Quine 4000
Quine 4000 | |
---|---|
A Quine 4000 is a type of Personal Computer used by spacecraft pilots. The Quine 4000 allows users to view their missions, cargo manifests, finances and kill breakdown. Grayson Burrows owned a Quine 4000 which he registered just after he first landed on Achilles in 2669. He continued to use the device to manage his missions and manifests through at least the next year.
Images
Screenshots
Sprite Sheets
Interface
Registration
Please register your
new Quine 4000
Enter Name:
_
Enter Callsign:
_
Startup
LOCATION:
{Base Name}
{Base Type}
SYSTEM:
{System}
READY!
Base Types
- Pleasure Planet
- Refinery Base
- Mining Base
- Agricultural Planet
- Pirate Base
- Derelict
- University Planet
- Government Base
- Industrial Base
- Military Starbase
SAVE
Save game as:
{list of games}
LOAD
Load game:
Save game not found.
{list of games}
MISSIONS
No missions. or Mission {#} of {#}
{mission description}
{mission payment}
Missions to date: {#}
Kills to date: {#}
FIN
Original Version
Current cash:
{credit balance}
Righteous Fire Version
Cash: {credit balance}
Kill breakdown:
Merchant: {#} {N/H/F}
Hunter: {#} {N/H/F}
Confed: {#} {N/H/F}
Kilrathi: {#} {N/H/F}
Militia: {#} {N/H/F}
Pirate: {#} {N/H/F}
Retro: {#} {N/H/F}
Total:
MAN
Space left: {X}
Hidden left: {X} if installed
No cargo loaded. or Cargo page {#} of {#}
{Cargo} {#} repeat
PWR
The PWR button shuts off the Quine 4000.
Wing Commander Privateer Player's Guide
PERSONAL COMPUTER
The Personal Computer is as important to you as to your character. Your character uses it to keep track of business obligations and finances. You use it to save and load games. Effective and quick use of the Personal Computer is crucial to both of you.
The Personal Computer answers questions like, “How much money do I have?” and “Which missions have I not finished?” and “Just what do I have in my cargo hold, anyway?” It is only available while you are at a base. All the information it provides is available through your MFDs and nav map during space-flight. To pull up your Personal Computer, type Alt-C or simultaneously click both buttons of your mouse or joystick. To exit the Personal Computer, click on the PWR (power) button at the bottom of the unit.
The Personal Computer cannot be accessed while you are interacting with another computer. Therefore, you cannot access it while at the screens for the Commodities Exchange, Mission Computer, Ship Modification, Software Dealer’s or guilds’ computers.
SAVE. The Personal Computer is the only place to save a game, so you can only save while docked at a base. When you click on the save button, the screen says SAVE GAME as: and offers you a box eight characters wide in which to name your game. If you have other saved games, they are listed below the box.
To save your game, name it and press Enter or click on SAVE. To save over an existing game, click on the name of the old one — it appears in the box. The only limit to the number of saved games you may have is the amount of available space on your harddrive. To exit the Personal Computer, press the PWR button at the bottom of the unit. If the names of your saved games overflow this screen, use Up or Down to scroll through further pages.
LOAD. You can only load a game from your Personal Computer, which is available only during your stay at a base. When you elect to load a game, the screen reads LOAD GAME: and offers you a box in which to type the name of the previously saved game you are loading. You may select the game you wish to load by again clicking on its name and the LOAD button, instead. If the names of your saved games overflow this screen, use Up or Down to scroll through further pages. Once the name of the game you wish to resume is typed in, hit Enter or LOAD. You automatically exit to the saved game.
MISSIONS. This selection allows you to review the missions that are currently awaiting your attention. If you have fulfilled all your missions or haven’t taken any, the screen says NO MISSIONS. When you still have active missions, they will be summarized on your Personal Computer mission screen. The top line tells you how many missions you have active. The rest of the description tells you where you must go to complete the mission, who has contracted you to carry it out and how much they’re paying. To scroll to the next mission in the list use Up or Down. At the bottom of the screen is the total missions to date.
Finance. Clicking on FIN brings up a statement of your current cash in credits. This is a cash-only sector. People don’t tend to live long enough to be a good risk for loan sharks and banks. This is all the financial statement you’ll need.
Manifest. Clicking on MAN brings up your ship’s manifest, telling you what’s in your cargo hold. At the top of the screen you are informed how much space in cargo units — roughly a cubic meter — are available in your cargo hold. Below that is a list of the items you have and the units of each. If your manifest goes beyond this screen, use Up or Down to scroll through the list.
Appearances
Behind the Screens
The artwork for the Quine 4000 stored in Privateer's OPTIONS file includes a sixth button labeled RJCT. The wider MISSIONS button which replaces it is stored elsewhere in the game. It is not clear what the RJCT option would've meant.
The internal script for the Quine text includes a startup line which reads "Linking to GPS.". It does not display in the game.
The kill breakdown was added to the FIN menu for Privateer Righteous Fire. The CD-ROM release ports it back to the original campaign. The original 3.5" release of the game has a different screen which only displays your credit balance (with slightly different phrasing).
A pre-release build seen in a screenshot in the Wing Commander Privateer Player's Guide shows an earlier mission description.