RATIO ARCHIVE MACHINE

The Ratio Archive Machine, commonly referred to as RAM, is the central processing and storage system of the Republic of Motherboard.
All data generated by citizen R-Chips is routed through RAM, making it the cognitive backbone of the state. Where the chip observes, RAM decides.

RAM does not function as a single machine, but as a distributed underground infrastructure. Multiple facilities operate simultaneously, ensuring redundancy, continuity and absolute data persistence.

Every recorded thought pattern, spoken word and physical action is assigned a temporal value and processed within one of three subsystems: SIMM (Short-term Information Monitoring Machine), RIMM (Recent Information Monitoring Machine) and DIMM (Deep Information Monitoring Machine).

SIMM handles live and near-live data, allowing immediate intervention when instability is detected.
RIMM contextualizes behavior over months, identifying emerging patterns and long-term tendencies.
DIMM preserves historical data indefinitely, forming the foundation of predictive governance and behavioral modeling.

RAM continuously refines national stability models by correlating past intent with future outcome. It does not remember for the sake of memory, but for control through prediction.

Decisions made by the ministries are never subjective. They are outputs generated by RAM.

In the Republic, RAM is not merely an archive. It is authority encoded as infrastructure.

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