Litcius/Paper detail

Chromatic Rail, Trail, and Veil (AEC-RTV1): A Low-Symbolic Carrying Architecture for Externalized Attention, Route Residue, and Soft Afterfield Memory

Raynor Eissens

2026Open MIND10 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract This paper introduces Chromatic Rail, Trail, and Veil as a unified low-symbolic carrying architecture for the Ambient Era. It defines a bounded environmental and representational front through which messages, route states, reminders, notifications, payloads, and reversible residue can be placed, carried, transferred, and softly dissolved across everyday space. Earlier work in AEC-CMR1 established a continuous chromatic chain in which communication may transform from message → accept → route → residue → dissolve, rather than vanishing after transmission. Earlier work in RC-1 established that interaction may settle into a carried chromatic afterfield that preserves continuity without collapsing into full symbolic archive. RC-1 defines residue as a bounded continuity carrier that preserves relational tone, semantic temperature, drift tendency, and continuity of presence while remaining reversible by design. The present paper introduces the missing architectural family through which those principles can become spatially deployable and psychologically livable. Rail is the infrastructural carrying line. Trail is the residual path of movement and passage. Veil is the soft afterfield layer. Together they form a modular and scalable post-app, but not anti-app, carrying architecture in which visible color remains the low-symbolic public handle, while deeper symbolic content remains optional, linked, and context-bound. Chromatic Rail should not be interpreted as a system of detachable physical tiles, removable hardware blocks, or self-contained semantic units in which full payload must reside locally. Rather, it is a flat chromatic surface architecture composed of luminous representational fronts on which linked chromatic units may appear, disappear, be reorganized, and be reassigned across devices and surfaces. A chromatic unit functions primarily as a visible semantic handle: a low-symbolic public representation of linked content, task, relation, or state. Its payload may remain elsewhere across phone, desktop, browser, cloud, wearable, vehicle, television, or other connected systems, where it can open, expand, execute, or be edited at the appropriate depth. Direct touch may be supported on some surfaces, but is not required; organization, control, and reassignment may also occur through phone-based control, desktop systems, remote interfaces, or other connected hardware. The system therefore externalizes the user-facing carrying layer from centralized phones and terminal-heavy interfaces into bounded chromatic surfaces that can live where life already happens, while preserving digital portability through representational reassignment rather than physical extraction. In this model, the rail is best understood as a low-symbolic organization and launch surface, not as the sole site of payload storage or computation. AI remains secondary but important as a compression, extraction, translation, and re-expansion layer. This positions Chromatic Rail, Trail, and Veil as the carrying family that completes the transition begun in AEC-CMR1 and RC-1.

Topics & Concepts

Chromatic scaleBounded functionComputer scienceArchitectureScalabilityBridging (networking)Modular designDistributed computingTheoretical computer scienceHuman–computer interactionThe SymbolicResidualOpportunistic and Delay-Tolerant NetworksCybernetics and Technology in SocietyCultural Studies and Postmodernism