lyonheart wrote:Hi MaxxQ,
Aw, come on.
Grayson may have been a some decades to a century behind Manticore which still means it had 18-19th century PD sensors and computers, ie almost a couple thousand years in advance of we have today, so I expect both ground based sensors of stead-holders [roughly computerized super telescopes] could be properly aimed assisted by orbital and other GSN sensors, as well as Grayson news organizations tracking the battle because the whole Grayson public had a vested interest in the outcome.
So Abigail was probably watching computer enhanced screens besides possibly also using a telescope [that probably had computer driven image intensifiers].
So there.
LMaxxQ wrote:*quote="cthia"*Ashes 0f Victory
*quote*
She'd managed, eventually, to piece together the details of how it all had happened, although Abigail herself had been on the reticent side. The tall (for a Grayson; she was only of middling height by Manticoran standards), attractive, willowy brunette was nineteen T-years old. That meant she'd been around eight when Honor first visited Grayson, and from the taste of the young woman's emotions, it was obvious she'd been smitten with a severe case of hero worship for one Commander Harrington. Some of that still lingered, though it has eased with time and she had it under firm enough control that no one who lacked Honor's special advantages would have known it was there. What had not eased with time was the fact that she'd been Navy mad from the moment she stood one night on a balcony of Owen's House, watching the terrible, pinprick flashes of nuclear warheads glare defiantly in the endless depths of space, and known a single, brutally outmatched heavy cruiser was locked in a death duel with a battlecruiser full of fanatics in defense of her planet and all its people.
Abigail had read of the Star Kingdom and of its infinite glory. And on that fateful balcony on that appointed night, young Abigail looked into the gripping darkness of the night sky and her heart fluttered with each terrible, frightening explosion; she stilled her firming fear and quelled the quickness of her beating heart as she sang ...
The Star-Kingdom's Banner
O say can you see, by the pinpricks of light,
How so proudly she wailed at Masada's last teaming
Whose broad stripes and bright stars through the perilous fight
Oh the missiles we watc'd were so endlessly streaming?
And their wedge's red glare, the bombs bursting in air,
Gave proof through the night that our hope was still there,
O say does that Star-Kingdom's banner yet wave
O’er the land of the free and the homes of the saved!
I'm not going to bother mentioning the nice long thread that erupted over whether or not Abby could even *see* the "terrible, pinprick flashes of nuclear warheads" from Grayson.
Nope... not going to mention it at all... [/quote][/quote]
I never had a dog in that fight back when the thread was running, so all I'm going to say here is that the way the passage was written, the impression was that she was watching the battle with her naked eyes. Frankly, I don't give a damn whether or not it was possible for her to do that. It's a freakin' book fer chrissakes, and the picture I always had in my mind was that of a little girl standing on a balcony and looking out to the stars, some permanent, some fleeting, and being inspired to rise above her intended upbringing.
Besides, if she was watching it on a monitor, what would be the point of specifying she was on the balcony? Why was no mention made of a telescope? Or "computer enhanced screens"?
Everyone else can rationalize it, or call BS all they want - it doesn't matter to me at all. I'm not getting into this any more after this.
Besides, my post you quoted was meant in humor, hence the evil grin smilie.