Chapter 627: Chapter 621: New Robot
“Confirmation received. The two selected materials are currently stored in the supplies warehouse.” Zero’s voice didn’t fluctuate.
“Zero, I want to exchange for a communication device similar to a personal smart brain that can also be used in the Galactic Federation.” Finn Lewis pondered before continuing. At the mont, Olivia Thatcher would definitely not be able to contact him. Here in the Galactic Federation, almost everyone has their own personal smart brain, much like the prevalence of mobile phones on Earth.
And Finn didn’t want to buy one. After all, he couldn’t completely trust and safely use sothing he bought. It would be better to directly exchange for one from Zero.
“The list has been given.” Zero had shown so form of humanization. Back on Earth, Zero wasn’t this intelligent. Finn took out his mobile phone and browsed for a bit, directly selecting the most expensive option on the list. The costliest portable personal smart brain was 800,000 points.
Finn directly exchanged for one. Since Zero said these could all be used, then they could indeed all be used. After finishing this, Finn took the compressed-space storage ring he exchanged from Zero and put it on his hand, then stuffed all the things he had bought into it.
“Zero, will this Roberts Coin harm the human body?” Finn asked curiously after taking care of everything.
“No, it’s like regular tal.”
“Extract 2 cubic ters of Roberts Coin for to see.” Finn thought for a mont and then said.
About twenty minutes later, Finn received the personal smart brain delivered by Zero. This ti, it did not appear directly in his hand. A middle-aged man delivered it to him. Finn didn’t know if this middle-aged man was a robot, but he didn’t look like one.
Finn didn’t pry further. The man respectfully handed the item to Finn and then turned to leave. The smart brain was very simple, only about the size of a palm, roughly the sa size as a smartphone, but very lightweight. Finn was already quite proficient with such gadgets.
After he activated it, Finn quickly entered his password, fingerprint, and DNA as prompted. After that, the smart brain beca Finn’s personal smart brain.
“Your na will be Kaylee.” Finn thought for a mont, then directly nad the personal smart brain “Kaylee”. In the absence of Kay Lee, it would serve as a mory of her.
“Na confird. Hello, sir.”
“Hmm, hello. Can it now connect to the Federation network?” Finn nodded and asked.
“Backup network can connect to the public network of the Galactic Federation, as well as the regional network of the Death Star. Would you like to connect?”
“Connect to all. Also, search whether you can buy warships in the Death Star domain.” After thinking about it, Finn directly asked.
“Search completed. According to the currently collected data, there are thirteen places where you can buy warships in the Death Star domain. However, based on related intelligence statistics, the risk of buying warships here is relatively high.” Kaylee quickly provided an answer.
Finn was a bit surprised by the existence of thirteen places, “Can you find an overview of the warships they sell?”
“I can find a part of it.” Kaylee quickly listed all the related information Finn needed. Finn imdiately started reading carefully. Among the listed items, he quickly noticed the Blackwater Sect. As Montgory Tian said, this organization was indeed huge, even selling warships.
However, after opening it, Finn shook his head slightly. The Blackwater Sect did indeed sell warships, but the warships they sold were not what Finn understood as warships. The warships here were not brand new, almost all were second-hand, and a large part of them had undergone repairs.
The most important thing was the labels behind these warships explicitly ntioned the family they co from, or simply the region of the Federation they belonged to. To put it plainly, these warships were robbed. Their target custors were obviously not people like Finn, but interstellar pirates or rcenary groups.
However, among the Blackwater Sect’s warships, Finn saw a big guy –- a battleship 17 kiloters long, 5 kiloters wide, and 2 kiloters high.
This was a real titan. The entire warship could virtually be described as a small society. However, its price was equally extravagant — a full 50 million star credits. Compared to what could be bought with star credits, this price was indeed quite expensive.
But the number of crew mbers it needed was not as many as imagined. It only needed more than ten thousand crew mbers. Most systems employed highly intelligent equipnt, with a significant part using robots.
After reading this, Finn shook his head and closed it. After opening the lists from other sellers that Kaylee found, Finn found that the warships in there were all pretty much the sa – all second-hand warships. Even the newest ships had been repaired.
“Sir, if you want to buy warships, based on my search, you should choose this piece of information.” Kaylee’s voice rang out, and she then projected the screen directly onto the table in front of Finn, marking a piece of information.
This piece of information was at the very end. After Finn opened it, it read very straightforwardly: Selling various types of Federation cosmic warships, brand-new factory warships, and also providing maintenance service for relevant warships. The description sounded grand, but what left Finn speechless was that the information actually ca from a personal website.
Unlike other warship sellers that were affiliated with so great powers and large organizations in the Death Star domain.
“Tell the reason?” Finn asked curiously.
“According to my data search, my program is more advanced than the programs these networks use. I can accurately assess the security of their networks. Although this is just a personal website, its safety level is very high. Judging from the safety level of the website, it definitely has powerful technical strength as a guarantee, so its credibility is very high.” Kaylee listed all the data for Finn.
Finn roughly looked through the person’s profile. Although he was just advertising, i.e., announcing his warship sales in this place, the terms ‘warship’ signified the price would not be too low. Furthermore, this was a place of disorder.
There had been instances of paynt without receipt of goods. Therefore, according to the data Kaylee had collected, this person had been advertising for about seven or eight years, yet hadn’t completed a single transaction.
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