Jonathan_S wrote:cthia wrote:In summation. The Honorverse algorithms necessary to pull off the handling of tens of thousands of missiles at Honorverse speeds require huge amounts of memory atop an assuredly resource hungry OS that is staggering for even Honorverse computers. It does not surprise me that programmers have to save memory where logically necessary, causing a SLN programmer coding for a threat environment of 10,000 missiles to simply not be a given.
Very true. And then you get into the joy of government contracts where even if your programmers figured out a brilliant way to handling 10 times as many missile tracks on the contract specified hardware you're more likely to get penalized for deviation from the RFP than rewarded for delivering excess capacity.
The Request for Proposal would be based on things like the threat environment the Navy expected to face (and therefore wanted to defend against) - and should specify acceptance criteria for number of simultanious contacts and target velocity.
I'd pulled the example of 1,000 missiles out of thin air, but thinking about it that's nearly equivalent to 4 squadrons of the wall (32 SDs) worth of fire from Scientist-class SDs. Still, given safety factors and possibilities of 3-4 squadrons going to concentration fire against a single squadron it seems more likely that they'd specify that ability to track salvos of 2-3,000 missiles.
But that's still grossly insufficient for the hellacious missiles swarms SD(P)s, or pod based system defenses, now routinely throw around.
If the SLN had realized it might face that environment I have every confidence that it's military contractors are capable of producing hardware and software that's up to the task of tracking and managing the defensive engagement. But they're not going to do so when the customer isn't asking for it and almost nobody realizes the threat scope has changed.
Absolutely. Producing the more capable systems is going to greatly increase the cost per system, times the many SLN ships. Which translates into less pocketed monies. Especially if memory is at a premium in the Honorverse. And when I say memory, I do mean the more expensive equivalent to the fastest available system ram, which would be the memory used in ECM systems and in defensive capacities throughout the system.
Which significantly increases the cost per system, to design a more capable system -- for a threat environment that would be considered insane.