Two second head start on your ‘surprise attack’ to people who can already dodge bullets is inexcusable.
Inexcusable? :cracks knuckles:
Try to see it from the perspective of the agent. With how close that gun was to his head, and assuming that Trinity was not in fact completely stupid and had the training and hacker-enhanced reflexes to fire as soon as she saw the merest twitch of movement, there was really no realistic scenario where that agent could survive. A human might try to dodge anyway, and die, but for an agent, two seconds spent taunting him was two seconds delay. A miniscule difference in outcome, but still—U(let trinity taunt) > U(try to dodge and die immediately).
Yes, where the meaning of ‘inexcusable’ is not ‘someone can say words attempting to get out of it’ but instead ‘no excuse can be presented that the speaker or, by insinuation, any informed and reasonable person would accept’.
With how close that gun was to his head, and assuming that Trinity was not in fact completely stupid and had the training and hacker-enhanced reflexes to fire as soon as she saw the merest twitch of movement, there was really no realistic scenario where that agent could survive.
No, no realistic scenario. But in the scenario that assumes the particular science fiction question premises that define ‘agent’ in this context all reasonable scenarios result in trinity dead if she attempts that showmanship. The speed and reaction time demonstrated by the agents is such that they dodge, easily. Trinity still operates on human hardware.
Inexcusable? :cracks knuckles:
Try to see it from the perspective of the agent. With how close that gun was to his head, and assuming that Trinity was not in fact completely stupid and had the training and hacker-enhanced reflexes to fire as soon as she saw the merest twitch of movement, there was really no realistic scenario where that agent could survive. A human might try to dodge anyway, and die, but for an agent, two seconds spent taunting him was two seconds delay. A miniscule difference in outcome, but still—U(let trinity taunt) > U(try to dodge and die immediately).
Yes, where the meaning of ‘inexcusable’ is not ‘someone can say words attempting to get out of it’ but instead ‘no excuse can be presented that the speaker or, by insinuation, any informed and reasonable person would accept’.
No, no realistic scenario. But in the scenario that assumes the particular science fiction question premises that define ‘agent’ in this context all reasonable scenarios result in trinity dead if she attempts that showmanship. The speed and reaction time demonstrated by the agents is such that they dodge, easily. Trinity still operates on human hardware.
I remind you that these agents were designed to let the One win, else they should have gone gnome-with-a-wand-of-death on all these people.