Starglider wrote: That occured to me, but I thought the USSR model was tightly ground-controlled intercept and the US more self-reliant fighters - I was probably taking this too far. Even still though, if the difference is basically the avionics fit then why develop two quite different airframes, though they have (AFAIK) similar performance? Is this just an unfortunate result of the A-12 being developed in such secrecy that other bits of the defence establishment duplicated it?
We'd have to go quite deep into the performance minutae of the two aircraft but the concept of operating independently to hunt down any interceptors is quite different from that of the interceptors themselves. Look at it this way, the F-112 is the natural prey of the F-108. The F-112 is tasked with intercepting and shooting down a basically non-manoeuvering target that is being tracked by ground stations. The F-108 has to find and then attack a target that is capable of significant manoeuver. Those are very different tasks; in OTL air superiority fighters (the TBO F-108) were regarded as being very different from interceptors (the TBO F-112). Good example, the differences between the F-101A Voodoo tactical fighter and F-101B Voodoo interceptor.
If the Nazis had enough time to assimilate the entire European production base the consequences of that can only be really bad - particularly if the interval is long enough that they sort their nuclear program out and produce their own devices. Just more of the 'the better Germany does the worse it is for everyone else' I suppose.
That's right, although the Nazis had pretty much given up on nuclear wepaons development by 1943 so restarting it wouldn't have bene plausible - at least until it leaked out that the US had nuclear weapons - then a Nazi restart would have provoked a Big One.
Did the TBOverse have a dot-com boom? If it happened in the late 90s it would presumably be doing so with contemporary or even better networking (certainly pervasive broadband), but only late-80s/early-90s computers (i.e. 386s/486s/MacIIs/Amigas). The failure of the network PC concept as an evolution of the formerly popular dumb terminal was a relatively close thing OTL, and I can certainly see a lot fewer conventional PCs in business applications.
It did (again slightly different due to differing developments).
Simply due to bioweapons or are you thinking of other existential risks?
Not just bioweapons, the possibility of a nuclear confrontation or, simply, teh whole thing collapsing. I do regard bioweapons, especially genetically engineered bioweapons, as the most serious danger the human race faces.
I see I am unable to pin you down on an opinion about AI feasibility and consequences which I can finally deploy expert knowledge to crush, or at least expand on.
I don't know enough about the area so I look for other people whose brains I can pick
You might find
This Thread interesting.
Starglider wrote:I didn't think that counted as 'napkinwaffe' since it actually made it into service in OTL.
I agree, it isn't really napkinwaffe, but its the one that comes up most frequently.
By 'napkinwaffe' I thought you meant stuff that never made it off the drawing board and was unlikely to be anything more than a prototype even in 1947, but which assorted Internet denizens still insist would've been a war-winning superweapon had the Third Reich lasted a few years longer.
The other major one in the true napkinwaffe category is the Ta-183. There is more utter nonsense talked about that piece of dirty paper than almost any other aircraft I can think of. The old legend that the MiG-15 is a copy of the Ta-183 still gets dutifully trotted out despite being utterly discredited. Ask how its projected performance characteristics on 2,200 pounds of thrust were greater than aircraft that had four or five times as much power and there's lots of waffle about what a brilliant deisgner Tank was. Pure idiocy.
Incidentally did you have any specific novels or online works in mind in your earlier references to 'Rommel+superweapon Nazi triumph stories'? Particularly ones that presented Nazi successes in a favourable light?
Not really, but there's a whole genre of pro-Nazi fiction like that out there.
So between that and the minimally-effective anti-B-36 measures, TBO alone wouldn't have been enough to knock out Germany, and more nuclear strikes would be needed? Given the use of almost every available device in TBO, presumably it would be months until further large-scale strikes could be made?
Nuclear device production (in OTL) was running at around ten per month by 1949; the figure for TBO in 1947 is around 15 per month. So the situation would probably be that the B-36s would be dropping them as they came off the production line. That, of course, is exactly the situation General LeMay and The Seer were trying to avoid.
Yes, pitched, I don't think I've ever seen a tiled flat roof. To be fair I'm not sure what your standard for comparison is, there can't be many steel+tile or pitched/domed concrete roofs out there. Though hopefully we will be moving to a different area in another year or two anyway, I don't like living this close to London (for a variety of reasons; living in the outer parts of Reading and Sheffield were both preferable, the later particularly so).
I have, out in Spain (not quite flat but a very gentle, circa 5 degree, pitch)
Do special forces play a major role in this? I note that the F-117 is described as 'primarily used for special operations'. How do the TBO US special forces compare to OTL?
Partly, the U.S. special forces (grouped, as in OTL under SOCOM) are the SEALS (who go in and get people), the Fleet Marine Recon Force (who go in and watch people), Air Force Commandos (who go in and take over people's airfields) and a group of others. They are used sparingly though, everybody is well aware that overuse of such groups can lead to America's Nightmare - a large scale land war.
If correct this has a massive impact on all the Peak Oil threads currently taking centre stage on this board. Yet generally the Peak Oil people tend to write off Siberian reserves as limited at best (admittadly sometimes with nothing more than 'well the USSR never managed to extract that much so it can't be there' or 'but of course the oil industry people are exagerrating as usual'). Do you have some references or a link to a more detailed study of this?
Peak oil (as an immediate problem) is nonsense. Nobody who is actually involved in the real-world oil industry takes it seriously. I got a long explanation of why a long time ago and it all has to do with the way oil reserves are calculated and accounted for. What that meant was that the world always looks as if it is running out of oil (I can confirm that; back in 1972, I can remember working on the same question when the absolute run-out date was the mid-1980s).
There is a major problem in the oil industry but it isn't shortage of crude, the world is awash with the stuff. There's so much physical oil floating around that the oil industry has run out of places to put it. (There are old tankers sitting in Norwegian fjords being used as extemporized storage sites). The problem is refining capacity; the world simply hasn't got the refining capacity to meet demand for refined products - so the price goes up. Now look at the situation; the oil industry has no capacity to refine extra oil, it has no place to put extra crude so what does it do? it doens;t dig it up. That's why production of crude has levelled off.
This Article looks at the refinery problem in greater detail.
The great source for all this is a magazine called
"Platt's Oilgram". The oil industry would dearly love Peak Oil to be true, it would mean they could make a fortune by uprating the value of the oil reserves they hold still in the ground. Only it isn't and won't be for decades - or possibly centuries - to come.
The article "Keeping Our Motor Running" By Investors's Business Daily published Thursday, July 19, 2007 exposes the Peak Oil business for the fraud that it is. The National Petroleum Council predicts oil output in 2030 to be 130 million bbls/day; the EIA 120 million bbls/day.
Peak Oil is essentially a hoax in the same order of magnitude as the "Flat Earth", "Intelligent Design" or "Creation Science". But, everybody was having too much fun with their doomsday projections for me to spoil it for them. If one had to really force the oil industry to guess the date when the oil really runs out, I'd guess that on present trends, they'd reckon between 200 and 300 years.
Were actual UK missiles tested against the US defences? I get the impression the answer is 'yes' from the relevant thread but it doesn't seem to be confirmed.
Yes, the real things were tested. The U.S. doesn't want people to have ballistic missiles in TBO, they're too destabilizing. So they are quite happy to demonstrate how easy ICBMs are to shoot down (and quite happy to encourage people to bring missiles to Nevada for testing against American defensive systems.
I don't know if I'll ever be a) qualified and b) have the time to write anything for the TBOverse, but perhaps after I finnished all the stories I could have a go at a 'UK Prime Ministers of the TBOverse' to complement 'Presidents in the TBOverse'. It'd be a lot easier than a story.
New authors are always welcome, all I ask is that people run the finished story by me before posting it so I can check it for consistency with the rest of the TBOverse.