• Yeah but you don’t need to buy an Orb.

    Anything that looks like an Orb will do (especially if it’s blue, for some reason). You can imagine storing concepts and information in them, then shaking them like a snowglobe and seeing if anything happens in your head. They can produce helpful results, but it’s all a lot less conclusive than very simple C code or something like that.

    Orbs operate on probability and collected data to build up big concepts.

    Lisp programming is also a lot like Orbs, since everything is in brackets (basically hollow spheres).