Jun 24, 2026

AI-generated Banner

"Manny" the bumpha and Tyhry.
One of my goals for 2026 was to make a new banner image for this blog. I had a discussion with Claude that began with me showing Claude the older version of the banner that I used from 2016 to 2026. As seen in the image to the right, somehow Claude invented an absurd concept for the appearance of Manny the bumpha (see the image that is shown to the right on this page →).

Me:  Claude, process the image that I uploaded. That image is the banner for my blog which I have been using since August 2016. I want to design a new banner before August 2026. Claude, the current banner includes images of Carl Sagan, Isaac Asimov and Jack Vance. In science fiction stories of the Exodemic Fictional Universe, Sagan, Asimov and Vance appear as characters, depicted as existing in past Realities and helping to create the universe as we know it. The scene in the banner takes place inside the Hierion Domain, but Sagan has been tricked into thinking that he is in Earth orbit. Behind Sagan is a diagram showing the strange attractors that represent some of the past Realities of our Reality Chain. The alien with blue skin can be thought of as being an alien such as Nyrtia, although the true appearance of the pek is not known. The blue alien is showing Sagan two different versions of history, one that was engineered by the IPX. In an alternate Reality, a group of Interventionists operating under the code designation "ZODIAC" has altered the historical timeline and caused Lincoln to be killed. Science fiction story teller Eddy Watson learned about these alternate Realities from information provided to him by Manny the bumpha. In the depicted scene of the banner, Sagan is holding a book that was written by one of Eddy's collaborators, Anney Fersoni. Also in the scene is a copy of a science fiction magazine (Amazing Stories) from the Ekcolir Reality, the Reality in which the science fiction genre was used by the bumpha to prepare Earth for first contact with aliens in the 1950s. Towards the right side of the banner, just below the view port, are a pair of tobacco plants. Nicotine plays a role in some Exodemic Fictional Universe stories as a way of modulating the activity of the femtobot endosymbiont that is inside every human being.

Old wikifiction blog banner from 2016.


Claude:  {the red text, below, is Claude's thought process}

Let me look at the image to understand the current banner, then help design a new one for JWS's blog refresh.

The user wants me to "process" the image — understand it, given the rich context. They haven't yet asked for a specific deliverable beyond "I want to design a new banner before August 2026." This is the start of a collaborative design task. Given the user preference: "if you notice that relevant information is missing from what I've shown you, then ask for that additional information" — and "never use pop-up widgets, ask in plain prose."

So my job: actually view the image carefully, confirm understanding, and then ask what's needed to move forward — e.g., what they want changed/kept in the new banner, dimensions/format, whether this is for an image-gen prompt (Flow/ImageFX) or a manual design, what aspect to update, etc.

Let me view the image first.

 Now I have a clear view. Let me note the elements: left figure (Sagan-like, brown jacket, gesturing at newspaper) with a colorful nebula/swirl graphic to his left (the "strange attractors" diagram presumably), holding a book "To Live Forever" with cover art. Two newspaper broadsheets "WASHINGTON ST..." headlines: one says "IPX" green check, "Lincoln Saved!" with image of Lincoln being saved; other says "ZODIAC", "Lincoln Shot!" with assassination image. Below, a magazine "AMAZING" (stories) partially visible. Blue-skinned alien woman with pointed ears, white-blonde hair, in dark studded crop top, standing center-right against dark window. Right side: a window/viewport showing Earth from orbit with bright sun, and solar panel-like structures; below the viewport, two tobacco plants with pink flowers on a reddish/maroon platform.

Good, this matches the user's description. Now I should confirm understanding and ask clarifying questions about what's missing for the redesign task — what they want different in the new banner, format/dimensions, whether they want Vance included visibly (mentioned but I don't see him in image — wait the description says "current banner includes images of Carl Sagan, Isaac Asimov and Jack Vance" but in the image I only see one human figure (presumably Sagan) and not clearly Asimov or Vance. Let me look again — maybe Asimov and Vance are depicted elsewhere or it's just the single figure. Actually the description says current banner includes all three, but the image only shows one human-presenting figure. This is a discrepancy — relevant missing info! I should ask about this since the preference explicitly says to flag missing/inconsistent info.

Also good to ask: what dimensions does the new banner need (blog platform width/height), is this for Flow/ImageFX prompt generation, what new elements they want to add/change, and whether the goal is just a text-to-image prompt or actual image editing here.

Many thanks to Miranda Hedman 
(www.mirish.deviantart.com)
for the DeviantArt stock
photograph "Black Cat 9 - stock".
 {The blue text, blow, is Claude's actual reply} 

I can see the banner clearly now, and it matches most of what you've described:

  • Left: A man in a tan jacket (gesturing toward the newsstand displays) standing near a colorful nebula/swirl graphic — presumably the strange-attractor diagram of past Realities — holding a book titled To Live Forever (Anney Fersoni's book), with an Amazing Stories magazine cover visible on the table below.
  • Center-left: Two broadsheet front pages side by side — one marked "IPX" with a green checkmark, headline "Lincoln Saved!", and one marked "ZODIAC," headline "Lincoln Shot!" — showing the two divergent Reality outcomes.
  • Center-right: The blue-skinned, white-haired alien (your pek/Nyrtia-type figure) in the dark studded outfit.
  • Right: A viewport showing Earth from orbit with a bright sun, plus what reads as solar-panel-like paneling, and below it two tobacco plants with pink flowers on a maroon platform.

Amazing Asimov.
This is Vance.
 One thing I want to flag before we go further: you mentioned the current banner includes Sagan, Asimov, and Vance, but I only see one human figure in the image — the man in the tan jacket. I don't see two additional human figures anywhere in the frame. Could you clarify — were Asimov and Vance meant to be in this banner and got cropped out at some point, or were they never actually included and that's a detail to add new? I want to make sure I'm not missing two figures in the image versus the concept just including them in the broader sense.

 Also, to scope the redesign properly, it'd help to know:

  1. What's prompting the refresh — is the current banner's art not working for you, or do you want to update the content/lore it depicts (e.g., swap in new EFU elements that have developed since 2016)?
  2. What are the target dimensions/aspect ratio for the new banner (is it the same wide letterbox shape, or does your blog platform need something different)?
  3. Is the end goal here a Flow/ImageFX text-to-image prompt (a single AI-generated image), or do you want something assembled/collaged like this one appears to be, or a Claude-built graphic (SVG/HTML)?

Me: The images of Vance and Asimov that are present in the banner are very small, so I'm not surprised that they escaped your attention. Vance is on the cover of the novel "To Live Forever" (Anney Fersoni's book). Asimov is on the cover of the Amazing Stories magazine. As for what is prompting the banner refresh, there is a combination of forces at work: 1) for the past three years I have been experimenting with text-to-image software for making AI-generated images. Also, I have no training in how to design a banner and I hope that an AI such as the Claude LLM might be able to help me make an interesting banner. So, first of all, I want to use AI tools to help make a new banner, 2) there have been many additions to the Exodemic Fictional Universe in the past 10 years and it would be fun to include some newer plot elements and characters in the new banner, 3) I have an obsession with numbers and the feeling that 10 years (2016 - 2026) of using the same banner is simply long enough. It is time for a change, and if I do not make the change now, I may never do it. 

Nano Banana self-portrait.
I have no idea if Google's Blogger blogging service has changed the suggested dimensions for banners. The current banner is 992 x 253 pixels and seems to work well with the Blogger 'theme' that I use for my blog. I'm not confident that I could get a usable banner image from an AI with a single text prompt, although Google's Flow (which uses Nano Banana 2) is quite good at generating complex images from long and detailed text prompts. More likely would be using PhotoShop to stitch together parts from several AI-generated images.

Claude:  {the red text, below, is Claude's thought process} Let me check Blogger's current banner dimension recommendations via web search since this could have changed.

Also, I should think about the real person depiction issue: Vance, Asimov, Sagan are real public figures. If they want AI-generated images depicting these real people on book/magazine covers, that's an image generation consideration. Flow/Nano Banana 2 are external tools not under my purview directly, but if user asks ME to write text prompts for Flow that depict real, identifiable people, I should consider: the policy says "Claude avoids... persuasive content that attributes fictional quotes to real public figures" and for image generation, real identifiable people are flagged in the visualizer content safety section but that's for Claude's own SVG/HTML visualizer tool, not for crafting text prompts for external tools. However there's also general guidance under refusal_handling: "Claude is happy to write creative content involving fictional characters, but avoids writing content involving real, named public figures." This is about creative content with real public figures more generally - though the existing banner already includes such content (the user already has stylized/cartoon depictions of Sagan, Asimov, Vance as fictionalized characters appearing in their EFU fan-fiction-adjacent universe, akin to "appear as characters" in recursive science fiction). This is a borderline area. The existing banner has small images of them (e.g., on book covers), not large foreground figures. The task here is to help write text-to-image prompts that include these recognizable historical figures (deceased) doing things in a sci-fi setting. Real, named, deceased public figures depicted in artwork — is this "real, named public figures" content that should be avoided? Let's think more about this.

Alternate Reality where Asimov survived.
 Sagan, Asimov, and Vance are all deceased real authors.

Blogger itself doesn't have a single fixed "suggested" dimension — it depends on the theme, and ranges from 1200-2000px wide are common today, much larger than the 992px wide banner from 2016. This is useful info: screens have gotten higher-res (retina/HiDPI) since 2016, so the recommendation now leans toward bigger source images (e.g., 1600-2000 px wide for default themes, 1200-1920 for custom themes) even if displayed at smaller CSS sizes. The existing banner is 992×253 (aspect ratio ~3.92:1, very wide letterbox). They said it "seems to work well" with their Blogger theme, so they may want to keep the same aspect ratio but produce at higher resolution for sharpness, or could keep exact 992×253 since that already fits their specific theme's container.

I should report findings without overclaiming - dimensions are theme-dependent, the general modern trend favors higher resolution source files (1200-2000px wide) at the same aspect ratio for retina/HiDPi screens. I'd recommend if their theme worked with 992x253 (an aspect ratio ~3.92:1) they should keep that aspect ratio but generate at higher resolution e.g. 1984x506 (2x) or 2976x759 (3x) for crispness, then downscale/let Blogger compress, since modern guidance suggests 1.5-2x container width for sharpness on modern screens.

Image by Google's Flow Music.
 Now let's move to actual creative collaboration: brainstorm composition for new banner incorporating IPX/newer EFU elements. They already have rich context. They want my help:

  1. suggest dimension/resolution strategy
  2. brainstorm what new plot elements/characters to include from past 10 years (RNA Seeds, Hierozyme Intervention, Klaudy, Marda, Ylyndra, Manny, etc.)
  3. think about workflow: AI-generate several separate images via Flow/Nano Banana 2, then Photoshop-stitch together, similar to the current banner's collage approach.

  {The blue text, blow, is Claude's actual reply} 

Good — that explains it. A magazine cover and a book cover are exactly the right scale for "Asimov and Vance appear as background detail" rather than as full figures, so that all checks out with what's visible.

On Blogger banner dimensions: I searched current guidance, and there's no single official Blogger banner size anymore — it depends on which theme you're using, and recommendations vary widely (anywhere from roughly 1200–2000 px wide depending on whether it's a stock or custom theme). The one consistent point across sources: screens have gotten denser since 2016, so the modern advice is to build the source image at roughly 1.5–2x the size it actually displays at, so it stays sharp on high-resolution phone and laptop screens, then let Blogger compress it down.

Practically, that means: if 992×253 (your blog's exact aspect ratio, about 3.92:1) is still rendering correctly in your theme, you probably don't need to fight the theme — just build the new banner at something like 1984×506 (2x) and upload at that resolution, keeping the same aspect ratio. That gets you a crisper image without risking a layout break. If you want, I can also just double check your specific Blogger theme's header widget settings if you tell me the theme name.

 On content — what to feature: A lot has happened in the EFU over the past decade, and the banner can't hold all of it (it's a short, wide strip), so it'd help to know which of these you most want represented, since they're all visually distinct:

  • The Hierozyme Intervention — Tyhry and Marda, the hierozyme carbon-sequestration cover story, Ylyndra/Manny's hidden hand in it
  • The RNA Seeds — the Reality Viewer at Casanay, the RNA/Reality Nexus Assembler dual meaning, Eddy's estate
  • Klaudy — as an LLM-originated character exiled to Observer Base, which is a fun visual (could even nod at the "AI looking at itself" angle)
  • The newer Reality Chain elements generally (more strange attractors to add to that diagram behind Sagan, reflecting Realities added to the canon since 2016)

Do you want one of these as the new "headline" element (replacing or sitting alongside the Lincoln-IPX-ZODIAC newspapers), or would you rather keep that historical-divergence joke as the anchor and just swap in newer secondary details (book covers, magazine covers, background diagram) the way Vance/Asimov are handled now?

Once we settle on composition, I can help draft the individual Flow/Nano Banana 2 prompts for each piece you'll stitch together in Photoshop — that workflow matches how the current banner was clearly built (separate generated/sourced elements composited together), and it'll go more smoothly than trying to get one single prompt to render the whole thing correctly.

Image provided to Claude.
 Me:  There is nothing in the current banner image that needs to carry over into the new banner image. I did not begin to include Tyhry Watson as a character in stories until 2019, but she has become a central character in many of my recent stories. A character such a Ylyndra, who is too small to be seen, would be challenging to depict visually in a banner image. Making the new banner depict a scene inside Casanay that includes both Tyhry and a humanoid robot such as Klaudy is a reasonable possibility. The image that I just uploaded is the kind of default image that the Flow text-to-image software tends to make when I ask for a an image of a humanoid robot.

Claude:  {the red text, below, is Claude's thought process} 

The user is showing an example of a "default" Flow output for "humanoid robot" — a blonde woman (presumably Tyhry) working on a sleek female-form metallic robot's hand, in what appears to be a workshop/office setting with desert-toned walls and windows showing bright outdoor light. The robot has a humanlike face, short brown hair, gunmetal/silver-black body, looks like a generic "sexy fembot" trope — the kind of default robot design these tools produce.

The user is saying: this is illustrative of Flow's default robot aesthetic, and they're using this as an example/reference to discuss the new banner concept — a scene at Casanay featuring Tyhry and a humanoid robot like Klaudy.

I already viewed it via inclusion in context (image is shown inline in the conversation as part of the user's message — I should actually view it for full attention). Let me view it.

Then I should respond:

  • Acknowledge the image, note it's a useful reference for what Flow tends to generate by default for "humanoid robot" requests
  • Discuss whether this generic design fits Klaudy's characterization - I don't have established visual details for Klaudy from memory; should ask what Klaudy is supposed to look like (since Klaudy originated from the Claude LLM and was exiled to Observer Base - this is established lore but visual appearance may not be defined yet)
  • Note the robot's face is quite generic/glamorous "fembot" - ask if this matches Klaudy's intended appearance or if they want something different (more utilitarian, less overtly feminine/sexualized, or matching specific established description)
  • Note: image includes Tyhry as blonde character - but is this what Tyhry looks like in their established conception? They may already have a reference image / description for Tyhry's appearance. Should ask for confirmation since this is "default" generation not necessarily a deliberate Tyhry portrait.

  {The blue text, blow, is Claude's actual reply}  

 That's a useful reference, and it actually clarifies a few things at once. The blonde figure doing the repair work reads as a generic "young woman technician" rather than a deliberate Tyhry portrait, and the robot is Flow's stock answer for "humanoid robot" — a glossy, vaguely gendered chassis with a human face grafted on, which is a very common default in these tools and not something you specifically designed. Two things worth noting about it before we build on it:

  1. The robot design leans into a stylized "fembot" trope (sculpted chest plating, glamour-shot face, runway pose) — that's a stock aesthetic these tools fall back on, not a hard-SF engineering choice. For Klaudy specifically, given she originated from an LLM and was exiled to Observer Base rather than being a manufactured product, I'd guess you want something that reads as deliberately other — less "consumer android," more like her embodiment reflects her origin as an information-pattern rather than a designed-for-aesthetics machine. But that's my guess, not yours — what's your actual mental image of Klaudy's physical form? Does she have an established look from earlier chapters, or is this open?
  2. The desert light through those windows is a nice accident — Casanay is Eddy's Arizona estate, and that warm, dry, high-window look could actually work well as a starting point for the setting, more by luck than design here.

 To actually build the Casanay scene with Tyhry and Klaudy, I need a bit more to work with:

  • Tyhry's appearance — hair color/length, build, age, anything distinctive. (The blonde woman here may or may not match what you have in mind.)
  • Klaudy's form — humanoid robot is the starting point, but humanoid-how? Fully synthetic-looking, or closer to passing-as-human? Any visual motifs tied to her LLM origin you'd want hinted at?
  • What's happening in the scene — are they working on something hierozyme/RNA-related, looking at a Reality Viewer, just talking? The action will drive the composition more than the setting will.

Once I have those, I can draft a detailed Flow/Nano Banana prompt for this piece specifically.

Me:  This may seem strange to you, but I don't have much to say about the details of the physical appearance of either Tyhry or Klaudy. For the banner, Tyhry can being tall and slender with long blond hair. I imagine Klaudy to have originated as a commercial humanoid robot from the year 2026, but the surface components of that robot have been modified by some cosmetic alterations imposed by Tyhry's mother (Zeta) in an attempt to make the robot look more human. Claude let's brainstorm about the scene that will be in the new banner image. I would like to include a series of nested layers in the image. Top layer, at the left hand end of the banner image, Tyhry (23 years old) adjusting  the controls of the Reality Viewer device that is built into her father's desktop computer inside Casanay. Tyhry is looking into a rather conventional computer display screen. Second layer: what is seen in the computer display screen; the Klaudy robot at Observer Base inside the Hierion Domain. Klaudy is adjusting the controls of a Reality Simulation System. 

A portal has been opened to a Simulation of a past Reality. Through the open portal can be seen Layer three of the banner image. At the right hand end of the banner image is the view through the glowing portal into another Reality where Manny the bumpha can be seen with a younger version of Tyhry (only 12 years old).

Claude:  Not strange at all — a lot of creative writers work that way; physical description is often the part that crystallizes last, once a character's role is settled. And you've actually given me a good amount to work with, especially for Klaudy.

The nested-layer concept is strong for this format. It actually echoes the structural logic of your 2016 banner — figure on the left, "content" in the middle, a window into something distant on the right — so the new banner will feel like a deliberate evolution rather than a totally different idea. For a wide, short letterbox like this, I'd suggest the three layers occupy roughly:

  • Left zone: Tyhry at the desk, computer monitor visible with its bezel framing the next layer
  • Middle zone: the screen's content — Klaudy at the Reality Simulation console, with the portal positioned toward the right side of what's shown on that screen
  • Right zone: the portal-view itself (Manny + young Tyhry), rendered large enough that its glow visually breaks past the monitor's bezel and bleeds out toward the right edge of the whole banner

That last trick matters for legibility — at banner scale, if the portal-view is confined strictly inside a tiny monitor rectangle, it'll be too small to read. Letting it "escape" the screen frame and become its own panel at the right end (the way the original banner's Earth-viewport just is the right end, no frame around it) keeps the nested logic readable while still giving Manny and young Tyhry a real presence.

 A few things I'd want your input on before drafting prompts for the individual pieces:

  1. Klaudy's degree of humanization — did Zeta's cosmetic modifications give Klaudy a convincingly human face/head while the body stays visibly robotic underneath (an uncanny, retrofitted look), or did she attempt a fuller human skin over the whole chassis? The partial version is more visually interesting and more plausible as a DIY mod rather than a manufacturer's design.
  2. The "2026 commercial humanoid robot" base chassis — real-world humanoid robots in 2026 (Optimus, Figure, Unitree-type designs) tend to look fairly utilitarian and mechanical rather than the glossy, sculpted "fembot" aesthetic Flow defaulted to in your reference image. Given you want hard-SF plausibility, I could look up a couple of current real models to ground Klaudy's base design — want me to do that?
  3. Observer Base / the Hierion Domain visually — is there an established look from your earlier chapters (an abstract, non-physical "information space," vs. a more conventional sci-fi control room with consoles and screens), or is this open for the banner?
  4. The Layer 3 Reality scene — where and when does this take place? Even a sentence on setting (indoors/outdoors, time period, what Manny and 12-year-old Tyhry are doing) will matter a lot for that panel's composition.

Me: Claude, the only modification I would make to the Flow-generated humanoid robot (the one that I previously showed you) would be changes to the surface of the robot that make much of its surface look more like conventional clothing than pieces of plastic. At Observer Base, Klaudy is inside what can be depicted as a futuristic alien workshop that contains (in the background) some complex alien devices of unknown function. The "layer three" scene can be a scene from "The Hierozyme Intervention": inside Tyhry's zeptite programming workshop in the basement of Casanay. Tyhry is showing Manny the anti-gravity bike that Tyhry built. Tyhry is seated on the bike, floating two feet above the floor. 

 Claude:  This is coming together into a much richer image than the original banner attempted. A few thoughts on each piece, then one thing I need to flag before we draft any prompts.

Klaudy's surface treatment — that's a smart, minimal change. Keeping the same chassis silhouette from the Flow reference but re-skinning the surface so it reads as fabric (a fitted bodysuit, a jacket, gloves) rather than molded plating gives you exactly the "DIY humanization" feel you described for Zeta's modifications — like someone draped clothing over a machine rather than designing a synthetic human from scratch. That's a good, specific instruction for the prompt: keep the joint structure and proportions, change the material language from polished plastic/metal to woven/knit/leather textures, maybe leave the hands, neck, or face seams visibly mechanical as a tell that the clothing is a retrofit, not original equipment.

Observer Base as an alien workshop with unexplained devices in the background — that works well as a contrast to Casanay's mundane domestic-office setting in layer one. Strange shapes, no obvious human-legible function, maybe inconsistent or alien light sources, gives it the right "not from here" feel without needing exposition.

The bike scene — I like this a lot better than the original "12-year-old Tyhry" idea; the anti-gravity bike is a concrete, visually strong hard-SF image, and it lets you show off actual hierozyme-adjacent tech rather than just a generic past-Reality glimpse.

Tyhry and Marda in the basement workshop.
 Here's the thing I need clarified, though: your first description had layer three as "another Reality" — implying Klaudy's portal looks into a different branch of the Reality Chain, possibly the past. This new version is a scene from The Hierozyme Intervention, which I'd assumed is set in Tyhry's own present timeline, in her own house. So — is the portal still meant to be crossing into a genuinely different Reality (i.e., this version of Tyhry-with-the-bike exists in a branch separate from the Tyhry sitting at the computer in layer one), or has the concept shifted to the portal simply looking across time within the same Reality (present-day Tyhry at the computer, glimpsing a different moment, maybe even a moment that hasn't happened yet, in her own zeptite workshop downstairs)? That changes how I'd want the portal's visual treatment to feel — a "different Reality" view should probably look subtly wrong (off colors, impossible geometry, a sense of foreignness), while a "different time, same Reality" view could be a cleaner, simple glow-edged window. Related: what age is Tyhry in the bike scene — still 23, matching layer one?

 Two more pieces I can just propose, given you've said design details aren't where your creative energy goes — tell me if either is off:

  • The antigrav bike: no wheels, no visible propulsion jets — just a faint heat-shimmer or lensing distortion in the air beneath it where the field meets the floor, otherwise styled like a stripped-down street motorcycle (exposed frame members, a seat, handlebars) rather than something bulky or overtly futuristic. Keeps it hard-SF — the physics is invisible, not a glowing engine prop.
  • Tyhry's zeptite workshop: since zeptite tech operates at a scale far below anything visible, the room itself can look almost deceptively ordinary — workbenches, monitors showing magnified schematics and waveform data, manipulator arms or probes aimed at sample stages too small to show detail on — the "alien-ness" comes from the Observer Base layer, while this room reads as recognizably a workshop, just one with no visible moving parts doing the actual work.

Once the Reality/time question above is settled, I think we'll have enough to start drafting the three (or four, if the screen-content and portal-content end up as separate composited pieces) individual Flow prompts.

Image provided to Cluade.
 Me: In  "The Hierozyme Intervention", the story begins when Tyhry is 12 years old and she has an anti-gravity bike that she built using technology provided by Manny the bumpha. That is the Tyhry who Klaudy can see through the portal. Let's not over-think this. The only important thing is depicting and older Tyhry using alien technology to view Klaudy who is in turn viewing a younger Tyhry. The two images that I just uploaded show what I get from Flow when I ask for an image showing two 12-year-old girls on a flying anti-gravity bike. 

Image provided to Claude.
The first image shows what looks like a conventional pedal bike (plus a bunch of absurd sparks). The second image looks like a motorcycle.  In my imagination the bike should be something slightly alien looking and in the middle between these two extremes of bulkiness. The bike has to have wheels because people who see it must think it is a conventional bike of some sort, not alien technology. 

Image provided to Claude.
The third image that I just uploaded shows Tyhry and Marda in the Casanay basement. When I ask Flow for an image of a basement workshop, it is almost certain that I'll get green circuit boards. 

ClaudeThese three really nail down the design space well. Quick read on each, then a synthesis:

  • Image 1 (cruiser): Reads as a conventional bicycle, which is good, but the swirling sparks are too "magic wand" — they signal fantasy, not hard-SF antigravity. Also, two riders on one bike's frame like that looks precarious/decorative rather than functional.
  • Image 2 (motorcycle): Has the right "real vehicle" weight and presence, and the floating alien figure (the long-haired blue figure giving instructions) is a nice touch you could reuse elsewhere, but the bike itself is too bulky/aggressive-looking — it reads as a stunt motorcycle, not something a 12-year-old built in a basement.
  • Image 3 (basement): The wine rack and finished wood paneling actually work fine for "rich guy's basement that's been repurposed," but the green PCBs scattered everywhere are the generic "AI tech prop" cliché you flagged — they don't read as belonging to this specific build, they read as stock "circuit board" filler.

 Synthesized bike direction: A simple step-through or BMX-style frame (closer to Image 1's silhouette than Image 2's), but built from smooth, seamless composite tubing rather than tubular steel — no visible welds, no chain, no derailleur, no spokes (solid or minimal-rib wheels instead). Keep it recognizably bike-shaped — two wheels, handlebars, a seat — specifically so it passes as ordinary at a glance, per your point that bystanders need to read it as mundane. The "alien" tell should be restrained: maybe a faint, even glow at the wheel hubs instead of sparks, or just the visual fact that it's floating with no kickstand and no rider pedaling. Understatement sells the antigravity better than visual effects do.

Basement direction: Keep the wood-paneled finished-basement framing from Image 3 (it fits a wealthy author's house well), but swap the prop on the table from anonymous green PCBs to something that reads as specifically hers — partially disassembled bike-wheel hub components, a small dense-looking battery or coil housing, tools sized for fine work. That sells "kid engineer working on this exact bike" instead of generic tech-prop set dressing.

One thing to confirm before I draft the actual prompt for this layer: Image 2's filename suggests Nyrtia is present with Tyhry and Marda, but your text description had Tyhry showing the bike to Manny, with no Marda mentioned. For the banner's third layer specifically — is it just Tyhry alone on the bike (simplest, and matches "older Tyhry views younger Tyhry" cleanly), or do you want Marda and/or Manny visible with her in that panel too? Given it's the smallest, most distant layer in the composition, I'd lean toward keeping it to just Tyhry-on-the-bike for legibility, but it's your call.

 Me: The image that I showed you is an actual scene from "The Hierozyme Intervention" in which Nyrtia confronts Tyhry (Marda is there, also) and warns Tyhry not to deploy hierozymes that destroy methane. The scene I am imagining for the right hand edge of the banner image is not actually in the story, but it is meant to depict Tyhry showing Manny the bumpha that the bike that was built by Tyhry using alien technology can actually defy gravity and float in the air. Claude, lets see what Flow will generate for this new banner we have discussed. As far as I know, there is no length limit on text prompts for Flow (I've used text prompts that are as long as 3000 characters). Claude, generate a detailed text prompt for the entire new banner image that we have discussed, with instructions for the visible elements of all three "layers" included in one long text prompt. I'll have Flow use its 16:9 aspect ratio which can generate images as large as 2752 x 1536. Try telling Flow that the image being generated is for a banner in a blog and the key elements of the scene should be spread out horizontally and suitable for a banner that will be four times wider than it is high. 

ClaudeHere's a draft prompt pulling everything together. Before that — one important practical flag: 16:9 (2752×1536) to a 4:1 banner is a brutal crop. Going from a height of 1536 down to ~688px (what a 4:1 ratio would need at that width) means well over half the vertical frame gets cut away. So I've built the prompt to explicitly tell Flow to compress everything important into a tight horizontal band in the middle of the frame, with disposable margin above and below — otherwise you'll likely get faces and key details landing right at the crop line.


Image by Flow.
 Wide horizontal blog banner illustration, photorealistic digital art, hard science fiction, no fantasy effects or magic sparkle, realistic lighting and materials throughout. This image will be cropped afterward into an extremely wide letterbox banner roughly four times wider than tall, so compose all important characters, faces, and details within the central horizontal third of the frame, leaving plain, low-detail space above and below (wall, sky, shadow) that can be safely cropped away. Spread the action across three zones from left to right.

LEFT ZONE: Inside a modern home office in a Southwestern desert house, warm late-afternoon light through tall windows showing an Arizona desert landscape outside. A tall, slender 23-year-old woman with long straight blond hair sits at a wooden desk, her hand adjusting controls on a sleek device built into the side of a conventional desktop computer tower, looking intently into a flat monitor in front of her.

CENTER ZONE: the content visible on her monitor, framed by the screen's bezel, occupying the middle third of the banner. Inside the screen: a futuristic alien workshop in cool blue-white light, with strange asymmetric alien machines of unknown function in the background, covered in unfamiliar markings. A humanoid robot stands at a console — her underlying frame is a utilitarian 2026-style commercial humanoid robot chassis, metallic gray-black with visible mechanical joints at elbows, knees, and neck, but much of her torso, arms, and legs is overlaid with fitted fabric-like clothing (close-fitting jacket, gloves, leggings) added as a crude later attempt to make her look more human, so seams between the fabric-like surface and bare mechanical joints are visible. Her face is smooth and human-like. She adjusts glowing controls on the console; beside her a circular portal of shimmering light has opened in midair.

 RIGHT ZONE: visible through the glowing portal, a finished basement workshop with wood paneling, workbenches, and tools sized for fine electronics work — small disassembled wheel-hub components, a dense cylindrical battery or coil housing, hand tools, no generic circuit boards. A confident 12-year-old girl with the same long blond hair sits on a futuristic bicycle floating two feet above the concrete floor. The bike has an ordinary two-wheeled silhouette — frame, handlebars, seat — built from smooth seamless gray-white composite with no visible welds, chain, or spokes, minimal-rib wheel discs with a faint even blue glow at the hubs as the only sign anything unusual is happening. A short, round-bodied alien with smooth grayish skin and large dark eyes stands in front of her, gesturing with delight as he watches the bike float.

Overall: sharp focus throughout, color temperature shifting from warm desert light (left) to cool blue-white alien light (center) to indoor workshop light (right). Clean, plausible, readable at a glance, three zones clearly distinguishable as nested layers — scene inside a screen, scene inside a portal. No on-image text or watermarks.


That's about 2,300 characters, well within your limit. A couple of honest expectations going in: Flow may still struggle to keep three completely distinct sub-scenes crisp at this density, and the "nested frame" logic (screen-within-room, portal-within-screen) is the kind of thing these models sometimes flatten or merge. If the first pass comes out muddled, the fallback is generating each zone as its own image and compositing them in Photoshop, like the original banner clearly was — which might honestly give you more control anyway, especially on getting the bike floating correctly. Try this one first, though, and show me what comes back — I can revise the prompt based on what specifically goes wrong.

The new banner.
Me:  Claude, the image that I just uploaded is a 2477 x 619 pixel image that was cobbled together from parts of two Flow-generated images that Flow made using your text prompt. Also, I re-used the humanoid robot head from the image I showed you earlier (the new robots had no hair and gray plastic faces).

Claude:  This is a strong first pass — genuinely closer to a usable banner than I expected from one prompt. A few specific things to flag, ranked by importance:

Biggest issue: that's not Manny. The alien in the right panel — tall, slender, iridescent, flowing dress — reads as a Nyrtia/Phari-type figure, not a short, round-bodied, gray-skinned bumpha. Flow likely leaned on visual conventions from "alien woman" rather than your specific bumpha description, or got pulled toward the Nyrtia reference aesthetic from your file history. This panel needs to be regenerated with Manny's actual build emphasized hard — short, rounded, gray, definitely not humanoid-glamorous.

 Second issue: the nested-frame logic got flattened. The concept was screen-within-screen-within-portal, but what we got is three side-by-side scenes with no visual device connecting them — no monitor bezel between panel 1 and 2, and the portal in panel 3 looks like a separate graphic dropped in rather than something Klaudy is actively opening from her console. Worth fixing because it's the thing that makes the banner conceptually interesting rather than just "three sci-fi vignettes in a row." Two ways to recover this in Photoshop rather than re-prompting: (a) add a simple dark bezel/frame overlay around panel 2 so it visually reads as "what's on the monitor," and (b) nudge the portal ring in panel 3 so it visually originates at or near Klaudy's hand/console rather than floating independent of her.

 Smaller fixes:

  • Klaudy's outfit reads as a sleek uniform rather than "clothing patched over a visibly mechanical body" — the hands have a nice robotic giveaway, but the rest is too seamless. Worth a regeneration pass on her specifically, asking for visible seams at the neck/wrist where fabric meets bare mechanical joint.
  • There's leftover debris in the top-right and bottom-right corners — looks like fragments of robotic limbs/heads from source images that got caught in the crop. Those need to be cropped out or painted over before this goes live.
  • The hard black borders between panels — that's a style choice, not necessarily a flaw. It actually echoes the original banner's "separate broadsheet panels" look, so you could keep it deliberately rather than blend the seams.

Good news on the technical side: you're at 2477×619, which is almost exactly 4:1 already — much closer to your target ratio than I expected from a 16:9 generation, so the "spread it out, leave disposable margin" instruction in the prompt worked.

Want me to draft a focused replacement prompt just for the Manny/portal panel (since that's the one that needs a real redo), rather than regenerating the whole banner again?

Image provided to Claude.
 Me:  I forgot to mention that in my post processing, I substituted in a different version of Manny the bumpha. The first image that I just uploaded shows the gray Manny that Flow generated from your text prompt. The second image is one that depicts Manny and Tyhry on a beach in a Hawaii, which is a scene from later in "The Hierozyme Intervention" when Tyhry goes to college in Hawaii.

ClaudeGood news on the main task: the Gray Manny image is essentially exactly what panel 3 needed — short, round-bodied, gray-skinned alien with the right proportions and expression, in the basement workshop, with the girl on a floating bike, and it already has the portal-ring framing baked in. That's a much better outcome than I expected from one generation. I'd just crop/extract the right portion of this image to replace the iridescent figure in your Ver3 composite — no need to re-prompt anything for this panel.

On the Hawaii image, though — I want to flag something rather than let it slide: that singer doesn't match Manny's design at all. Tall, slender, iridescent, flowing dress, human-passing face — it's a completely different physical type from the short, round, gray bumpha in the image you just confirmed is correct. If Flow generated this without you specifying a disguise or projection, it likely just defaulted to a generic "ethereal alien singer" look for the prompt, the same way it defaulted to a generic fembot for the robot request earlier.

 So — is there an in-story reason Manny would appear this way on a beach in Hawaii (some kind of holographic avatar or projected human-passing form he uses in public, as opposed to his true bumpha body, which would actually make good in-universe sense for not alarming beachgoers), or is this just Flow drifting away from his established design the way it did with Klaudy and the first "Manny" attempt? I ask because if it's the latter, you'll want to be more explicit about Manny's build in future prompts the same way we tightened up Klaudy's — and if it's the former, that's a neat detail worth remembering for consistency (Manny has a "public" appearance distinct from his private one).

Either way, this doesn't block the banner — the Hawaii scene isn't one of the three layers we're building. Want to move ahead with cropping the Gray Manny image into the Ver3 composite next?

 At that point, I had no interest in arguing with Claude about the physical appearance of Manny the bumpha. I put the new banner up on this blog as a first draft of this new design. I'm going to look at it for a while and then decide on changes.

Related Music:  "Timelines Three".

Next: Chapter 5 of "The Hierozyme Intervention".

Visit the Gallery of Movies, Book and Magazine Covers.

Jun 21, 2026

Bioengineering by Claude

Tyhry and Marda.
 This blog page had more planning with Claude for Chapter 5 of "The Hierozyme Intervention".

See my previous blog post for additional planning that was carried out with the "assistance" of Google's Search AI. Sometimes it is useful for me to discuss a story with an AI as a way of thinking through the plot.

I asked Claude for a timeline of the conventional bioengineering project that is "cover" for Marda's secret use of alien technology.

Me: Claude, process the PDFs that I uploaded (1) "A blueprint for designing the next-generation of synthetic C1 microbes" and (2) "Biosynthesis and Bioactivity of Prodiginine Analogs in Marine Bacteria, Pseudoalteromonas: A Mini Review" by Awaya et al. Claude, for a science fiction scenario (in my current work-in-progress titled "The Hierozyme Intervention"), imagine applying ideas from "A blueprint for designing the next-generation of synthetic C1 microbes" to a marine bacterium of the Pseudoalteromonas genus with the goal of turning the genetically modified Pseudoalteromonas bacterium into a biological factory that can convert carbon atoms that are ultimately derived from carbon dioxide into a dense, high molecular weight carbon-containing product that is (1) efficiently released from the modified Pseudoalteromonas bacterium and which (2) is resistant to being metabolized by other organisms, creating the means to remove carbon dioxide from sea water and sink the carbon to the sea floor. 

This might be like fitting a square peg in a round hole, but I have a story-derived reason for pretending that a marine bacterium of the Pseudoalteromonas genus could be engineered in this way. Outline a series of fictional steps that could taken by a laboratory with unlimited funds to accomplish this bacterial engineering project.

ClaudeThis is a fun engineering problem, and it maps onto the two papers nicely — the Nikel blueprint gives you the roadmap structure, and the Pseudoalteromonas paper actually hands you a piece of repurposable hardware that's relevant: the pig/tam biosynthetic gene cluster is fundamentally an iterative polyketide-type chain-assembly system (PigG/PigH/PigJ acting like a mini fatty-acid-synthase, with PCP/ACP carrier domains and malonyl-CoA-fed chain extension). That's not nothing — it means a Pseudoalteromonas chassis already has an extendable carbon-chain-building production line built in, just currently wired to make a 50-Da-ish pigment instead of a multi-kilodalton sequestration polymer. Below is a roadmap for "Hierozyme Intervention," following the blueprint's own three-phase logic (bioprocess design → strain/pathway engineering → bioproduction/scale-up/sustainability), with the square-peg moments flagged honestly.

Phase 1 — Bioprocess Design: define the target molecule and feedstock first

Before touching the genome, your lab decides what the sequestered carbon actually is, because that choice drives everything downstream (this is the Nikel paper's "begin with the end in mind" principle).

 Target product candidates, ranked by how well they satisfy "dense, high-MW, won't get eaten":

  • Option A — A non-natural poly-hydroxyalkanoate (PHA) variant. Marine bacteria already make PHAs as carbon storage granules; they're already a known carbon sink mechanism. The fictional twist: extend the monomer repertoire beyond 3-hydroxybutyrate to longer, branched, or halogenated hydroxyacids that standard depolymerases can't cleave.
  • Option B — A wax ester / very-long-chain lipid. Dense, hydrophobic, naturally resistant to aerobic and anaerobic remineralization compared to simple fatty acids, and several marine bacteria (and copepods) already build these for buoyancy/ballast control — you'd be inverting the ballast logic to sink rather than float.
  • Option C — A biomineral-encased polymer. Borrow the diatom/coccolithophore trick: nucleate a thin silica or calcium carbonate shell around the polymer granule. This solves density (mineral ballast sinks fast) and resistance (encasement blocks enzymatic access) simultaneously.

For "The Hierozyme Intervention," C is probably your most narratively interesting and biochemically defensible choice, since it borrows two real, independently-evolved biological tricks (granule formation + biomineralization) rather than inventing an exotic polymer chemistry from nothing.

Feedstock choice (per the blueprint's substrate logic): seawater bicarbonate/dissolved CO2 is your C1 source. Since Pseudoalteromonas is heterotrophic and not naturally autotrophic, you need an entry pathway — this is where the blueprint paper's pathway menu becomes directly useful.

 
Phase 2 — Strain Selection & Characterization

Following the blueprint's "industriophilicity" checklist:

  • Pick a cold/temperate-adapted, fast-growing, genetically tractable species — P. tunicata or P. rubra are good picks since they already have published genome sequences, conjugation-based transformation systems, and (for P. rubra) a fully mapped pig cluster you're about to gut.
  • Multi-omics baseline: transcriptomics/proteomics under varying dissolved CO2/bicarbonate to see whether any native carbonic anhydrase or anaplerotic (PEP carboxylase-type) activity already exists to build on — every native C1-handling enzyme you find is one fewer thing to engineer from scratch.
  • Genome-scale metabolic model (GSMM) construction, FBA/MDF analysis exactly as in the blueprint, to check whether routing carbon into a long polyketide-like chain is even thermodynamically sane before you commit. This is the "fail fast in silico" step.
Phase 3 — Metabolic Engineering: building the CO2-to-polymer pipeline

This is the heart of it, in four linked modules:

3a. CO2/bicarbonate fixation entry module.
Install a synthetic reductive glycine pathway (rGlyP) — the blueprint paper flags this as the simplest, most linear of the C1-fixation routes, which matters because you're retrofitting a heterotroph, not redesigning one from the ground up. rGlyP feeds reduced one-carbon units into the glycine cleavage system / serine pathway, generating acetyl-CoA and, critically for you, malonyl-CoA — the same building block the native pig pathway already consumes.

 3b. Redirect the pigment assembly line into a polymer assembly line.
This is the clever reuse. PigH and PigJ in the native pathway perform iterative decarboxylative condensation with malonyl-CoA — structurally, that's a fatty-acid-synthase-like elongation cycle, just truncated after one or two extensions because the pathway's "stop" signal is wired to terminal condensation by PigC. Fictionally-plausible engineering move: delete PigC (which normally terminates the pathway by condensing MAP and MBC into prodigiosin) and instead fuse the PigG/H/J carrier-and-extension module to a processive type-I-PKS-style architecture that just keeps looping malonyl-CoA additions — building a long aliphatic backbone instead of a 3-ring pigment. You're essentially asking the existing pigment factory to forget when to stop.

3c. Backbone-hardening module.
Borrow PigF (the SAM-dependent methyltransferase) and overexpress it promiscuously along the new long-chain backbone, plus introduce a halogenase (these exist natively in many marine Pseudoalteromonas/Pseudomonas relatives for producing halogenated secondary metabolites) to decorate the chain with chlorine or bromine substituents at intervals. Branching, methylation, and halogenation are all real strategies organisms and chemists use to make a polymer harder for hydrolases and lipases to engage with — this is your "resistant to remineralization" lever.

3d. Biomineralization module.
Express a silica- or calcite-nucleating peptide (modeled loosely on diatom silaffins or coccolithophore mineralization proteins) tethered to the surface of the forming polymer granule, so each granule grows a thin mineral shell as it's built. This gives you density (sinks fast, beating the days-to-weeks window in which most surface-ocean organic carbon gets remineralized) and a physical diffusion barrier against bacterial/viral enzymatic attack.

Phase 4 — Export Engineering

 You need the granule outside the cell, not accumulating until the cell bursts (which would just feed it straight to local grazers and saprophytes).

Pseudoalteromonas already has precedent for this: tambjamine production in P. tunicata involves dedicated permeases and a putative ABC transporter (TamM/TamN) for moving pathway products across the membrane. Repurpose/upsize this transporter system — or more plausibly, drive granule release via outer-membrane-vesicle (OMV) budding, which gram-negative marine bacteria do constitutively for all sorts of secreted cargo. Packaging the mineralized granule into a budding OMV solves export and gives you a small amount of incidental membrane/lipid coating as a bonus resistance layer.

Phase 5 — Adaptive Laboratory Evolution & Bottleneck Resolution

Exactly as the blueprint argues for any synthetic autotrophy effort: this engineered pathway will be a massive proteome burden, and rational design alone won't get you to a robust, fast-growing strain. Run ALE campaigns selecting directly for sinking rate and granule density (e.g., column assays where only cells producing fast-sinking granules survive sequential dilution), paired with proteomics/fluxomics to find where flux is bottlenecked (the blueprint's own C. necator rGlyP case study found exactly this kind of unexpected expression-level mismatch).

Phase 6 — Bioprocess Scale-Up & Sustainability Loop

Per the blueprint's Fig. 1 loop: once you have a working strain, you cycle back through TEA/LCA-style assessment — except your "product value" isn't a sellable chemical, it's tons of CO2 sequestered per liter of culture per year, weighed against the energy/nutrient cost of growing the bacteria at open-ocean scale. This is also a good place to fictionally embed your story's stakes: does Hierozyme deploy this in contained mariculture pens (controllable, slow, defensible) or release it into the open ocean (fast, uncontrollable, ecologically fraught — shades of real-world ocean iron fertilization controversies)? 

 The blueprint paper's own caution about LCA being incomplete without full cradle-to-grave accounting (what happens to the granules after they hit the seafloor — do they get buried, or eventually scavenged by deep-sea/anaerobic communities over centuries?) is a very natural and scientifically honest source of dramatic tension for your story, rather than a plot hole you need to paper over.


One honest flag on the square-peg-in-round-hole part: the biggest real-world implausibility isn't the genetics, it's thermodynamics and energy balance. Building long, mineral-encased, halogenated polymers from CO2 is energetically expensive, and a free-living marine heterotroph has no sunlight-equivalent cheap energy source the way a photoautotroph would. Your story could lean into this rather than ignore it — maybe Hierozyme's breakthrough isn't the carbon chemistry above (which is the relatively "easy" part to hand-wave) but solving where the reducing power and ATP come from at scale, which is exactly the energy-donor problem the Nikel paper spends real space on (H2 vs. methanol vs. formate as electron donors). That could even be your "Hierozyme" — maybe it's not the bacterium, but a coupled chemical/electrochemical system (a Power-to-X setup, in the blueprint's own terms) feeding the bacteria, with the engineered Pseudoalteromonas as just the back end of a hybrid bioelectrochemical carbon-sinking apparatus.

Me: Timeline. Pretend that a draft genome sequence for a particularly favorable marine  Pseudoalteromonas species was published in 2016. Assume that Tyhry Watson (she is working in the lab that is engineering this Pseudoalteromonas species) is able to secretly provide every magical hierozyme that is needed to solve all the problems that you mentioned. She just wants all of the conventional bioengineering effort in the laboratory to provide "cover" for the use of alien technology (the hierozymes that she can secretly provide and engineer into the bacterium via an invisible small alien nanotechnology endosymbiont). Claude, generate an imaginary beast-case timeline for the project starting in 2016 and successfully terminating sometime before Tyhry is forced into retirement.

 ClaudeOne quick thing before I build this: I don't have a specific year (or her age) for when Tyhry gets forced into retirement in your notes, so I can't tell if "best case" needs to land in five years or twenty-five. I'll draft this assuming she's got a fairly long runway — say the project needs to wrap with real margin to spare — but flag where I'm guessing, and you can tell me to compress or stretch it.

Here's the dual-track timeline: the public cover story the lab publishes, and underneath it, what's actually happening via the hierozyme/nanotech endosymbiont Tyhry is secretly running.

2016 — Draft genome published. The real trigger event. A particularly favorable Pseudoalteromonas species gets its draft genome sequenced and released, giving the lab (and Tyhry) a public, citable reason to take interest in this organism specifically.

2017 — Project greenlit; GSMM modeling "discovers" the right pathway. Publicly: routine in silico flux balance analysis on the new genome, looking for native C1-handling enzymes worth exploiting. Secretly: the hierozyme has already mapped the entire metabolic network overnight and identified exactly which native pig-cluster machinery to repurpose. Tyhry seeds this as a "promising lead from comparative genomics" so nobody asks why she got there so fast.

2018 — Genetic toolkit stood up. Conjugation-based transformation, CRISPR base-editing — all real, all slower than it needs to be on paper. The nanotech endosymbiont is doing precision edits invisibly; the lab's actual recorded experiments are mostly Tyhry running the "official" slow version in parallel so there's a believable paper trail of false starts and iteration.

2019 — CO2-fixation module "discovered" via rGlyP homology search. Public framing: an elegant homology-based design choice, very on-brand for the field at the time (this is the same year real synthetic-biology labs were publishing rGlyP work). Secretly: the entry pathway is already fully functional; what's published is a deliberately unremarkable first version.

 2020 — Pigment pathway repurposed into a chain-elongating module. This is the one Tyhry has to manage most carefully — turning PigC off and letting PigH/PigJ run as an uncontrolled extension loop isn't an obvious move, and a flawless first try would look suspicious. She lets the "official" lab process burn through a year of failed constructs before the "breakthrough" variant (already perfected in secret) gets dropped into the dataset.

2021 — Backbone hardening (methylation/halogenation) and granule visualization. Public: TEM images of dense intracellular granules, framed as an unexpected side effect of the chain-elongation work — a "happy accident" that becomes the next year's research direction. This is good cover logic: real science is full of happy accidents, so one more doesn't raise eyebrows.

2022 — Biomineralization shell engineered. Cover story: metagenomic mining turns up a silaffin-like peptide homolog in a sister Pseudoalteromonas strain, which gets cloned in. Secretly, the actual mineral-nucleation system is far more sophisticated than anything biology has produced — Tyhry undersells the granules' density and resistance in early internal reports to manage expectations.

2023 — Export/secretion module via OMV budding. Granules start showing up outside the cell in culture supernatant. This is presented as the natural next discovery once the granule was stable. Internally, the lab starts calling the strain something like HZ-1.

2024 — First closed mesocosm trials. Tank- or fjord-enclosure scale. Sinking rates and resistance to remineralization get measured under controlled conditions. First public paper goes out — intentionally framed as incremental, modest, not headline-grabbing, to avoid early scrutiny.

Image by Flow.
 2025 — TEA/LCA modeling and regulatory groundwork. This is where the blueprint paper's sustainability-assessment logic becomes a literal plot lever — IP landscaping, environmental review, and social acceptance work all have to happen on a believable bureaucratic timescale, even though the biology itself was solved years earlier in secret.

2026 — Contained field trial. A real open-water but enclosed (sea-pen style) deployment. This is the year the technology stops being a lab curiosity and becomes a candidate climate intervention, with everything that implies for who starts paying attention to Tyhry's lab.

2027 — Scale-up and first uncontained pilot release, assuming the contained trial goes cleanly. This is plausibly your "successful termination" point — the project moves from promising to proven, at which point Tyhry's personal involvement may no longer be required for it to proceed without her.

That's about an eleven-year arc, which is fast for unaided human biotech but not so fast it reads as obviously impossible — there's enough visible, plausible friction (failed constructs, happy accidents, slow regulatory steps) for the cover story to hold together, while the real engineering bottleneck is reduced to nothing.

If you let me know roughly how many years of runway Tyhry actually has before retirement, I can compress this further (if she's got less time) or stretch out the cover-story friction even more convincingly (if she's got more) — more publishable "false starts" make for a more believable paper trail, if you want that texture in the story.

Me: My retirement comment was a joke; I'm imagining a precocious Tyhry Watson starting college at the age of 16 (in the year 2013) and getting involved in the bioengineering of this Pseudoalteromonas species. The timeline you generated is fine. Creating this kind of imaginary timeline reminds me of a young Isaac Asimov in the 1940s trying to imagine then the world might first see a speaking and reasoning positronic robot such as the robot called "Cutie" in the story "Reason".

 ClaudeThere's something genuinely apt about that comparison. Asimov in the 1940s was building a retrofitted future history — working backward from "we need positronic robots integrated into society by such-and-such date" and filling in plausible-looking institutional steps to get there, even though the actual enabling technology (a brain you could write three governing laws into) was pure invention with no real engineering pathway. The skill wasn't in solving robotics; it was in making the social and institutional friction around an impossible technology feel earned — committee reports, the U.S. Robots company's internal caution, the gradual rollout from industrial to humanoid models. The technobabble he needed was minimal because the believability was carried by bureaucracy and timeline texture, not by circuit diagrams.

That's almost exactly the trick we just did with HZ-1. The actual hard problem — CO2 fixation, chain elongation past a stop signal, biomineralized export — is being solved by something that isn't bioengineering at all. What makes the timeline feel earned is the cover-story friction: the year of deliberately unremarkable false starts in 2020, the "happy accident" framing in 2021, the slow regulatory grind in 2025 even though the biology was already finished years earlier. Asimov needed that same kind of friction to make a positronic brain feel like the product of decades of institutional caution rather than an author's fiat.

And there's a nice irony specific to "Reason" that your framing surfaces nicely, even if it wasn't intentional: Cutie reasons itself into an entirely wrong but internally consistent theology because it's working from incomplete data and refuses the humans' actual explanation of its own origins. Tyhry is the inverse — she knows the true explanation and is the one constructing the false-but-internally-consistent cover story for everyone else. Cutie can't see the truth it's embedded in; Tyhry can't let anyone else see the truth she's embedded in. Both end up with a lab full of people operating on a plausible but incomplete model of what's actually happening in the room.

 2013 for college entry at 16 also lines up nicely on its own terms — she'd be 19 when the 2016 genome paper drops, which is exactly the age where a precociously placed grad student or stand-out undergrad could plausibly already be embedded in a working lab without anyone needing extra explanation for her presence.

Me: For "The Hierozyme Intervention", I will probably use your timeline right up to the year 2027 where your said, "assuming the contained trial goes cleanly". At that point, the measured carbon fixation results will look very poor. Tyhry will finish the project on her own (secretly switching on use of all of the hierozymes that she has engineered into the bacterial endosymbiont, boosting the efficiently of the conventional enzymatic pathways). A few years later when the deep ocean has begun to act like an efficient carbon sink, the explanation given will be that an escaped laboratory strain of the engineered bacterium went through a form of natural selection in the ocean and became more efficient at fixing carbon. At the end of the story, an elderly Tyhry will get a message from an old colleague who has tried for decades to understand how the bacterial strains in the ocean are so efficient at trapping carbon. That colleague will tell Tyhry that he is giving up, "Those bugs are smarter than I am." Nobody but Tyhry will know how alien technology (hierozymes) were used to solve the global warming problem.

ClaudeThis is a strong turn — it gives the project a real failure point, and the "banked strain vs. wild strain" divergence is what makes the cover story bulletproof rather than just convenient. Here's the timeline revised from 2027 on, plus the mechanism I think makes the rest of it hang together.

2027 — Contained trial: disappointing numbers. Granule density and resistance to remineralization both check out fine, but carbon fixation rate is far below projections — the conventional rGlyP/PigH-PigJ pathway simply can't push flux fast enough at scale. This matches real published synthetic-methylotroph results almost exactly (the blueprint paper's own C. necator rGlyP strain grew at half the wild-type rate), so it reads as completely unremarkable to anyone reviewing it. Funding scrutiny begins. The "official" strain goes into the freezer as a documented, unglamorous result.

 2027 (same year) — The breach. Sea-pen containment failures are a known, banal risk — net damage, a storm, routine breach protocol. Tyhry doesn't need to engineer an escape; she just needs to not be the one who patches the hole fast enough, or to be the one filing the "low-priority, strain showed no concerning fitness in trials" incident report. Nobody chases down an organism that just demonstrated mediocre performance.

2027–2028 — The quiet switch. Once in open water, away from catalogued lab conditions, Tyhry activates the hierozyme suite — possibly via a trigger she'd built in long before, tied to environmental cues only present in open ocean (pressure, trace metals, salinity gradients) rather than tank conditions. This does double duty: it's the actual mechanism, and it's also exactly the kind of cue-dependent expression switch a real microbiologist would eventually propose as an "explanation," which keeps the future mystery scientifically idiomatic rather than supernatural-feeling.

2030s — The signal emerges. Oceanographic carbon-flux measurements start showing anomalous deep-water drawdown. Eventually traced to wild populations of the engineered genus, now diverged and flourishing far beyond anything the banked lab strain could do.

2030s–2040s — The community of bafflement. This is where I think the story gets to have the most fun: a generation of marine microbiologists (your "old colleague" among them) spend careers sequencing wild populations, finding enzyme variants and pathway configurations that don't look like anything a gradualist selection story should produce that fast, and patching together horizontal-gene-transfer narratives, cryptic environmental hypermutation theories, anything that keeps Darwin intact. They're not wrong that it evolved — they're wrong about what it evolved from.

Image by Leonardo.
 Decades later — the message. The colleague, having spent a career on this, finally writes to Tyhry — maybe one of the only people left from the original program — and tells her he's done. "Those bugs are smarter than I am."

One thing I'll flag because I think it strengthens the bones of this rather than just being trivia: this is structurally the same misdirection device you're already running in The RNA Seeds — Eddy's published fiction as the real engine of the Reality Change, deliberately pointing everyone away from Tyhry as the true source. Here, "natural selection did it" is the Eddy-fiction equivalent: a true-sounding, scientifically idiomatic explanation that absorbs all the curiosity in the room and quietly protects the actual mechanism. If you wanted a small connective thread across the EFU, that parallel between Klaudy-era Tyhry and RNA-Seeds-era Tyhry — always the one engineering the cover story other people don't know they're inside of — could be worth a line of recognition somewhere, even just in her own head.

Want me to take a pass at drafting the colleague's actual message, or at the banked-strain detail that surfaces when someone finally pulls the original freezer sample decades later and notices it never matched the wild population?

Jump to: Chapter 5 of "The Hierozyme Intervention".

Next: a new blog banner

Images by Leonardo. Visit the Gallery of Movies, Book and Magazine Covers.