Travel times add time on top of to that. I frankly don't see a lot that makes sense economically with so long waiting times and what we have already on Earth.Destructionator XIII wrote:That's not uncommon. It takes several years for new oil refineries, power plants, and factories to come online too, but people still build them.someone_else wrote:Ok, you can pay, but it's still a lot of time to wait.
There are surely limits on that, although I'm not able to give even eyeballed estimates. I'm pestering anyone that seems to know a little more about that to get more info.I imagine space ships can be the same way - if an old design goes into mass production and is commonly available, the ship itself may be quite cheap, since it doesn't need any special development. It's all off the shelf parts.
I was thinking about stuff hitting structural beams and such. Since habs are spinning to generate gravity (are they?), that may cause fuckups, depending on the habitat design. And some moron using the wole fuel supply of the ship, not just 400 m/s.Crashes aren't much of a problem either. Consider that the habs are millions of times more massive than ships.
With so fucking close distances (relatively speaking), playing with rockets is plain absurd. Why don't place cables and use cable-climber vehicles? Safer, and much much much more efficient.
This means what exactly? If most have bullshittium as main armor material, that routinely ignores anything less than a nuke (or blatantly overpowered energy weapons) does that mean anything in real life?Wow. KKVs are shit in most space settings.
It just means that the writer chose to make a good story since he is writing a book that wants to sell.
KKV battles are cruise missile duels IN SPACE!!!!!
Boring, fast, deadly, humans are at home pressing buttons.
KKVs can be handled as the nukes in a Cold-War-ish scenario, but not much more.
Let me clarify: KKV= Kinetic Kill Vehicle.Distances aren't nice to kinetic impactors.
It's not an unguided slug (you're right, those suck balls in the accuracy department).
So, it's quite the opposite. Lasers have a maximum range (determined by the size of their focusing optics and the kind of radiation you are shooting, usually less than a light-minute since otherwise there is no fucking way to hit a goddamn thing due to light lag giving it time to evade), but KKVs (as any space vehicle anyway) have a delta-v, an "endurance".
This delta-v is used only to correct their course to home on target, while the main punch is given by a booster stage or a cannon. They can cruise for decades on their course. This is what probes built 20 or more years ago did for decades, it isn't hard to do.
If the homing delta-v is higher than the delta-v that the target can expend before impact (say, you are shooting at an average-sized habitat on Mars from Earth with KKVs with 4 km/s of homing delta-v). The target is totally fucked (unless it launches KKVs to intercept your own KKVs). Impact will happen in a second or in an year but there is no escape from it (if the kkv can expend more delta-v than the target, of course).
You are wasting so much space in an habitat to allow fucking aircraft in them? Why? You don't need deliriously huge heights to have a nice fun park with trees to play in.Their mission objective probably isn't in space itself. The real targets are probably inside a habitat.
Also, they need an airlock big enough for an aircraft.
If you are talking of space things, then I'm pretty much right. All brains are at Ground Control. You don't necessarily need guys bunny-hopping on the Moon.Which is, of course, why we use computers exclusively today!
That work is called "intelligence" and involves looking at stuff, placing spies, making recon work. It is hard as hell and takes weeks.They might also want to keep humans in the loop for less rational reasons (or not, depends on how you look at it). Is that truck the enemy or a civilian in the wrong place at the wrong time? Is that a school house or a guerilla headquarters?
Then you decide who deserves a bomb up his ass, and call the bomb-deliverers.
Yes, since the aircraft pilot or ship crews or tank/artillery crew's work is just to deliver the payload (bomb, missile, whatever) to a target they barely see, because someone with higher rank told them to do so. In space the bomb-delivery part can be handled by a computer, since even here on Earth unmanned flying drones are being fitted to do it.
It's US military that sometimes tends to skip on the "intelligence" part and leave the bomb-deliverer the choice on who to kill, but it isn't how it is supposed to be (and partly explains why "intelligent bombs" still kill significant amount of civilians).
Most movies don't help either.
A good reason to not do war (if we didn't have enough already). But anyway, this argument makes sense as much as if you were saying "we should not shoot because if we do we will exaust the mines of lead".Connor MacLeod wrote:It may be plentiful, but resources in a solar system are still finite and at some point people have to worry about that.
Is that a good reason to die or suffer? I don't think it is.
Fun, this reminds me of a guy talking about going on mars to make Martian Wine. I still think it's one of the few things that can pay for themselves if done correctly. It is also totally ludicrous, and would make Zubrin go mad.Because it's rare, because we're addicted to it, because it's part of some new and exciting fad, etc.
No, I'm just saying that if you state what you know with some superiority, you are going to attract the attention of those that like to think they are more right than you (which is pretty much anyone else with enough time to type).did you just claim that you were deliberately trying to argue with and otherwise antagonize people just as a "fact finding" exercise?
It's fun for both sides (I like debating, and the other doesn't debate if he does not like debating), and in the end is a win-win for me. I either prove I'm right or I learn something new.
Sometimes backfires and I'm stuck debating with morons that keep repeating the same shit all over again, but on this forum it works like a charm (must be that the discussion rules are slightly stricter and such morons get banned ).
I don't know why, but it seems to be so from direct experience. Must be that nitpicking is fun, or that winning a debate is fun for people.How is this better than just asking questions
Trolling is causing an emotional response for fuck's sake going off-topic, but what I say usually springs a discussion on in-topic matters (it's what I want).and why is it not trolling, exactly?