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Grand Fromage posted:I wasn't replying to you, just a general warning after I went there to check something out and saw what sort of stuff is on the front page. poo poo, sorry bro. They usually delineate books and show with disambiguation pages. I basically pop in to read backstory via search function and then close it when I'm done.
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# ? Apr 30, 2018 12:09 |
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# ? Apr 28, 2024 21:59 |
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It's a good warning. I looked something up on the wiki and was like, "oh hot drat," because of an off-handed reference in the first paragraph.
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# ? Apr 30, 2018 17:27 |
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I had a plot point of Knights of the Old Republic spoiled for me because I was browsing something that I thought was unrelated on Wookieepedia. Don't go to any fan wikis unless you're all caught up on something.
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# ? Apr 30, 2018 18:20 |
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Milo and POTUS posted:poo poo, sorry bro. They usually delineate books and show with disambiguation pages. I basically pop in to read backstory via search function and then close it when I'm done. Is cool. I just went to check something and was surprised how quickly I ran into massive spoilers.
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# ? Apr 30, 2018 18:24 |
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drewhead posted:In the books it is explained that rail gun rounds travel at a a speed that approaches C. So no, you're not going to see something coming at you at a speed that is indeterminate from that of light. Yeah, you can, through two avenues. One, the firing signature will be enormous. Every bit of kinetic energy carried by the projectile needs to be given to it by the launcher, which means the energy input is going to be roughly equivalent to the big boom when it impacts. Two, if it's moving arbitrarily close to c (which it might not be, but hell, let's go with it), the projectile's going to be forward-scattering gamma radiation off of whatever interplanetary dust or hydrogen atoms it's hitting on its way out. Those gammas will be moving *at* c, so you'd get some warning based on the speed difference. But really it's the first one. You might not see the bullet heading your way, but you'll sure see the muzzle flash from the gun that fired it. . Phi230 posted:Nobody uses optical telescopes to track ships because they fell out of popularity after Transponders were standard. Going dark is as easy as turning your transponder off and not receiving or sending any emissions Barring magical stealth tech, you're going to be emitting IR and will show up like a flare. The Martian stealth tech is basically a magical method to prevent IR emissions. Everyone should read Stross's Iron Sunrise if you like the whole relativistic kill vehicle + space base planetbusting deterrent force thing.
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# ? Apr 30, 2018 18:55 |
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404notfound posted:Don't go to any fan wikis This is just good advice in general.
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# ? Apr 30, 2018 19:09 |
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Phanatic posted:One, the firing signature will be enormous. Every bit of kinetic energy carried by the projectile needs to be given to it by the launcher, which means the energy input is going to be roughly equivalent to the big boom when it impacts. There was some “marines in space” series of books (I think it was a trilogy of trilogies, each covering a different time span). In one the early books the three super powers are the US, UN (really the EU, but this was written pre-EU I think) and China. There’s a low key shooting —well, I hesitate to call it an all out war— incident where the Chinese were attempting a sneak attack on a scientific outpost on Europa. Events are to the point were things are kicking off and a bunch of projectiles on a ballistic trajectory seemingly appear out of nowhere and take out the USN Battleship/Dreadnaught that’s providing orbital support. It hits like a shotgun blast. Shortly before the Chinese ship’s orbit had carried it to the other side of Europa. Turns out before everyone had hauled rear end out to this outpost, the Chinese had sent a task group out above the elliptical and then there were a bunch of very large fusion explosions that observers wrote off as weapons tests. But the Chinese had used the EM blanket created from that to disguise the firing of their rail guns so the projectiles would intersect on the probable orbital positions of the USN ship above the lab. Six months in the future. I always though that was one of the neatest depictions of how to conceal things like that. The Roci taking out the UN ship reminding me strongly of that.
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# ? Apr 30, 2018 19:29 |
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Phanatic posted:Yeah, you can, through two avenues. Both of those things are traveling towards you at the speed of C form the source which for practical intents is the same location as the round . So yea, technically I concede the point. Whatever fraction less than C that the round is actually traveling would be some delta difference of warning right?. I just took their description of being indistinguishable at face value. If one can't distinguish between those two speeds then can one really perceive between flash and boom?
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# ? Apr 30, 2018 19:32 |
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drewhead posted:Both of those things are traveling towards you at the speed of C form the source which for practical intents is the same location as the round . So yea, technically I concede the point. Whatever fraction less than C that the round is actually traveling would be some delta difference of warning right?. I just took their description of being indistinguishable at face value. If one can't distinguish between those two speeds then can one really perceive between flash and boom?
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# ? Apr 30, 2018 19:43 |
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drewhead posted:Both of those things are traveling towards you at the speed of C form the source which for practical intents is the same location as the round . So yea, technically I concede the point. Whatever fraction less than C that the round is actually traveling would be some delta difference of warning right?. I just took their description of being indistinguishable at face value. If one can't distinguish between those two speeds then can one really perceive between flash and boom? It can't be the same speed of c, it must be slower. It can be slower to an arbitrarily small degree, but there must be *some* finite interval between flash and boom, and yes, that interval would depend on on difference in speed times the range to the target. In the Expanse universe I think railguns fire at some some small percentage of c, at most. Firing projectiles at anywhere close to the speed of light would represent a level of tech that's far beyond the context of that universe. Like, the protomolecule could do it, but it's not the kind of thing humans in the Expanse can mount on battleships; a 1 kilogram mass traveling at .99c would have a kinetic energy of 5.4E17 joules, or in the ever-popular tons-of-TNT reference, a yield of 138 megatons. That's not the kind of thing that punches holes in an orbiting deterrence satellite which then explodes, that's the kind of thing that turns the whole thing into a rapidly expanding cloud of plasma the instant it makes contact. Proteus Jones posted:Turns out before everyone had hauled rear end out to this outpost, the Chinese had sent a task group out above the elliptical and then there were a bunch of very large fusion explosions that observers wrote off as weapons tests. But the Chinese had used the EM blanket created from that to disguise the firing of their rail guns so the projectiles would intersect on the probable orbital positions of the USN ship above the lab. Six months in the future. Man, I remember something exactly like that in a book I read, but I've never read something with spehss marines and Chinese forces. Now this is bothering me.
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# ? Apr 30, 2018 19:46 |
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Proteus Jones posted:There was some “marines in space” series of books (I think it was a trilogy of trilogies, each covering a different time span). In one the early books the three super powers are the US, UN (really the EU, but this was written pre-EU I think) and China. The Heritage, Legacy and Inheritance trilogies by William H. Keith Jr. Dude's got a bit of a right-wing slant to his books but is pretty good at battle scenes and realistic depictions of technology (even if the technology being depicted isn't realistic, it usually does exactly what its description says it should do). IIRC an alien space station gets taken out by a hyperaccelerated cargo of sand in one of the books.
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# ? Apr 30, 2018 19:58 |
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Polaron posted:IIRC an alien space station gets taken out by a hyperaccelerated cargo of sand in one of the books. I want to say this was also a plot point in the Seafort saga though its been quite a while since I've read them. The books are not... great.
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# ? Apr 30, 2018 22:13 |
Fister Roboto posted:Stable orbits don't. A massive explosion imparts new velocity vectors, and all it takes is a little nudge to degrade an orbit and set it on a reentry trajectory. If it was in Earth orbit, I'd say they'd probably burn up in the atmosphere, but Mars doesn't really have much of that. Deimos is tiny and insignificant, and the only real reason people are upset is at the principle of losing a moon (and a small military base). Eiba fucked around with this message at 00:08 on May 1, 2018 |
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# ? May 1, 2018 00:05 |
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Proteus Jones posted:There was some “marines in space” series of books (I think it was a trilogy of trilogies, each covering a different time span). In one the early books the three super powers are the US, UN (really the EU, but this was written pre-EU I think) and China. Yeah even outside of the sci-fi sphere I'm a real sucker for military plans that are months in the making or that involve elaborate concealment of what you're up to. There are of course numerous actual historical cases of insane battle plans as well, where even when the loss of life sucks to think about the strategy can be really interesting.
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# ? May 1, 2018 00:10 |
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Milo and POTUS posted:Wow the wiki says the moon's got a population of a cool billion. It's fun to wonder how many people might be living in Antarctica, if they managed to make the moon hospitable enough for a billion people.
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# ? May 1, 2018 00:20 |
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Kassad posted:It's fun to wonder how many people might be living in Antarctica, if they managed to make the moon hospitable enough for a billion people. What would they do? I assume the people on the moon extract helium or minerals or whatever. What do they do in Antarctica?
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# ? May 1, 2018 00:39 |
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Well Antarctica might have mineral deposits worth going after, and depending on what climate change did to the region, it may be more inhabitable than you're thinking in the post-climate change world of the Expanse.
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# ? May 1, 2018 00:45 |
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In the opening credits, we see the statue of liberty being put behind a sea wall, and when Bobby goes to see the ocean she's essentially sitting in front of one as well. Think it's safe to say that Antarctica is fairly habitable in this timeline.
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# ? May 1, 2018 01:05 |
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30 billion people live on earth and they melted the ice caps.
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# ? May 1, 2018 02:17 |
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Phi230 posted:30 billion people live on earth and they melted the ice caps. Thanos was right.
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# ? May 1, 2018 02:18 |
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Blackchamber posted:Thanos was right. Yeah but he also could just snap his fingers and make enough poo poo and room for everyone if he really wanted to sooooooooo... Grand Fromage posted:For the spoiler avoiders, don't go to the wiki. There's pretty big ones just right up front. drat, that sucks. Was it the show wiki? loving hell...
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# ? May 1, 2018 02:25 |
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Blackchamber posted:Thanos was right. Nah Malthus was a dumb bitch and so are people who buy into overpopulation rhetoric
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# ? May 1, 2018 02:30 |
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Phi230 posted:Nah Malthus was a dumb bitch and so are people who buy into overpopulation rhetoric It was cooler and way more relatable when he was doing it to get a goth gf
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# ? May 1, 2018 02:32 |
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Polaron posted:The Heritage, Legacy and Inheritance trilogies by William H. Keith Jr. Dude's got a bit of a right-wing slant to his books but is pretty good at battle scenes and realistic depictions of technology (even if the technology being depicted isn't realistic, it usually does exactly what its description says it should do). IIRC an alien space station gets taken out by a hyperaccelerated cargo of sand in one of the books. Is Ian Douglas his pen name? Because I got curious and dug through some of my book boxes and found them but they have Ian Douglas as the author.
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# ? May 1, 2018 03:59 |
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Phi230 posted:Nah Malthus was a dumb bitch and so are people who buy into overpopulation rhetoric He might've been wrong in some ways, but lol if you don't think that endless growth of energy consumption is something that we as a species can sustain forever.
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# ? May 1, 2018 04:02 |
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Proteus Jones posted:Is Ian Douglas his pen name? Because I got curious and dug through some of my book boxes and found them but they have Ian Douglas as the author. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_H._Keith_Jr.
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# ? May 1, 2018 08:42 |
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Cojawfee posted:Turn the Roci into an A-10 and put a big ol fuckin rail gun right on the front. If you like railgun rabbit holes and have an advanced degree in hyperbolic topology. Nerd out. https://arxiv.org/pdf/1709.05901.pdf
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# ? May 1, 2018 10:21 |
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There is a space manoeuvre in the Startide Rising, where the dolphins dump a load of water in their wake for a flotilla of chasing galactic fanatics to run into at near c. I really enjoyed 5 of the uplift books, The Uplift War is as good an example of Planetary Romance that you will find. Brightness Reef (is it just the first half?) is as bad as TUW is good but it is worth slogging through as the two after that are A grade for multiple galaxy spanning grand space opera. I must dig out my copies for a reread... Phoneposting.
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# ? May 2, 2018 05:28 |
Collateral posted:There is a space manoeuvre in the Startide Rising, where the dolphins dump a load of water in their wake for a flotilla of chasing galactic fanatics to run into at near c. I wish he'd write another one of those. lots of stuff hinted at in the later books that never got resolved.
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# ? May 2, 2018 06:18 |
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Wes Chatham's kids learning BJJ is the best thing. https://www.instagram.com/p/BiQCPzqnD5X/
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# ? May 2, 2018 09:26 |
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Rocksicles posted:Wes Chatham's kids learning BJJ is the best thing. giving a child that haircut is unconscionable
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# ? May 2, 2018 14:35 |
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Rocksicles posted:Wes Chatham's kids learning BJJ is the best thing. Interesting that he looks like a fun guy and someone you dont want to mess with at the same time, a bit like Amos
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# ? May 2, 2018 14:48 |
Shohreh Aghdashloo is 65 years old but i still would
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# ? May 3, 2018 02:13 |
I just want her to read me a bedtime story. https://twitter.com/AndrewRotilio/status/991823108486000640
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# ? May 3, 2018 02:16 |
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What time does the latest episode show up on iTunes/Amazon? Midnight EST? I am disappointed in SyFy's insistence on censoring Best Character's fucks.
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# ? May 3, 2018 02:27 |
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Well, I guess everybody saw that coming except for Alex.
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# ? May 3, 2018 02:31 |
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Avasarala in that flight suit makes me feel all sorts of weird. I’m very thrilled Drummer is taking over the Space Mormon Battleship.
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# ? May 3, 2018 02:35 |
pick a side holden
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# ? May 3, 2018 02:36 |
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# ? Apr 28, 2024 21:59 |
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"poo poo."
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# ? May 3, 2018 02:45 |