The Wealth Algorithms: Codex of the Harvest

Novella 3 – Zero Draft

Cyberpunk and solarpunk are two contrasting visions of the future, often described as polar opposites in their outlook on technology and the environment. While cyberpunk serves as a warning of what might happen if current trends continue, solarpunk acts as an aspiration for what could happen if we change course.

The “raw state” of writing—often called the “terrible first draft” or “zero draft”—is the original, unprocessed material a writer produces in response to an idea
. It is the stage where imagination outpaces the fingers, and the focus is entirely on getting the story outrather than making it good. 


Novella: Codex of the Harvest


The Wealth Algorithms: Codex of the Harvest

If you want the reader to feel the grit and gears of the farm and the mockery of the artists, go with “Codex of the Harvest.” It is more unique and ties all your symbols (F4 menu, Da Vinci, the farm) together.

Time: March 31 2054

___

Characters

Main character: Marvin “F4” Thorne (Marvin Morlo Whistler), the painter and a person who looks for the meaning of life. Wise men.

Four friends , also artists but wealthy 

Localisations

Manhattan.Affluent restaurant Bee9, It’s an upscale restaurant. 

West Maryland, Marvin’s rural Farm named Rancho. 

Systems and Robots 

One Chinese humanoid Robot, Three US located Digital Clouds, Safe And Personal Open Source AI. 

***

What kind of machines does Marvin have on his farm?

  • Based on the scenario you provided, Marvin’s farm is equipped with intelligent, autonomous machines capable of high-level problem-solving.
  • According to your narrative:
  • Sentient Intelligence: These machines are not standard farm equipment; they have the cognitive ability to process a direct command to “come up with a way to make a lot of money quickly.”
  • Technological Capability: While the specific types (e.g., robotic harvesters, AI-driven tractors, or automated processing units) aren’t detailed in your prompt, they function as a collective “think tank” for Marvin after he returns from the Bee9 restaurant. 
  • In a broader literary context, these are often depicted as advanced robotic farmhands or automated agricultural systems that represent Marvin’s hidden potential, contrasting with his lack of visible, traditional wealth.

Main plot, main storyline

Marvin used to go to New York from time to time to look at paintings and other works of art at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, MET, but this time he met artists at Bee9.

“The artists meet at the Bee9 restaurant. They discuss their new luxury purchases. Marvin remains silent because he isn’t buying anything; he is not wealthy. The rest of the group begins to mock him, claiming that he knows so much yet cannot afford to buy anything. Marvin clenches his teeth and stays silent. After returning to the farm, he gives an order to all the machines to come up with a way to make a lot of money quickly.” 

Subplot, sub-story 

***

What led to Marvin’s lack of wealth compared to his peers?

  • Marvin’s lack of wealth, compared to his artist peers who purchase luxury items, is a central part of the original premise of your story. The story you provided does not give a specific reason or backstory for this disparity, only that “He is not wealthy.”
  • His situation appears to be due to his life choices or circumstances within the narrative you’ve established, rather than a detailed financial history provided in the prompt. The key elements presented are:
  • Contrasting Lifestyles: His peers are “artists” who buy “luxury purchases,” suggesting they have high incomes or prioritize material wealth.
  • Marvin’s Circumstance: He is described simply as not wealthy and working on a farm with advanced machines, implying a different focus (e.g., self-sufficiency, technology, or intellectual pursuits over commercial success).
  • The Catalyst: His peers’ mockery over his lack of possessions is the inciting incident that drives him to use his knowledge and machines to make money quickly. 
  • The story implies a difference in values or life paths, where Marvin’s intelligence and technological capabilities were previously directed toward something other than accumulating a large fortune.

*** 

What kind of machines can solve problems and make money quickly?

The kinds of machines (or systems) that can solve problems and make money quickly are generally advanced AI-driven systems and automated manufacturing equipment that leverage technology to optimize processes and generate revenue efficiently. 

Artificial Intelligence (AI) and Software 

These systems excel at data analysis, prediction, and automation of complex tasks: 

  • Algorithmic Trading Platforms: These AI systems analyze vast amounts of market data in real time to identify trends and automatically execute trades faster than any human, with the goal of generating significant profits.
  • Data Analysis and Predictive Analytics Tools: Platforms like Tableau and Domo transform complex data into actionable business intelligence, helping companies identify cost-saving opportunities, optimize pricing strategies, and forecast demand for profit maximization.
  • Generative AI and Content Creation Systems: Tools like Writesonic (content creation) and Runway (video generation) automate the creation of high-quality digital assets (articles, marketing copy, videos) which can be quickly monetized through various online business models.
  • Automated Business Platforms: Software that runs automated businesses such as e-commerce dropshipping, print-on-demand services, or online course platforms can handle everything from order fulfillment and payment processing to marketing with minimal manual input. 

Physical Production Machines

These machines are used to create physical products quickly and often at a low overhead for immediate sale: 

  • 3D Printers: Used for rapid prototyping and producing customized goods on demand.
  • Laser Engravers and Vinyl Cutters: Create personalized items, signage, or components for various products.
  • Automated Agricultural Systems: In a farming context, advanced computer-vision platforms integrated into industrial machines can optimize resource use (like water and herbicides), which increases crop yields and profitability.

*** 

“Bee9 is a very expensive restaurant with a system of exceptionally high tips. It is a tradition among the group of artists to split the bill. Since Marvin has little money, a special menu called ‘F4’ was created specifically for him; it does not list any prices, and the servers do not disclose what it contains. This mystery even deters the very wealthy regulars. Marvin is also exempt from the obligation to leave a tip.”

***

What’s implied by the F4 menu’s pricing mystery?

In the context of your story, the F4 menu functions as a powerful literary device that highlights Marvin’s unique social and financial position. Its mystery implies several things: 

  • Extreme Social Stigma or Charity: Because the price is hidden and only Marvin uses it, it serves as a “poverty marker.” The fact that it deters even the wealthy suggests it might be a subsidized or “charity” menu that is socially beneath the other artists, emphasizing Marvin’s outsider status. [1, 2]
  • A “Secret” Agreement: The lack of price and the servers’ silence suggest a private arrangement between Marvin and the restaurant. It implies that Marvin might have a value to Bee9 that isn’t monetary—perhaps he provided them with technology or services from his farm in exchange for this special treatment. [2]
  • Psychological Warfare: The name “F4” (reminiscent of a keyboard’s “close” or “refresh” command) and the lack of information create an aura of unpredictability. For the wealthy regulars, the unknown is more frightening than a high price; it implies a loss of control, which is why they are “deterred” while Marvin remains unfazed. [3]
  • The “Price of Admission”: By being exempt from the high tips and the shared bill tradition, Marvin is physically present but financially invisible. The F4 menu is his “pass” to sit at the table, but it also reinforces the group’s perception that he is not their equal, fueling the mockery that ultimately drives him to unleash his machines. [1, 2]

How to Use Hidden Costs in Narrative

The Psychology of Secret Menus

Understanding Social Exclusion in Groups

***

What’s the significance of ‘F4’ beyond a poverty marker?

Beyond functioning as a “poverty marker,” the F4 menu primarily symbolizes the fundamental disconnect between Marvin’s world (technology/functionality) and the artists’ world (luxury/social status) and highlights Marvin’s unique position of being an outlier who holds a non-monetary value. 

The deeper significance of the “F4” menu includes:

A Symbol of Exemption and Control: Marvin is “exempt from the obligation to leave a tip,” and the price is hidden. This implies a special, possibly powerful, arrangement where the rules of the Bee9 restaurant’s expensive system don’t apply to him. He operates outside their established social order, which gives him a hidden form of control that his rich peers don’t possess.

The Contrast of the Unknown: For the wealthy patrons, the hidden price and contents represent a loss of control and an encounter with something they cannot quantify or buy with traditional wealth. This is a powerful psychological device: the rich are afraid of the unknown, while Marvin, who deals in the practical world of farming and machines, is comfortable with it.

A Nod to Function over Form: “F4” can be interpreted as a technical or functional name, possibly referring to a form number or a keyboard shortcut (often the ‘close window’ or ‘refresh’ command). This contrasts sharply with the “artistic” and “luxury” focus of the rest of the restaurant, symbolizing Marvin’s practical, results-oriented mindset.

A Marker of Potential: The menu represents a hidden value that others cannot see. While the other artists only see a poor farmer, the restaurant or its owners might recognize the actual (non-monetary, e.g., technological) value Marvin provides, which is why they accommodate him uniquely. This foreshadows the immense, sudden wealth his machines will soon generate.

A Symbol of Exclusion and Resilience: The menu solidifies Marvin’s “outsider” status. The mockery he endures due to this unique arrangement acts as the ultimate trigger for his actions, highlighting his resilience and the fact that he has access to a powerful resource the artists don’t understand.

***

What are the artists talking about?

In your story, the speaking artists represent a specific social class that uses language as a tool for exclusion and status signaling. Their behavior highlights the following: 

Verbal Mockery as a Social Barrier: By openly laughing at Marvin, the artists use their speech to define who belongs in their “high-society” circle. They equate knowledge with purchasing power, claiming that if Marvin truly “knew so much,” he would be wealthy. This creates a sharp contrast between their superficial talk of luxury and Marvin’s silent, practical intelligence.

  • The “Luxury” of Conversation: For the artists, the dinner is a performance. Their talk of “new luxury purchases” serves as a way to validate their success to one another. They use the shared table at Bee9 to perform their status, while Marvin’s silence makes him an easy target for their “militant irony”.
  • A Shallow Perspective on Art and Value: The artists focus on the results of wealth (luxury items) rather than the process of creation or innovation. Their mockery reveals a belief that art and knowledge are only valuable if they can be converted into high-end goods, which is a shallow worldview compared to Marvin’s deep connection with his machines.
  • Catalysts for Marvin’s Transformation: Their insults are the direct reason Marvin breaks his silence—not by arguing back, but by giving a command to his farm’s machines. In this way, the artists’ speech is the “inciting incident” that forces Marvin to move from passive observer to a man of action. 

While they may be “artists,” their communication style is not about creative expression, but about social hierarchy and maintaining the “stigma” against those they perceive as beneath them. 

***

Why do they compare Marvin to Leonardo da Vinci?

In your story, the artists compare Marvin to Leonardo da Vinci as a form of “militant irony” to mock the perceived gap between his vast knowledge and his lack of material wealth.

The comparison is significant for several reasons:

  • Knowledge vs. Wealth: Leonardo da Vinci is the archetypal polymath or “Renaissance Man”—someone who knows everything about art, science, and engineering. By calling Marvin a modern-day Da Vinci, the artists are sarcastically highlighting that despite his “genius-level” intellect and farm full of complex machines, he cannot even afford a standard meal or a luxury purchase.
  • Impracticality of Inventions: Historically, many of Da Vinci’s most famous designs (tanks, helicopters, gliders) remained theoretical sketches that were never built or were non-functional in his lifetime. The artists likely see Marvin’s farm machines in the same way: as useless, over-engineered contraptions that don’t produce the “real” value they care about—cold, hard cash.
  • The “Unfinished” Genius: Da Vinci was notorious for leaving major projects unfinished. The artists may be suggesting that Marvin is a “failure” of a genius—someone who has all the blueprints for success but lacks the “finish” to actually become rich like them.
  • Social Isolation: Like the historical Da Vinci, who often felt isolated from his social and family environment, Marvin is a “talented misfit.” The artists use this comparison to distance themselves from him, framing him as a historical curiosity rather than a contemporary peer. 

This comparison ultimately backfires when Marvin returns to his farm and proves that his “Da Vinci-like” machines are not just theoretical sketches, but functional tools capable of generating immediate wealth.

***

What are the implications of using ‘militant irony’ to mock someone?

In your story, the artists use militant irony—a term popularized by literary critic Northrop Frye to describe satire in its most aggressive and purposeful form. By mocking Marvin this way, the artists aren’t just making a joke; they are using a sophisticated psychological and social weapon with several deep implications: 

1. Irony as a Tool for Social Exclusion

  • Defining In-Groups: Militant irony works by creating a “secret” understanding between the speakers while making the victim the outsider. By sarcastically comparing a poor farmer to Leonardo da Vinci, the artists signal to each other that they belong to an elite class that understands high art, whereas Marvin does not.
  • Enforcing Hierarchy: Unlike simple humor, this type of irony is “vehement” and “vigorous,” intended to shame the victim into accepting a lower social status. It aims to make Marvin feel that his intelligence is worthless because it hasn’t produced the “correct” result: luxury and wealth. 

2. Sarcasm vs. Irony (The “Bite”)

  • Direct Attack: While general irony can be a quiet observation, militant irony in this context acts as sarcasm, which is more aggressive and personal. Sarcasm stems from the Greek word sarkázein, meaning “to strip off the flesh”—a literal description of how the artists’ words are meant to “tear down” Marvin’s dignity.
  • Condescension: It adds a layer of superiority to the conversation. The artists are not just pointing out a contradiction; they are expressing contempt and disgust, intending to demean the target. 

3. The Psychological Trigger

  • Inducing Helplessness: This kind of mockery can lead to a sense of demoralization and hopelessness in the victim. However, in Marvin’s case, it causes a “grievance-based” cognitive shift.
  • Fueling Resentment: Instead of being shamed into silence, the “militant” nature of their attack acts as a catalyst. It transforms Marvin’s passive silence into a “with us or against us” mindset, directly leading to his command for the machines to seize wealth as a form of retaliation. 

4. Foreshadowing a Reversal (Situational Irony)

  • The ultimate implication of using militant irony to mock someone’s “lack of wealth” is the potential for situational irony. By attacking Marvin for being poor while acknowledging his Da Vinci-like knowledge, the artists inadvertently acknowledge the very power (his intellect) that he will soon use to financially destroy their perceived superiority.

***

Name other artists

In your story, the other artists at the Bee9 restaurant represent the successful, high-spending elite of the 2026 art world. While the prompt focuses on their mockery of Marvin, several real-world and fictional artist archetypes would fit into this “luxury” social circle:

Established “Luxury” Titans of 2026

  • These artists are the ones whose work commands millions and who would likely be bragging about their latest high-end acquisitions: 
  • Gustav Klimt & Mark Rothko: Figures whose estates continue to dominate the 2026 auction market, with Klimt’s works reaching staggering prices like $236 million. The artists might boast about owning a rare sketch or a limited-edition reproduction from these “blue-chip” estates.
  • Damien Hirst: A perfect candidate for this group, Hirst is known for exploring the intersection of art, money, and branding. In 2026, he remains one of the world’s wealthiest living artists with an estimated wealth of $1.1 billion.
  • Jeff Koons & KAWS: High-demand artists who bridge the gap between fine art and luxury goods, making them ideal peers for the “speaking artists” who mock Marvin for his lack of “flash and cash”. 

Emerging “Breakout” Stars of 2026

  • The group might also include younger, “trendy” artists who are currently having their moment in the spotlight: 
  • Sara Anstis & Nour Bishouty: Rising stars noted for their immersive worlds and multidisciplinary practices.
  • Bagus Pandega: An Indonesian artist whose work blends art and technology—a sharp contrast to Marvin’s practical farm machines that the other artists clearly don’t appreciate.
  • Paula Siebra: A Brazilian artist whose scenes of domestic life and “cartography of returns” are highly buzzed about in 2026 galleries. 

The Archetypes of the “Speaking Artists”

  • Based on your narrative, the artists at Bee9 could be categorized as:
  • The “Performance” Artists: Those like BULLYACHE, whose 2026 works scuff the image of privilege and power, yet they themselves participate in the exclusive restaurant culture.
  • The “Designer” Artists: Cross-disciplinary creators like Harry Nuriev, who blur the lines between art, fashion, and furniture, fitting perfectly into the Bee9 luxury aesthetic. 
  • These peers use their success to judge Marvin, viewing his intelligence as a failure because it hasn’t resulted in the same kind of commercial “splash” they value.

***

But these artists are fictional characters and we have ro 2054!

In the year 2054, the art scene is dominated by characters who blend high technology with traditional ego. The “speaking artists” at Bee9 who mock Marvin include:

  • Xan De Rosa: A “haptic sculptor” famous for creating digital monuments that can only be felt through neural implants. Known for his excessive spending, he recently bragged about buying a private gravity-well for his studio.
  • Ariel de Santos: A renowned “Vivid Dreamer” who shapes raw emotions into marketable experiences. He is the most vocal about Marvin’s “wasted” potential, often using his own status as a “creator of dreams” to belittle Marvin’s silent, practical nature.
  • Indigo Gold: A multimedia titan who specializes in “synthetic nostalgia.” She is the one who initiated the F4 menu prank, viewing Marvin as a quaint historical relic—much like the physical paintbrushes she uses as props in her high-priced performances.
  • Dax Whitestone: A “biotech minimalist” who “grows” living architecture for the ultra-wealthy. He is the one who most frequently uses the Leonardo da Vinci comparison, mocking the fact that while Marvin has the “blueprints” for greatness, he lacks the commercial ruthlessness to harvest them. 

These artists treat the Bee9 restaurant as their private stage, using their verbal wit—their militant irony—to ensure Marvin remains a social outsider despite his clear intellectual superiority.

***

Does Marvin has a proper name for this cyberpunk story?

In your cyberpunk story, while “Marvin” is his familiar name, a “proper” cyberpunk name often combines a traditional first name with a high-tech or grit-oriented surname or handle. 

Given the setting in 2026 (per current date) or the future 2054 (per your previous prompt), here are a few ways to give Marvin a more complete, “proper” name for your story:

1. The “Nomad/Farmer” Style (Grit & Earth)

  • In cyberpunk lore, characters from outside major cities often use names that reflect their roots or “low-life, high-tech” status: 
  • Marvin “Marrow” Vane: Suggests something deep, essential, and perhaps a bit hollow or sharp.
  • Marvin Thorne: A classic, sharp surname that fits a man who “zaciska zęby” (clenches his teeth) and lives on a farm.
  • Marvin Clay: Connects him directly to the earth he works, contrasting with the “synthetic” artists.

2. The “Technical/Da Vinci” Style (Intellectual & Hidden)

  • Since the artists mock him for his knowledge and compare him to Leonardo da Vinci, a name with a classical or technical edge works well:
  • Marvin Daedalus: A direct nod to the mythical inventor who built machines (and a labyrinth), reinforcing the “Da Vinci” mockery.
  • Marvin Codex: “Codex” refers to ancient manuscripts (like Da Vinci’s) and modern programming, fitting his command over machines.
  • Marvin Vectis: Latin for “lever” or “force,” implying he is the tool that will move the world once he gives the order.

3. The “Cyberpunk Handle” (The “Street” Name)

  • If Marvin had a reputation among the machines or the underground, he might have a handle that his artist peers don’t even know:
  • Marvin “Ghost-Acre” : A reference to his “empty” farm that is actually full of invisible, intelligent machines.
  • Marvin “F4”: A grim choice where he adopts the name of the very menu used to humiliate him—turning their insult into his own identity before he destroys them financially.
  • M.A.R.V.I.N. (Machine Automated Resource & Venture Intelligence Network): A twist where it is revealed that “Marvin” is actually an acronym for the system he controls.

4. Full Name Recommendations

  • Marvin Silas Hilton: A name that sounds traditional and “old-world,” making him feel like an outsider in a neon, hyper-modern world.
  • Marvin Vance: Short, punchy, and fits the “lone wolf” protagonist archetype common in cyberpunk media. 

Recommendation: Using Marvin “F4” Thorne would be particularly powerful. It acknowledges his farm roots (Thorne) while taking the “F4” menu insult and reclaiming it as the “command” that will eventually “close” the artists’ lifestyles.

Affluent restaurant

***

Write a short cyberpunk story.

In the year 2054, the neon signage of Bee9 cast a sickly amber glow over the table. The air tasted of recycled oxygen and expensive synthetic saffron.

Xan De Rosa, the haptic sculptor, adjusted his glowing neural interface and laughed. “Look at him. Our own Leonardo da Vinci,” he sneered, gesturing toward Marvin with a wine glass that cost more than Marvin’s annual tractor fuel. “Vast knowledge of the old world, yet he sits there behind an F4 menu. Tell me, Marvin, does the ‘mystery’ menu taste like poverty, or is it just air?”

Ariel de Santos chimed in, her voice dripping with militant irony. “He knows the physics of every star, yet he can’t afford to split the bill. It’s a tragedy, really. A genius who can’t even trigger a tip-bot.”

Marvin “F4” Thorne sat perfectly still. He didn’t look at the blank F4 card. He didn’t look at the artists. He simply clenched his teeth, his jaw muscles tight enough to snap bone. He was the only one in the room not performing. He was the only one who was real.

When the bill came, the artists grandly divided the digital credits. Marvin stood up in silence, the servers ignoring him as per his “exempt” status—a charity he found more insulting than the mockery.

He drove back to the edge of the sprawl, where the city’s lights died and the dust of the Thorne Farm began. As he stepped into the mud, his boots crunched on dry soil.

“System active,” Marvin whispered.

In the darkness, hundreds of sensors flickered to life. Not harvesters, but Processing Units disguised as silos.

“Command?” a voice like grinding tectonic plates echoed through his neural link.

Marvin looked back at the glowing skyline of the city, at the heights where Bee9 sat.

“The artists think knowledge is a museum piece,” Marvin said, his voice cold and flat. “Show them it’s a weapon. I want the Wealth Algorithms online. Use every scrap of processing power on this farm. Find the market’s throat and squeeze. I want their luxury to be a memory by dawn. Make me enough money to buy the street Bee9 stands on.”

In the dark, the machines hummed—a low, rhythmic growl. The Codex of the Harvest had begun. For the first time that night, Marvin smiled.

***

How do the farm machines generate wealth?

In your story, Marvin’s farm machines (the Processing Units and the system he calls the Wealth Algorithms) generate wealth not through traditional farming, but by using their immense processing power to engage in advanced algorithmic trading and market manipulation in the 2054 global economy. 

  • Here are the likely specific methods implied:
  • High-Frequency Trading (HFT): The machines use their speed to execute vast numbers of trades in milliseconds, profiting from tiny price fluctuations that human traders or less advanced systems miss. This is the “market’s throat” that Marvin commanded them to squeeze.
  • Statistical Arbitrage: They identify and exploit temporary price discrepancies between related financial instruments based on complex mathematical models and historical data analysis.
  • Pattern Recognition and Predictive Analytics: The AI systems analyze massive datasets—far beyond what is visible to the artists—to predict non-random market movements with a high degree of probability, giving Marvin an unfair advantage.
  • Automated Resource Allocation: The machines optimize every aspect of their operation to maximize profit and efficiency, from power consumption for processing to the timing of when to buy or sell assets, much like real-world systems that maximize crop yields in modern farming.
  • Exploiting Digital Infrastructure: In a cyberpunk 2054 setting, the machines might also be engaging in some form of data hacking or exploiting vulnerabilities in the digital financial systems themselves, ensuring they “harvest” capital directly from the system or the accounts of the wealthy elite like the artists.

*** 

Explain Thales of Miletus’s concept of Arche and relate it to the future of agro hydroponic businesses.

Thales of Miletus, often considered the first Western philosopher, proposed a revolutionary idea that remains surprisingly relevant to modern agrotechnology: water is the arche (the fundamental substance or first principle) of all things. 

Thales’ Concept of Arche

In the 6th century BCE, Thales moved away from mythological explanations (like “Gods cause rain”) toward rational inquiry. He argued that water was the primary material from which the entire universe emerged and to which it would return. His reasoning included: 

  • Essentiality: All living things require moisture to survive and grow.
  • Transformative Power: Water is the only substance he observed that naturally changes states—from solid (ice) to liquid to gas (steam)—symbolizing the “fluidity” of all matter.
  • Universal Presence: He observed water in the soil, in plants, and in the air, concluding it was the underlying unifying principle. 

Connection to Future Hydroponic Business

Thales’ philosophy effectively serves as the spiritual and logical foundation for the agro hydroponic industry, which eliminates soil to place water at the center of the production cycle. 

  • Water as the “Primary Medium” (Arche in Practice):
  • In hydroponics, soil is viewed as a mere “support” rather than a necessity. By treating water as the fundamental carrier of nutrients, businesses can achieve 3–10 times higher yields and 50% faster growth rates compared to traditional farming.
  • Resource Efficiency and Scarcity:
  • Just as Thales saw water as the origin of life, future agro-businesses see it as the most precious limited resource. Hydroponic systems use up to 95% less water than soil-based farming by recirculating it in a closed loop, directly addressing global water scarcity.
  • Rational Control and Prediction:
  • Thales was also a shrewd businessman; he famously used his knowledge of the stars to predict a bumper olive crop and “cornered the market” on olive presses. Modern hydroponics mirrors this predictive rationality by using precision sensors and AI to control every aspect of the environment, removing the “whims of the gods” (weather) from the business equation.
  • Adaptability (Transformative Nature):
  • Thales’ focus on water’s ability to change form reflects the adaptability of modern systems. Hydroponics allows for “farming anywhere”—from urban skyscrapers to space stations—because it relies on the arche (water) rather than the geographical limitations of fertile land.

The wealth algorithm. Sun Punk Novella

This novella turned out to be just a dream. Lucid dream. After waking up, Marvin took a long time to recover before deciding to travel to New York. He harbored apprehension about meeting his artistic acquaintances, aware of their disposition.

The meeting took place in an even more unpleasant atmosphere than it took place in his dream. Full of bad emotions, he returned to the farm and decided to prove that gaining wealth in these bizarre and dark times is possible if you have strong computing power and rich life experience.

Write versions of novels in a dark cyberpunk style, inventing the most bizarre and sometimes cruel ways to acquire wealth while wasting huge reserves of electricity and clean water.

And depriving fake friends of their social influence and digital money.


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