minds?”
“Figure seventy seconds after the first shot. The coast guard cutters have reaction times around two minutes, but they’re still dealing with the *Gloomraker* ghosts we planted. You’ll have a window. You in?”
Jax looked at his crew. A lanky blade-girl named Switch, a troll built like a forklift who answered to Thud, and a rigger-wannabe kid called Spindle who’d already climbed into one of the Gnats and was stroking the throttle with the reverence of a monk. They all nodded. “We’re in.”
---
They launched from the smallest possible places. Jax’s Gnat folded out of a rusted dumpster behind a soy-protein factory in Shinagawa, its rotors unfolding like a mantis’s arms. Switch popped out of a sewage maintenance culvert near Odaiba, her craft’s skids scraping the slime. Thud unfolded his from inside an abandoned mag-train maintenance closet in the bowels of Tokyo Teleport Station. Spindle, the only one with a rigger jack, synced directly from a flooded merchant sub pen, his Gnat dripping seawater as it climbed. Six attack craft, each the size of a heavy motorcycle, joining the night sky in a silent, deadly formation.
The corp drone swarm was clustered over Koto ward, their searchlights lancing down into alleyways, hunting a repeater node that was tucked inside a fake air-conditioning unit on a love hotel roof. The drones had already crippled four other nodes. The broadcast crackled with static, Raveena’s voice cutting in and out, the beat stuttering like a wounded heart.
Jax armed the miniguns. The targeting system was crude—a crosshair painted on his visor, slaved to his head movements—but at close range, it would do. “Neon Ghosts, on me. We hit the centre cluster, break their formation, then peel off before the cutters arrive.”
The Gnats descended like hornets.
Jax’s opening burst chewed through a Raptor’s tail rotor, sending it spinning into a warehouse wall in a shower of sparks. Switch fired her EMP projector, frying two drones at once, their systems fritzing into dead silicon as they plummeted. Thud’s missiles streaked out—micro-sized, barely as long as a forearm—but they hit with a shaped charge that blew a Raptor clean in half. Spindle, jacked in, was a blur, his Gnat spinning and strafing with impossible precision, miniguns shredding drone after drone while he laughed like a man possessed by the machine.
The swarm broke. The surviving drones scattered, their attack algorithms confused by enemies that moved like angry insects, too small to target with standard countermeasures. In thirty seconds, the Gnats had downed eleven of the eighteen Raptors. The repeater node on the love hotel roof kept broadcasting, the bassline steadying.
Then the corporate response kicked in.
Alarms screamed across the bay. A coast guard cutter, already on high alert from the earlier chaos, turned its VLS missile tubes toward the city. A Saeder-Krupp rapid-response VTOL launched from the Arasaka Prime Spire, its railguns charging. The Tokyo Metropolitan Corporate Security Bureau declared a Tier Three airspace violation and scrambled a dozen more combat drones, these ones armed with anti-air fragmentation missiles. The full madness was seventy-two seconds out.
Harpy’s voice cut through the comms. “Window’s closing. Ghost to the nearest hide—NOW.”
Jax yanked his Gnat into a steep dive, rotors screaming, pulling up so close to the water that spray kissed his face. He aimed for a stormwater outflow beneath the Koto bridge, a concrete maw just wide enough for the Gnat’s folded rotor diameter. The craft slid inside, scraping its skids on both walls, and Jax killed the turbine just as magnetic clamps locked it to the ceiling. From outside, it looked like just another piece of urban detritus in a drainage pipe. Switch folded her Gnat into a shipping container full of scrap electronics, slamming the doors behind her. Thud dropped into an abandoned subway ventilation shaft, his Gnat’s thermal signature blending with a geothermal vent. Spindle, still laughing, ditched his craft in a pile of derelict bikes behind a scrapyard and was walking away, casual as hell, before the first VTOL screamed overhead.
The corporate forces arrived to a scene of wreckage: eleven downed drones, burning debris, and absolutely no sign of the attackers. The Thursday Warm Up broadcast, which had faltered for a terrifying ten seconds, roared back to full strength as Spindle’s cached repeater node took over. Raveena’s voice poured out of speakers across Tokyo, triumphant, taunting, utterly unkillable.
Executor Tanaka, watching from his spire, broke an actual whiskey glass in his hand. The bay police, the coast guard, the corporate security divisions—they went fully mad. They cordoned off entire blocks, ran DNA swabs on the debris, launched a house-to-house search in six wards. They found nothing but shadows and the fading echo of a six-rotor hum.
The Gnats had disappeared into the city’s smallest cracks, alongside the skater crew that flew them. In the weeks to come, that night’s counter-attack would become street legend: the Night of the Swarming Gnats, when a bunch of board-riding street kids kicked the corps square in the teeth and vanished before the boot came down. The physical art kept selling—the hand-painted vinyl, the bullet-casing cassettes, the shatter-chips—their value only skyrocketing now that the buyers knew their money bought actual, audible defiance. The Wave Syndicate grew stronger, its rhythms shaking the foundations of the corporate towers, its pilots and skaters and technoshamans a family bound by basslines and vengeance.
And the next Thursday, when Raveena Cipher’s voice crackled to life over the airwaves, she opened the show with a single line, spoken over a beat so heavy it rattled the fillings of every executive in the city:
*“This one’s for the Ghosts. Spin it loud.”*




