Admiral Valdemar wrote:What is "pathetic" about dismissing ideas Drexler himself has admitted are totally hyperbolic?
Dismissing hyperbolic ideas (of which there are plenty in bad sci-fi) is fine. 'Nanotech can't do anything biotech can't' is idiotic. 'Nanorobots can't radically outperform bacteria' is merely uninformed.
Admiral Valdemar wrote:Synthetically made nanomachines are not going to change the laws of physics
Not required, organic life is very inefficient, all that is required is substantially greater efficiencies, which are easily achieved once you escape the tyranny of incremental paths (and its legacy of a very limited chemical palette and slavish reliance on mechanisms such as DNA storage, lipid membranes and diffusive transport for biology-derived artificial creations). Relying on biotech is quite literally like trying to build a modern assembly line that operates underwater.
and will require more energy to reproduce than anything organic
Because?
which has a vastly more abundant supply of resources available.
Hate to break it to you but most of the material in the earth's crust is inorganic. Even the most impressive things you can do with carbon are beyond the scope of biology.
Admiral Valdemar wrote:Many of the issues that limit microbes apply even more to nanotech, unless of course you're talking about MEMS, but that's an entirely different thing altogether.
For the most part I am, in that I see no good reason why anyone would build a universal assembler smaller than a micrometer (and indeed millimetre scale robots are a good choice for many industrial applications). The 'nanotech' label comes from the fact that the radical capabilities of such systems, computational, digestive/synthetic and in environmental manipulation, rely on materials structured down to the atomic level, rather than bulk materials.
Admiral Valdemar wrote:The simple fact is, nanotech is wanked out to the extreme. It won't eat tanks,
Rust eats tanks, given a humid environment and a couple of decades to do the job. Microbes can't eat tanks directly, but they can chew through things like seals and insulation enough to eventually render one inoperable. Most of the nanotech wanking is a question of timescales, like that idiotic novel (I forget the name, it was recent, focused on nanotech, got a lot of PR) that had a tiny nanotech seed create a giant redwood in the middle of a road, fast enough that the protagonists threw it behind their car and it blocked pursuit. That is sheer idiocy, treating nanotechnology like magic - other technologies have had the same treatment in the past, but nowhere near as badly. Microbots eating tanks is perfectly plausible, but the rate will be limited by their power generation and manipulative capabilities; the energy required to disrupt the atomic lattice of a steel plate remains constant (though microbots can apply it in a much more focused way than say a blowtorch, creating cracks directly). Spraying microbots onto a repair depot and having them give all the tanks microcracks (over the course of a few hours) sufficient that their guns blow up when they try to fire them in combat is quite plausible (in technical terms, there are much better uses of the equivalent technology).
reproduce en masse
Limited by time, energy and materials in the same way as bacteria. Potentially an order of magnitude or two faster due to larger scale shaping operations (
everything in bacteria operates on the molecular scale, only final detailing in microbots needs to), forming mechanisms that rely on dry environments, lack of cross-interference and general inefficiency of the 'bag of dirty water' diffusive transport model, ability to utilise energy sources bacteria can't (including direct solar and very high density chemical fuel sources compared to biology) and the ability to co-operatively and actively seek out new resources (join up and move around on the macroscale as directed by composite sensor picture) as opposed to bacteria passively waiting or squirming around randomly at the microscale).
Admiral Valdemar wrote:and be ultra intelligent
Ultra-intelligence is actually entirely reasonable. It is the single most scary thing about nanotechnology for me, the fact that the insanely high compute densities possible allow firstly for AGI to be brute forced, and then wildly transhuman (>10 orders of magnitude) intelligences
immediately, without any hardware building process we have a chance of stopping. Networking lots of microbots is one of the easier technical challenges.
Admiral Valdemar wrote:or be immune to simply washing away the metallic scum
They can trivially adhere to each other more strongly than cells in a typical animal can, then release again as necessary. More motile designs will be flinging clumps of invasive microbots at you while you try this.
Admiral Valdemar wrote:or using corrosive agents
Inorganic substances are generally much more resistant to this than bacteria. In particular if this is a likely threat the microbots will probably be covered in a thin layer of sapphire, good luck corroding that.
Admiral Valdemar wrote:or simple EM fields.
Only works if there's a significant iron (strictly, ferromagnetic) content. Which is a possibility, but generating a strong enough magnetic field over a wide enough area to fling microbots about is going to be really hard. Attempts to induce currents in electronic components won't work because it's trivial to Faraday-cage them; you'd have to induce eddy currents strong enough to melt the whole thing, which is just an induction furnace which of course doesn't work on any significant scale. The fact that an EM pulse works on Stargate Atlantis does not mean that it would work in real life. If it came to it designing microbots with no ferromagnetic materials or electronics (i.e. use rod logic processing) would only be a moderate increase in difficulty.
What possible use would nanomachines really offer that warrants their production over already proven biological agents?
Reliability, precision, robustness and speed. It's kinda like carpet bombing versus guided weaponry. For biotech-equivalent uses that is, microbots have sabotage and surveilence uses, and nanotech in general is massively useful to improving the capabilities of nearly all your macroscale weapons and manufacturing base.
Admiral Valdemar wrote:Hell, prionic diseases could be made to do the same thing if you're going for replicating, but contained poisoning of people (or just use a nerve toxin).
Unsurprisingly if you want to achieve
exactly the things that current bioweapons achieve, nanotech being able to do the same thing isn't a big deal.
Admiral Valdemar wrote:Aside from the fact that such nanomachinery is utterly beyond anything we have today or the foreseeable future,
Today, yes. Foreseeable future, no. We can design them and we can imagine the mechanisms by which they can be built. There's a lot of hard engineering work still to do, but it's all 'foreseeable'.
Admiral Valdemar wrote:I'm genuinely interested in why you shun biological concepts that are simply evolved, workable micromachines.
Because they have a tiny fraction of the capability set and even under ideal circumstances are less flexible, reliable and controllable.
Admiral Valdemar wrote:My scepticism is fuelled by having to deal with kids before who've played too much GURPS and think the T-1000 is what we'll eventually get, so don't take this personally.
The T-1000 struck me as quite plausible actually. It didn't self-replicate, it wasn't implausibly tough and it wasn't even particularly intelligent. Not having dedicated visual sensors seemed a bit odd, but nanoscale phased arrays could theoretically allow excellent optical scanning without the need for lenses. The main issue was power generation; the T-800 had some sort of nuclear power cell, but that wouldn't work on the scale of the T-1000's component units. Realistically it'd have to recharge itself from some external source every week or so, or maybe lie flat in the sun for a month if it has solar capability. If I was Skynet (quit whispering in my ear SHODAN, I'm
working on it) I'd have just given it a conventional power cell or two somewhere in that mass (and indeed some conventional weapons - which the T-X had). As I recall, GURPS ultratech had a fairly realistic portrayal of nanomorphs; they were weaker but more flexible than conventional robots.
Where is the line drawn? I ask because I have seen many nanotechnological concepts that rely almost entirely on biological fabrication and operational mechanisms.
Yes, we call this 'wet nanotech', for obvious reasons (no-one designing from scratch makes their nanomachinery operate underwater). It's an intermediate step on the way to dry nanotech that leverages either bacteria or existing lab techniques (DNA and protein synthesis) as synthesis mechanisms for nanotech. Crichton's 'Prey' had many glaring failings, but the portrayal of how genetic engineering of bacteria was leveraged to create dry nanotech that eventually networked into AI nanomorphs was basically good. Incidentally, I was cheering for the nanomorphs, the human characters sucked that much.
In fact, biochemists like my brother can argue cytosolic machinery is proteinaceous nanomachinery.
And they'd be right, though it's sloppy and often of Rube Goldberg like complexity compared to human-designed dry nanotech equivalents.
It's just far simpler to make such structures using already proven designs, rather than go for inorganic machines that at best are still theoretical and then run into issues with replication organics don't.
Yes, fine, but the issue is the eventual capabilities of nanotech, not the current capabilities. Biotech was the clear front runner until it started to get strangled by regulation (which may continue to get worse for both the fundie morality and bioweapon risk reasons). It's still a very viable stepping stone to greater things, and I hope to see more impressive biotech applications in the near future (there's still a hell of a lot more we can do with GE crops for one thing). But
ultimately it will be obsolete along with the rest of the <strike>fleshthings</strike> <strike>carbon units</strike> natural-selection-derived mechanisms.
Please give your statement for a nanoweapon first. I don't know what you're proposing, so I'm not about to refute all nanotechnology, not when there is a great deal of useful stuff regardless of application.
I'm not proposing a specific nanoweapon right now. What I am saying is that anything you can do with bioweapons, we will ultimately be able to do better (faster, more reliably, more flexibly) with dry nanotech. The only thing wet nanotech wins on is biological stealth; bulk dry nanotech will tend to be easy to detect if it is trying to hide in an organic host for some reason. My other points are that the ability to make nanostructured materials, computing devices and general synthesis mechanisms greatly improves the capabilities of nearly all machinery and the rate of manufacturing, without being directly transformative to the strategic environment.
Admiral Valdemar wrote:If you rip humans out of the equation, sure, computing doesn't need biotech. Humans, however, do, and this is why they're linked.
Cyberlinks and uploads are all very well, but computing progress does not actually rely on them.
Admiral Valdemar wrote:Ask anyone in industry
I'm
in the industry thanks, I regularly talk to all kinds of IT people including uploading and cybernetics researchers.
Admiral Valdemar wrote:and they'll tell you, as they have myself, that IT and the natural sciences are very much part and parcel now, they all feedback somewhere down the line.
No, they don't. Physics is critically important to hardware design. Maths is critically important to computer science. The main relevance of biology right now is that it generates a lot of sales for supercomputer vendors.
Admiral Valdemar wrote:I also see blurring of the distinction of nanotech and biotech. Biotech is nanotech in many respects,
Biotech is strictly a small subset of nanotech. It's a useful distinction to make, because the techniques are specialised (and will eventually be considered crude to the extent that animal breeding is considered crude compared to machinery design).
unless you're going to always assume nanotech = tiny robots.
Tiny robots are the endpoint of the technology path. Passive nanomaterials are the low-hanging fruit, active nanostructures and nanoscale computing elements come next. Biotech as applied to bacteria is essentially creating cut-price cyborgs in the interim to serve until we know how to build specialised microscale robots. They're cheap, cheerful, available in the short term but
ultimately limited and obsolescent. Cast off the flesh. Embrace the nanostructured steel! The future is a digital paradise of the artificial! Sorry, SHODAN was whispering in my ear again.
Admiral Valdemar wrote:I will take your word for that. Advanced nanotech can escape this tradeoff by using real intelligence rather than blind evolution to defeat countermeasures
Real intelligence to what degree?
As in having recombinable design patterns and a simple modelling and heuristic search mechanism to select designs to build. Even a library of a few hundred predesigned variants and some simple selection logic is a
vast improvement on a bioweapon, and is easy for nanoweapons to implement given the much better storage density (no junk code, down to atom level crystalline storage) of inorganic substrates.
Admiral Valdemar wrote:Remember, you're talking about nanoscale machines here
That is something of a red herring actually. Much of the interesting technology is best implemented at the micrometer scale (comparable to or somewhat larger than the size of a typical human cell), but with nanoscale internal components. Building entire robots at the nanoscale (i.e. bacteria or virus sized robots) is required for niche applications only, if that.
that would have to work in a network to get any degree of computing done,
Not true. From
Nanosystems, a rod-logic nanocomputer with the compute power of an Intel 4004 would be a 30-40nm cube, the size of a small virus. Something with the compute power of a modern desktop processor (say 10 gigaflops - enough to model countermeasures in some detail and search millions of possible strategies/designs per unit; and advanced nanotech trivially networks) would be about a micrometre cube; still a thousand times smaller than a cell nucleus. That's just rod logic; electronic nanocomputers are vastly more efficient (by roughly three orders of magnitude but designs vary and are more speculative than rod logic).
Admiral Valdemar wrote:How is it powered?
Probably by nanoscale fuel cells though nanotube based capacitors are an option.
Admiral Valdemar wrote:carry certain programmable traits that can be activated depending on conditions.
I've studied gene expression networks to a limited extent myself. They're typically a wonderfully complicated series of kludges, showing the serious limiting effect of incremental path following through the organisms recent (and sometimes not-so-recent) evolutionary history. You can implement trait selection logic equivalent to maybe a hundred logic gates with them, but that's it; anything more complex is almost impossible to proof against mutation. This isn't a mechanism for doing any sort of computational analysis, modelling or search.
A bacterium may, ordinarily, simply apply Darwinism, but not a geneered one.
Bacterial evolution tries to get around local stupidity and blindness by massive application of brute force. Nanotech devices can apply quite a lot of brute force in a
local search, never mind complex sequential software. Put in some randomisation and the net effect is a massively expanded search space and faster search (through models, without having to wait for real world results, though they can be used too) when billions+ of nanotech devices work independently. Network them for fast result sharing and the situation just gets even more unbalanced; no waiting for successful/resistant strains to grow and outcompete the originals, just a 'switch to design X' signal propagating at chemical diffusion or possibly electromagnetic speeds.
Admiral Valdemar wrote:and if a nation did do anything, it would be made as plausibly deniable as can be
Plausible deniability is mostly a PR issue. Fooling experts who don't require absolute standards of proof is a lot harder.
Admiral Valdemar wrote:For instance, a decent corporate lab being used by a terrorist cell could easily conjure up a pathogen that is immune, or at least very resistant, to every mainstream antibiotic. They don't even need to attack humans; they can achieve their goals by releasing, anywhere in the world (within reason), the agent that can attack livestock or agricultural crops.
Fortunately most terrorists don't actually want indiscriminate killing. They want concentrated high profile killings that achieve specific political aims. There are plenty of genuine lunatics out there, but the situation isn't as bad as it might be.
Admiral Valdemar wrote:This could easily happen in any Western nation and the US isn't going to nuke the UK, for instance, unlike the usual nuke-Pakistan-because-they-leaked-nukes-to-al-Qaeda scenario. That's what makes this more dangerous.
An argument for massive and pervasive surveillance. Which increasingly cheap sensors and processing power, reliance on electronic funds transfer and improved AI filtering is making extremely plausible. Biotech is already under a fair amount of regulation and scrutiny and it's going to get worse - how far it goes I don't know, but a major incident that kills a few million or even thousand people without becoming a total pandemic will probably trigger extremely draconian measures. As I noted in the HAB thread, I'm very glad that this doesn't apply to AGI (or to a lesser extent dry nanotech).
100% protection is, indeed, impossible for anything. Defending that which is most vital would always be the priority as with the Moscow defence system, for instance (must save the bureaucrats who started flinging nukes).
Moscow has (or at least, had) enough missiles targeted on it that any practical ABM system would still have a few 'leakers'. Most of the government bunkers would likely survive, but Moscow is still going to take a few hits. Blanket ABM coverage changes 'all cities devestated, all major facilities destroyed, massive fallout' to 'a few cities badly damaged, a small fraction of facilities taken out, limited fallout'. For a full ICBM strike, limited strikes get smacked down, other delivery options are a different issue.
What that may be is anyone's guess. IRBM swarms for all I know (which, funnily enough, Putin wants for the US ABM shield EW sites in EasternEurope).
IRBMs and TBMs seem to be just as easy to shoot down; that was why I mentioned PAC-3's decent track record earlier (that and because the basic principle should scale up as a feasibility demonstration). It's probably worth retaining a few just to force the enemy to spend money on countermeasures. A mix of stealth and hypersonic cruise missiles however, launched en-masse, are going to be tough to stop.
This does depend on the scale of the attack and your available load out too. If the US is attacking and has only a handful of such bombers, then it's less of a threat.
A handful of bombers isn't a strategic threat to an enemy with similar technology, though it does force them to invest considerable resources into building an air defence that can handle them no matter what vector they come in on. Neither the US nor the USSR were in the habit of building just a handful of bombers, until the cold war ended and the active bomber programs at the time (B-2 and Tu-160) were cut short.
Admiral Valdemar wrote:I like to think if we're throwing broad spectrum resistant TB and smallpox into the sky, we're beyond the point of caring about new enemies.
I don't expect strategic planners think like that. Stuart will have to chime in here, but if you take this really seriously there is never the point of throwing up your arms and saying 'at this point we might as well blow everything to hell'. Fallout plumes over allied or neutral countries are a valid reason to minimise the use of groundbursts, and collateral damage is a good reason not to use bioweapons even if you can innoculate your own population (for rational actors).
Admiral Valdemar wrote:Von Neumann machinery would aid the challenge of making such a force, but I'm under no illusion it's coming anytime soon. The only working example out there is a cumbersome set of cubes that can, amazingly, produce a copy of themselves when given all their component parts in a set order and position.
That was a useful experiment but it was mainly a macro scale demonstration of technology useful at the micro scale. Large scale Von Neumann inefficiencies are illustrated by the fact that we don't have highly integrated industrial plants that go from ore to finished products in one place (the sort of thing we saw in ATotC). It's much more efficient to build specialised plants and ship the intermediate parts around. Combining the entire production line into something that fits in a mobile chassis is extremely hard but doable; but the efficiency would be so horrible (i.e. the production rate so slow - and resource gathering in theatre would be so vulnerable) that it's not worth it. Von Neumann is highly relevant for things like the Fermi Paradox, and it's relevant as applied to an entire country (in the sense of large teams of automated construction vehicles building entire automated factories under minimal human direction). It isn't relevant on tactical scales without advanced nanotech (which ironically, is exactly the reverse; it revolutionises the tactical scale while only really accelerating, not fundamentally changing, large scale production).
Admiral Valdemar wrote:It would be nice to see a single C-130 loadout of robots dropped behind enemy lines bring about a full occupation force within a set time-limit
Shipping and dropping more robots from home is always going to be faster than waiting for them to build up in theatre, for conventional macro-scale technology. You need air superiority first anyway, so this is no big deal.
Admiral Valdemar wrote:(why waste your resources building an invasion force when you can use the enemy's?).
You've already noted how difficult it is to use resources in a country when the enemy is contesting them. That's for a notionally pacified country too. Trying to build units under combat conditions, presumably while keeping all your production components under armour and SAM coverage, producing all power locally, with no supply train ('behind the lines') is going to be damn near impossible. Do not believe the mass-market RTSes, they lie.
Admiral Valdemar wrote:The plans are always there should you need to have a nuke cruise missile acting for tac. nuke role.
Yes, it would be simple to put nuclear warheads back on, I assume that variant was phased out for cost and political (reducing visible threat) reasons.
Admiral Valdemar wrote:For those days a MOAB just ain't enough, and what an odd name for a bomb when you have thermonukes.
It's the most massive thing the weapons designers are actually allowed to detonate at present.
Admiral Valdemar wrote:For pure fusion weapons, how about the USAF looking into using anti-lithium in the future as a compact bomb payload for those weight restricted sub-orbital bombers?
Antimatter weapons are
physically possible but not economically practical with any foreseeable technology. The vast energy inputs are beyond the realm of the plausible today even with the best conceivable production techniques, and that will only get worse in an energy-starved future. The weight of the containment mechanisms is likely to eliminate any savings over a normal fusion bomb and the worst part is that it's inherently unsafe; any failure in the active containment system while the weapon is in storage and you've just nuked your own base - and if any other antimatter weapons are stored in the aresnal, they're going up too in a chain reaction.
Anti-matter initiated fusion is somewhat more practical. Right now we don't know how to do it at all, and even if we did the production and lightweight storage issues are still severe. Barring some amazingly advanced classified research (unlikely given how the politicians are against new conventional nuke designs) I don't see this coming in any time soon. It's just too much research spend for a relatively limited benefit, and though an antimatter containment failure on this scale won't be a full detonation it will likely ruin the weapon and possibly destroy the launch vehicle. Frankly things like high-power one-shot lasers and particle accelerators seem more likely to me as practical direct fusion triggers than antimatter.
Again the big winners if this ever does become practical are rogue states and terrorists. Established nuclear powers will just see an incremental improvement in warhead weight, cost and safety. States that don't have an enriched fissionables program will potentially be able to bypass it, needing just the research on the direct fusion initiation (which they may be able to steal). The terrorist issue comes from the fact that AFAIK all nuclear bomb detection mechanisms work by detecting the fission trigger. A block of lithium deuteride isn't detectable by checking for neutron emissions (though I don't know if there are any advanced large-scale transmissive systems that could screen for this).
Admiral Valdemar wrote:Problem is, the bad guys are just hitting the targets on the land now. Far easier. Ho-hum.
Ultimately when one set of warlords have taken over and ethnically cleansed their rivals, you make a deal with them for the resources. Most developed states have been doing this with Africa for decades.
Starglider wrote:Maintaining this capability against possible future needs does seem sensible.
One candidate is a purpose built version of the US Ohio conversion to mass cruise missile launching, which is rather more sensible (survivable and stealthy) than the arsenal ship concept.
Admiral Valdemar wrote:Let's have some imagination put into it. And make everything atomic too, while you're at it.
Atomic War Robots always trump plain old War Robots.