Me2005 wrote:Simon_Jester wrote:Eh, good enough. Step one: send B-52 overhead with one leaflet per citizen (better yet, three or four!) saying "Danger: do not carry a gun around our robot minions. They kill people who carry guns." Then send in the robots.
Good, the terrorists now carry knives/crowbars and disable all of your bots before taking their (likely much nicer) guns.
Oh come on, you know it's not going to be that comically simple. These robots wouldn't be worth spit if they couldn't identify someone or something directly attacking them with a melee weapon.
Or, hell, "shoot anyone with a gun, taze anyone within ten feet." At least, that's what they do in combat mode, and it's a human teleoperator's responsibility to monitor them and switch to that mode if need be.
One issue that isn't coming up her that came up in the power armor thread is how well these bots will hold up with a 48 hour engagement window? It's much less of an issue, as the bots loosing power in the field don't matter as much as people in suits, but will they be able to perform?
One of the main reasons they won't replace combat infantry entirely. One question: can they carry spare batteries, can they perform battery swaps on each other?
Tribble wrote:Me2005 wrote:I say we buy up 100% of production for a few years, then use them to conquer Canada and take over the manufacturing process.
As I stated earlier, a far more likely scenario will be that the USA
immediately exert pressure to seize total control of the Canadian assets. The USA will
not want Canada to be the sole provider of that level of military technology. Nor would it want Canada producing that technology, period. It's in America's best interests to take total control as quickly as possible.
An American company would probably just offer buy the designs, patents and the factory. And after that's done, the company would ship them to a secure American location. I doubt the Canadian government would object because it would realise very quickly that if it didn't comply the Americans would take the gloves off and force them to give the tech over anyways, so they may as well make some kind of profit while they can.
I'm a little skeptical about this. It's not like the robots make other armies much more of a threat to the US (because they'd be easily disabled by antitank weapons, heavy machine guns, armored vehicles, and so on; the Terminator they ain't). And Canada is in fact an allied country with considerable and longstanding economic ties to the US. I think it far more likely that, given the very reasonable per-unit price the Canadians would be charging, the US would rather just buy the damn things in large quantity rather than risk a huge legal scuffle with Canada that the US would likely lose.
Remember that America isn't Nazi Germany; it has a real court system, the rule of law is a real thing. Certainly in the context of corporate law, international business, and dealing with closely allied nations.