Wiki:General disclaimer: Difference between revisions
Appearance
Created page with "'''''UNIVER.SYS'' is a work of fiction, and is not intended to portray computing history in a comprehensive or accurate way, as the project is influenced by the author's personal interests, nor it was made to replace or compete with similar concepts related to computing personifications.''' This project used a significant amount of artistic licenses, and as such, expect some historical details or events to be altered or omitted in ''UNIVER.SYS''. Certain examples includ..." |
mNo edit summary |
||
(One intermediate revision by the same user not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
'''''UNIVER.SYS'' is a work of fiction | '''''UNIVER.SYS'' is a work of fiction and does not aim to portray computing history comprehensively or accurately. The project reflects the author's personal interests and is not meant to replace or compete with other computing personification concepts.''' | ||
The project takes creative liberties with historical details and events. For example, a single Techne may represent an entire line of operating systems, while Techne representations based on particularly controversial technologies, or those with overwhelmingly negative reputations, are intentionally omitted from the setting. These choices help streamline the project, reduce redundancy, and maintain the setting's lighter tone. |
Latest revision as of 13:05, 16 April 2025
UNIVER.SYS is a work of fiction and does not aim to portray computing history comprehensively or accurately. The project reflects the author's personal interests and is not meant to replace or compete with other computing personification concepts.
The project takes creative liberties with historical details and events. For example, a single Techne may represent an entire line of operating systems, while Techne representations based on particularly controversial technologies, or those with overwhelmingly negative reputations, are intentionally omitted from the setting. These choices help streamline the project, reduce redundancy, and maintain the setting's lighter tone.