Military lasers, for real.
Posted: Sat Feb 19, 2011 6:15 pm
The US Navy have just tested a laser which can burn through 20 feet of steel per second. They'll be needing shield boosters soon!
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Or the new version of ooCheatOkti wrote:Or a hacked version of IronHide .
But now imagine how far we could have got, if our civilian technological advancements were not the mere fringe benefits of military research, but would've been the focus of research in the first place, with all the budgets and dedication we use to reserve for 'defense'.ClymAngus wrote:Well yes, it is also somewhat ironic how a great deal of civilian technological advancement has come from originally military applications.
Maybe something like defending oneself focuses the mind a little more keenly than merely seeking profit. It could be all that lovely research money floating around. It is unfortunate, but a destructive trait not without it's creative fringe benefits.
There's always the possibility that this is about as old, and as mature, as we're likely to get ... this could be pretty much the maximum age for a technological species. Maybe this is what happens: tool-using species discover how to split the atom, then a few eyeblinks later they all tend to moth themselves. That's one answer to the Fermi Paradox. With a sample of one, viewed from the inside, it's hard to tell ...ClymAngus wrote:We are a very young race after all.
Amen. That was exactly my point.Commander McLane wrote:But now imagine how far we could have got, if our civilian technological advancements were not the mere fringe benefits of military research, but would've been the focus of research in the first place, with all the budgets and dedication we use to reserve for 'defense'.
Trouble is, we only seem to be able to make the 'big' advancements when we're backed into a corner. The sheer willpower doesn't seem to exist outside of times of adversity.Commander McLane wrote:But now imagine how far we could have got, if our civilian technological advancements were not the mere fringe benefits of military research, but would've been the focus of research in the first place, with all the budgets and dedication we use to reserve for 'defense'.ClymAngus wrote:Well yes, it is also somewhat ironic how a great deal of civilian technological advancement has come from originally military applications.
Maybe something like defending oneself focuses the mind a little more keenly than merely seeking profit. It could be all that lovely research money floating around. It is unfortunate, but a destructive trait not without it's creative fringe benefits.
There are always people looking to make big advancements: it's not willpower that's stopping them, it's access to resources (at least when it comes to making practical use of theoretical insights: you can make some theoretical insights with paper and a pen). But it's only when the prevailing power structures are under threat that those at the top of the pile are prepared to foster new ideas. Usually, they fear anything which could potentially alter the status quo. It comes with being a pack-primate species, I suppose.drew wrote:Trouble is, we only seem to be able to make the 'big' advancements when we're backed into a corner. The sheer willpower doesn't seem to exist outside of times of adversity.
Strange trait, but there it is.
Cheers,
Drew.
This would be true if for instance the developers of this real life military laser (or the guys who ordered the development) actually were backed into a corner.drew wrote:Trouble is, we only seem to be able to make the 'big' advancements when we're backed into a corner. The sheer willpower doesn't seem to exist outside of times of adversity.