Somtaaw wrote:Relax wrote:The absurdity that there is actually a defense officer of more than a single person who does anything other than flip an ON switch... As if a person can do anything constructive that hasn't already been pre programmed weeks, months, years in advance.
And this actually makes sense as well. If you have an idiot operating it, who relies on canned software, versus someone who is operating the same software but operating on training and intuitive leaps... the operator wins.
Canned software is only good, as long as things don't change, and during a battle, things are going to change quickly and in ways you cannot always predict you can almost count on that.
Now we saw this all in the books already, and it does hold together. Thunder of God was being operated by a bunch of idiots, who were barely able to operate it at all, and never had been comprehensively trained by Theisman.
On the other side, you had Cardones who spent years on Sagananami Island in the tactical schools, then his middy cruise, goes on to Basilisk Station (and that particular battle), and finally goes on a two year patrol in Silesia before winding up fighting Thunder.
Cumulatively, that works out to something between 6 to 10 years of operating the tactical panel, and learning to do tricks while also surviving hostile fire. Versus whatever a planet-bound programmer can think up, without ever having to improvise while also limited to situations he can think up and computer simulations to test it.
And that's also not counting what happens if your computer storage gets damaged, and those pretty canned defense strategies gets wiped, which I will concede would be a pretty freak hit. But considering how often we see a hit to a boat bay, that goes on to destroy CIC (probable location of canned software), then flag bridges or real bridge or the fusion cores... yeah I'll take a live tactical console operator over "computer, activate defense plan..." anyday of the week.
Turn brain on, turn off DW baloney... Then reconsider what actually happens and HOW fast it happens.
If a multi redundant computer gets fried, then YOU, can't do anything anyways. A manual operator on mount can, but you sitting in C&C can't as that means by definition you are cut off from said CM tube, or all CM tubes. It is called redundancy... It is impossible to have one node of a computer crash take out your system. All nodes must be down. Without said node you have no access to said CM to upload said data...
Why you have 5 computers and 4 sets of wiring in an airplane that is flown by wire... Your interface to your controls goes THROUGH all 5 computers and 4 sets of wiring. It only takes one set of wires and one computer to fly...
EDIT: Math time:Showing how stupid it is to say a human can do Jack Diddle__________________-
Assume sensors far out see one blob and fires 1 CM when in reality it is 2. 1) When do you know it is 2 missiles? and 2) Can a human operator tell it is 2 before a computer, let alone see it and fire off another CM
1) Solve in reverse. Time to get a CM to minimal interception range from the ship. Assume the firing key has already been depressed and its in the tube ready to go via C&C loop etc.
What is its initial Velocity? 1000km/s via mass driver?
Go with a wedge depth from ship of 50KM or so(small ship)
If 1000km/s v0 then requires essentially no time just to clear the ships wedge. t ~ 0.05
Lets go with ~0s for best scenario.
What is minimal distance before you do NOT fire and rather use PDLC? 100,000km?
Assume best scenario: v0 = 1k km/s, a = 10kmpss
t = time to clear wedge(0s) and get to 100k km = 13s
Distance at which you need to determine if one "blob" = two missiles. Assuming you do not know how many missiles were fired to begin with...
which the books all say is rather apparent so we are left to believe a computer all of a sudden can't count to 20 without taking its socks off... and likewise can't put CM's in line with each other...
Now add reaction time of a human who has to select the missed missile and hit fire instead of the computer doing it... As if the computer doesn't already know Friend from Foe
Missiles aren't exactly stealthy you know...
V incoming, Best case scenario, SDM, 13s @100,000km intercept, is 1,000,000km @0.25c for distinguishing between 1 and 2 missiles. Assuming you have spare CM's that were not already launched for some odd reason...
Its not like you don't already know that CM's miss incoming targets...
This is the equivalent of saying a human in a wet navy today should be in charge of using the CIWS/SEARAM... You might have noticed but no navy on earth is that stupid...