Thanks Mike. Didn't know that Mongoose was keeping things at 1105. Wafer technology is what TL?
Perhaps all of the subsequent era were wafer enabled universes?
here is a brief overview that sort of cobbles together T5 and MgT:
T5 first, during character generation you can muster out with an insurance package.
"Life Insurance archives a personality scan and DNA (or equivalent) sample during the Mustering Out Process. When notice of death reaches the archive, it enables the creation of a Clone and Implantation of the character’s personality.
Notice that unless updated, the replacement clone will revert to the memories and skills recorded at Mustering Out.
Life Insurance may be purchased: the premium is MCr1 to start a policy and Cr100,000 to update."
"A Personality Can Be Recorded
Personality Scanners make an editable, reproducible record of a Personality from any sophont. The record preserves the Elements of a Personality in a digital format.
The Scanner. Brainscan technology is commonplace and part of modern medical diagnostic practice. Any ship (or other) Autodoc has the ability to perform a brainscan (it takes about an hour)."
"For example, Duke Adawulf of Efate knew he was living a dangerous life when hostilities started in the Spinward Marches; he quite responsibly bought life insurance. In the last days of the enemy assault, Adawulf held off the enemy at the portico of his estate as his staff made their escape. After several hours, he was killed when Zhodani artillery levelled the palace. His loyal butler gathered up a few scraps of the Duke, and after the war ended, notified the insurance company. About a year later, the Duke made his appearance at a party in his honor, but with no memories of the past three years."
Relicts have force-grown organic bodies, cloned brains, and implanted personalities."
"After a terrible groundcar accident, Spyke Alpha and his bride Majack Sierra both lay in autodocs with extensive injuries. Spyke was 62 years old: the doctors took tissue samples and force grew a completely new clone body over about 18 weeks. When it was ripe, they implanted his brainscan into the new (18 year-old) body and allowed the old one to expire. Majack is 58 and her injuries are confined to the left leg. Doctors could have removed the leg and replaced it with a temporary mechanical; then when the clone body was ripe, replaced the mechanical with a clone leg and finally destroyed the remainder of the clone body. Instead, they implanted her brainscan into the new (18-year-old) body and destroyed the old one. Or did they?"
And another couple of really creepy examples:
"For example, during the Second Frontier War, Zhodani and Imperial forces repeatedly held, lost, and retook strategic
positions on Arden. Thousands of soldiers on both sides were killed.
By chance, a non-human prospector Zognar and crew were in the Arden system and saw a chance for profit in midst of all this destruction; they collected cell samples and brainscans from several dozen of the dead (some were actually not quite dead when the samples and scans were taken).
The result was a bonanza: dead soldiers became guest security guards and bodyguards; dead technicians became guest factory workers; a dead doctor became a series of sorely-needed medical staffers. Zognar made a fortune."
A note - a guest is another name for clone with an edited memory/personality and sterilised.
For example, Morio Nakamura grew up on Boughene, the child of prospectors in the copper-rich Swalian Mountains;
he was the operator of a small copper mine for more than 40 years. Both strong and smart, he was good at what he did and he enjoyed his work.
When the megacorporation Naasirka opened a much larger mine, it needed more skilled workers than the planet could provide, and they struck a deal with Morio: in return for his cell samples and brainscan, they provided him with a new cloned body and bought his mine for enough to support him in luxury for the rest of his life.
Naasirka’s Nakamura Copper Mine (they named it after him) is staffed by a workforce of strong smart Nakamura
clones, each implanted with the proper skills and a personality which enjoys its work. Naasirka’s cost-benefit analysis was confirmed: it was cheaper to create a clone workforce than to recruit, transport, and train hundreds of offworlders."
To be continued...