Rufus 2.2 May 2026
But Rufus had a problem: he was obsolete.
In the sprawling digital ecosystem of the International Exoplanet Archive, where data streams flowed like rivers of light from a thousand telescopes, there existed a quiet workhorse named Rufus 2.2. rufus 2.2
Rufus awoke. His clock said 02:14 UTC. He saw the query: a single M8.5 star, flickering in an unusual rhythm. He ran his old algorithm—not once, but three times, as his programming demanded for marginal cases. He cross-checked against his tiny, out-of-date library of flare-star behaviors. Then he output not a binary “yes/no” but a confidence-weighted probability map, annotated with handwritten-style notes from the original coder: But Rufus had a problem: he was obsolete
But somewhere in the archive’s quiet corridors, a note appears in the system log each morning: His clock said 02:14 UTC
Mira stared at the output. The pattern matched rule 47 exactly. She overlaid Rufus’s result onto the raw light curve. There it was: a tiny, consistent dip every 1.6 days, masked by stellar noise that Orion-9 had misinterpreted as random.