ThinksMarkedly wrote:kzt wrote:
All the expert manufacturing engineers, most design engineers and virtually every hands-on person involved in manufacturing is dead. Any critical information that wasn't written down and was shared insider data is gone. All the design tools and resources are gone. It will take 4 years to train more engineers, and somehow I doubt they have the instructors/facilites to train 50X to usual class size. It will probably take more like 10 years to produce the experienced people you rely on to keep things working and solve issues as they arise.
The problem is that the math just doesn't add up. The Yawata Strike caused something around 5-5.5 million deaths. The Manticore Binary System alone had a population of 3.6 billion so, however tragic, that's only 0.15% of the population. You can't have such a tiny percentage responsible for such an enormous part of the GDP. In any case, the losses in Gryphon were minor: the entire technical staff survived. Plus, Pritchart returned the Grendelsbane staff.
Schools and colleges were probably not aboard the stations either, so there is no problem with the upcoming workforce, nor those who had changed jobs (in a prolong society, people may change careers multiple times). You won't need 50x class sizes for a decade. The MBS alone probably graduates about a million a year anyway (NSF data says the US, with a tenth the population, graduated ~600k in 2012). So you may need 1.2x for a decade, or 2x for the next couple of years. Coupled with incentives to immigration, the workforce would recover inside of 5 years.
David also mentioned that the data was judiciously backed up, off-site. So not much data was lost. Sure, latent knowledge was.
Well, that's what David (and the characters) says happens in act 1. And then in act 2 it's all suddenly better.
In act 1 EVERYONE who worked on the platform lived on the platform. Why they would choose to live in tiny, heavily regulated and terrible expensive living quarters when at 500G from a shuttle bus the entire planet is 30 minutes away is not even mentioned, much less explained.
In act 2 they are all still dead, but it's no big deal.
In act 1 everyone talks about how the loss of the missile stores and fabrication capabilities pose severe problems for the operations of the RMN. In act 2 nobody even mentions this again.
You tell me.
I think it's that David painted himself into a corner and decided that the cure was to ignore the paint. Same way one of the stupider space battles in subsequent books has the SLN automatically line of missiles head to toe (which means they won't possibly hit their targets) so the RMN can show how clever they are.
Sorry, having the vastly weaker side demonstrate that the smartest of them is hopelessly incompetent is BORING. "James, it looks like the natives are getting having another war dance with their spears in that village. Could you ask the corp artillery to have one of their multiple launch rocket brigades quiet them down? On and bring me some wine to celebrate our glorious victory."