Excuse me, but when we have a clear example of a nationality in a war not being able to actually win that war using droids instead of organics as its main battle force, that does establish the point —whether you like the idea or not.Illuminatus Primus wrote:Which does not establish that droid forces in general cannot be more efficient and more capable than straight-up humans-on-the-ground or humans-in-the-ship-in-large-numbers in SW. You consistently reject the Death Star, the clarification on your fabrications regarding the WDs, and the SD battle droid et al examples.Patrick Degan wrote:Non-logic? In that case, the canon material itself is also "non-logical".Oni Koneko Damien wrote:Over the years, at many places I've worked, I've seen numerous jobs, growing ever more complicated, taken up by machines rather than people. I guess in all these cases, according to Degan's non-logic, the companies are taking a hit in profits and productivity by replacing people with machines.
It's funny when today's reality, with technology and AI far inferior than what SW can produce, already shows that replacing people with machines in many areas is cheaper and more efficient.
Your Red Herring does not make the case, either. We're not talking about widespread factory automation, which is not something I've attempted to argue against at any point in this thread. The subject at hand, rather, is whether or not the droids fielded by the Separatists gave the CIS the clear qualitative advantage over the human/clone armies of the Republic. Clearly, they did not, and indeed their vulnerabilities were in several cases disasterous in terms of single-point failure.
And I fabricated nothing regarding the World Devastators. They got neutralised by an override code and later had their central control complexes scrambled by a virus programme formulated by R2D2 in the Dark Empire comic series.
I "reject" the Death Star as one of your examples? Even you should be able to tell the difference between industrial bots designed and programmed to perform a limited number of functions and combat droids which are supposed to operate in a far more dynamic environment such as the battlefield. And just how do constructor droids demonstrate the proposition that a droid army enjoys a better qualitative advantage over human/clone forces, when this is not demonstrated in the course of the Clone Wars or by the example of the defeat of a Trade Federation droid task force at the hands of then-Force Commander Thrawn leading a numerically inferior patrol squadron in an incident prior to the war (Outbound Flight)?