Re: The Salvation War: Pantheocide. Part Forty One Up
Posted: 2009-10-06 08:30pm
Fairly, though it looks to be a one of a kind at this point, IRL.CaptainChewbacca wrote:How... REAL is Scalpel 1?
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Fairly, though it looks to be a one of a kind at this point, IRL.CaptainChewbacca wrote:How... REAL is Scalpel 1?
I remember something bout a laser on a Boeing being tested about 5yrs back... it was to blow up missiles in flight.CaptainChewbacca wrote:How... REAL is Scalpel 1?
Here's the beast in all its glory. I present to you...the Boeing YAL-1!CC (great initials BTW) wrote:How...REAL is Scalpel 1?
Very. IIRC, they've done a full-power test of the laser, and they've done a low-power in-flight test on a ground-based stationary target, but they have yet to do a full-power in-flight test on a ground-based target.CaptainChewbacca wrote:How... REAL is Scalpel 1?
In real life, the YAL-1 was cut from a production program (which it finally reached under the end of Bush's second term in office) back down to an R&D program, and only one YAL-1A is to be built (well no further ones are to be built, unlike the previous budgets which had up to 6 of them being built I think).CaptainChewbacca wrote:How... REAL is Scalpel 1?
I have heard it said that Napoleon's presence on the battlefield was worth 40000 men, in an age when armies numbered on the order of a few hundred thousand, tops. I have also heard it said that Napoleon would have gotten his head handed to him if he'd gone up against an equivalently equipped and sized army with a decent modern-style staff.Stuart wrote:“Well done Colonel, a masterly exposition that completely fails to answer the question. I said, what’s going on up there? Or would you prefer I sent you in a jeep to find out?” General Marosy closed his eyes and muttered some choice epithets under his breath. A classically-trained officer he had long believed that the IDF were a superb example of the concept of lions lead by donkeys. It was significant that there was not a single Israeli officer in multi-national command positions anywhere in the Human Expeditionary Army. They were brave enough, gallant to a fault, but their staff-work was appalling. And, in the final analysis, staff-work won wars.
Stuart wrote:“Excuse me General.” al-Zahari was standing at one side of the room, looking at the operational display. “I thought you had three submarines at sea?”
“We do. Dolphin and Tekuma were at sea anyway, Leviathan sortied as soon as this attack started.”
“Well there are only two on this map.”
Marosy looked at the map and saw that the Palestinian was right. There were display indicators tagged for Dolphin and Leviathan but no sign of Tekuma .
A laser pointer delivers a few milliwatts; the YAL laser delivers a few megawatts. So, yes, about a billion times worse.JonB wrote:And I thought getting a pointer laser into one's eye was bad enough. This was just brutal.
I think he can comprehend the idea of a weaponized beam of light. How a laser works is a different story, but very few people actually know that, anyway. The explanation involves quantum mechanics. However, since Uriel never realized what hit him, and definitely never got the word out, Michael may not know anything beyond "Uriel is dead."Ya-Ya is gonna be angry when he finds out, that's for sure. Wonder how Michael is gonna phrase it? And would he even understand the concept of Laser weaponry? He seems to 'know' a lot about human weapons, but 'understanding' is something different.
My impression is that Hell-bodies do not survive decapitation, so this last is probably a moot point, I sincerely hope. At the very least it's going to be given Iron Age medical skills on the part of the demon doing the attempted head transplant.DataPacRat wrote:If a pair of hands or feet is amputated, and the N-R-M healing factor tries to regrow it, but the cleverly malicious demons hold the 'wrong' appendage to the stump, does the N-R-M healing factor try to 'heal' the wrong part into place? If so, what about some other Hell-body's hands or feet? At the extreme, what about swapping heads?
You probably should be; at this point I'm picturing a cross between Satan and Josef Mengele...DataPacRat wrote:And, going back to my questions on the Resurrection Machinery... (I'm almost nervous about what sort of character would be based on my questions...)
And yet it happens. Strange, I know, but true. There comes a point where airborne command control breaks down and the result is a giant furball. Sometimes it doesn't even need a lot of aircraft; there was a classic case of two UH-60s that were shot down by two USAF F-15s that was a total command control failure with only a dozen or so aircraft involved. This kind of thing is one of the issues I deal with professionally and I've seen all too many cases of massive C4I failure to be complacent about it. I saw one estimate a few years back (no source unfortunately, it's filed away somewhere) that suggested up to 20 percent of the casualties in WW2 were the result of "friendly fire". Even today, with all the equipment we have, mistakes get made with stunning regularity.Simon_Jester wrote:What I don't understand is why the AWACS that was overseeing the Battle of Los Angeles didn't say "screw it, this is ridiculous, pull back and attack him one squadron at a time" or something along those lines. Trying to mob one target with dozens and dozens of planes is just stupid.
They're zipping in and out of the area of effect very rapidly; repeated short exposures to the death field might well not have the same effect as one long exposure of equal total duration, because it gives your body's autonomous functions time to reset themselves.Ryan Thunder wrote:I assume that the fighter pilots have better head-shielding than the poor sods on the ground? Because otherwise I could see a bunch of them going down to the death field...
C4ISR = Computerized command control, communications, intelligence, surveillance and reconaissance.Simon_Jester wrote:What's the fourth C again?
Oh yes. Take a look at a modern fighter aircraft, the cockpit is seriously shielded. Instead of using aluminum (which isn't actually very good shielding) fighter aircraft canopies are inlaid with gold. There are special ranges where shielding designs are put through their paces and the most effective ones exploited while the least effective are junked. Air forces spend very large sums on this area.I assume that the fighter pilots have better head-shielding than the poor sods on the ground? Because otherwise I could see a bunch of them going down to the death field.
May well indeed although the field was breaking down by then. Pre-war, it might also explain some odd incidents where civilian aircraft crashed for no apparent reasonCome to think of it though, the death field might help to explain some of the friendly fire and mid-airs.
I had that in mind as well[Murphy is far too powerful to be a daemon in the Salvation War setting; he must surely be one of the dreaded "devils."
Sigged. XDSimon_Jester wrote:"Run for your lives! It's the anthropomorphic personification of the Second Law of Thermodynamics!"
I disagree on your basic premise here. We are dealing with a mythology that is two thousand years old and is massively distorted. We know, beyond any reasonable doubt, that much of it is flat untrue, that much more is allegorical. Your analogy would be more accurate if you were using as a basis a version of Star Wars that was a retold and distorted version of the original having gone through multiple generations of oral retelling in teh meantime.Darth Raptor wrote:Having a vague and really unworkable mechanism in mind does not make super powers any less fantastic. We have a vague idea how hypermatter works in Star Wars; it is still a totally implausible and unobtainable superfuel. The same is true for the powers in TSW. That we know which physical laws they break and where doesn't make them any less magical. So the idea that you 'had' to nerf the demons because you were restricting them to 'realistic' powers is pretty absurd.
Obviously.I'm a fan of soft science-fiction and fantasy.
There's nothing false about it. There is not one - not one - weapon in the earth side of The Salvation War that does not exist in reality. As far as the earth side of things is concerned the science is rock, concrete-hard. I agree that the daemonic side has some pretty strange physics working for it but what you are avoiding is that every breach or modification of hard science works in favor of the daemons. The point is that, despite being given every break possible, they still don't stand a chance. That was clear before the story was ever written; the whole point that kicked it off was that the mythology in question is hopelessly outdated by modern weaponry. As you say, even having been given every break reasonably possible, they didn't stand a chance against guns. Frankly, I find the whole "tension" argument a bit absurd. There is very little "tension" in most stories. We know Sherlock Holmes will solve the mystery, we know that "The Lootenant" in a TV copshow will solve everything in 44 minutes 23 seconds. The end destination is known and obvious. What matters is the route by which we get there , who we meet and what we learn on the way.But false pretensions of hardness (especially when it makes your conflict into a one-sided curbstomp with no tension) are hardly a defense for having a curmstomp war with no tension. Your creatures have some of the most magical magic out there, cursory 'quantum' sticker notwithstanding. It just doesn't help them much against lolguns.
I'd agree with all of that. It's fairly obvious that we're dealing with something that is much more powerful than any known human pheremones here and given the possible applications of the basic science it's fair to bet that a lot of people are studying exactly what the chemistry is (and, being humans, how they can make some money off it). In fact, we have a story segment in that area coming up shortly (which acts as foreshadowing of an important section of the third book). Being able to affect human emotions by means of a chemical exudate is an incredibly powerful weapon, there's a good reason why people are ebginning to realize that the Succubae are indvidually the most dangerous of the daemons.Gil Hamilton wrote:Look at succubi. I've actually devoted some time (not as much as I like) to thinking on the biochemistry of their pheromone powers and what little time recently I've been able to devote to it has come to the conclusion that their "pheromones" aren't in fact what we think of as pheromones, but rather a psychotropic drug that effects the brain like beta-endorphines* the absorbs though all possible pathways (inhalation, oral, and skin absorption) and moves across the blood-brain barrier with ease. *(think a runner's high, which has the physiological effects of an extreme sense of well being and deadening of aches and pains, which I believe combines with intonations in the succubus' voice such that person associates the glow with them and thus is favorably inclined to listen to them) In terms of hard science, there actually exist compounds that absorb though all pathways like this and have powerful physiological effects in trace amounts. Thinks like nerve gas, for example, have really really low LD50s. Given that similar air scrubbing schemes for combatting chemical warfare agents have to be deployed against succubi to prevent their miasma from functioning on people, they have the psychotropic happy drug equivalent of VX vaporizing off their skin. That's pretty ridiculously powerful an ability.
I think this is a lot of the problem. People generally have been schooled to believe that having a superpower is automatically a devastating advantage. Rather like a lot of people actually believe the "German uberweapons win WW2" nonsense. Running into a situation where having superpowers simply doesn't do enough good to matter is a heck of a wrench. People wait for the superpower that will win the war and there isn't one. Also, I was tending to try and avoid a "superpower of the Chapter" approach where the daemons kept revealing new "powers" and humans had to keep scrambling to find "solutions".Frankly, Stu has hot-rodded the powers of alot of daemons and angels beyond what is actually feasible, to make them more potent, not less. The snag is that Stuart also doesn't treat superpowers as an automatic win button, the way alot of fiction does.
YesDataPacRat wrote:Are the humans living their Second Life in heaven physically pretty much the same as the ones in Hell?
Unknown at this time. Doubtless this will be revealed in due course. We know that Angels and daemons can survive in both.That is, are they unable to go back to Earth... and can Heavenites survive in Hell, or vice versa?
Sure. And sent robots through. Nothing (and I mean nothing) ever came back.Has anybody tried even something as simple as sticking a camera on a stick through the Minos Gate, through which all Hell's incoming dead are arriving through?
Remember Yahweh has wrapped up on humanity, he's done with us and consigned us all to Hell. he's got a new race to play with,If Yahweh becomes more of an actual character than a lightning-flinging temper tantrum... I can imagine something along these lines being said: "The prophecies of the Christian religion are not being fulfilled! I declare that Christianity is a /false/ religion! Michael, what other faiths revere Me but declare Christianity to be false?" "Uh, well, sir, <thinking fast> there's Islam, but-" "Very well! I now declare Islam to be the One True Faith. Do not bother pouring the final Bowls; we will switch to the Islamic version of the End of the World. The humans will not be expecting /that/." "Uh... yessir, you are great, oh Lord. I'll have someone go tell Jesus that he's not your son, just a prophet... <thinks to self: "And look up what the Islamic version of Armageddon /is/.">"
Oh yes, I've imagined itI know that everyone is expecting Yahyah to get splattered at the end of Pantheocide in a violent gornfest orgy... but here's a thought: can you just imagine the /massive/ headaches that would ensue if humanity manages to take him /prisoner/?