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#11 |
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Stick in the Mud
Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: Rural Utah
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Pre GUI I don't think there was a typical user. Everyone had their own personal preferences as to which dos commands to use for example. Or how to set up their machines or system files.
For example, I was one of only a handful of people locally who seemed to even know about the dir/p command when everyone else seemed to just stick with either dir or dir/w. One guy I knew had hugely complex autoexec.bat files to work around the 640k barrier. It involved about 80 lines of code telling the machine to load, run, and then unload the various TSR programs. My preferred method was to add more than 640k of onboard memory to the motherboard (most boards before the 486dx2 had half a dozen chip slots for this). The number of people using computers jumped dramatically when programs like Xtree showed up. That program used a GUI directory tree that is very similar to what is still used today.
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#12 | |
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Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: Houston
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Mechanical - Melee Chemical - Bullet Atomic/Nuclear - Nuke Optic - Laser Thermal - Steamships Electrical - Taser Solar could be and exception. I cant think of a single weapon in history that has been solar powered..... That could be endemic to the human tendency to provide their own competition. Nymdok |
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#13 | |
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Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: Eindhoven, the Netherlands
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Our first real nuclear technology was a weapon, and only later did we apply it to peaceful ends. Isn't it possible to do it the other way around, to create a nuclear technology for power, and only later go "Heeeyyy, I bet we can use this as a weapon." |
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#14 |
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Aluminated
Join Date: Feb 2005
Location: East of the moon, west of the stars, close to buses and shopping
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Archimedes is said to have set Roman ships afire with a battery of mirrors during the siege of Syracuse in 212 BC.
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I've been making pointlessly shiny things, and I've got some gaming-related stuff as well as 3d printing designs. Buy my Warehouse 23 stuff, dammit! |
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#15 |
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Join Date: Jul 2006
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The only thing I can think of off the top of my head would be for nuclear power to have developed from radiothermal power by engineering experimentation rather than being developed from physical principles... a nuclear reactor and a bomb are very different beasts and whilst you might know from experience that you get a hell of a mess if you lose control of your core the idea that you could turn that into a practicable weapon might not be inutitive if you don't know the physics.
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#16 |
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Banned
Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: Portland, Oregon
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Democracy.
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#17 |
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Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: Houston
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#18 | |
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Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: Eindhoven, the Netherlands
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Or something like that. It was only later, as they understood the principles involved (to better engineer their super steam-engines), that they realized they could make a weapon out of them. As a very warlike species, they're grudgingly admiring of humans for figuring out the super-weapon first and then "reverse" engineering the power aspect. I figure it's one of those "in hindsight, that's really obvious" kind of things, but I'm not sure if it's so obvious as to be absurd, hence why I'm asking. It's easy to devise alternate Low Tech, because some a plethora of real-world examples exist. It's easy to devise alternate Ultra-Tech, because sci-fi is loaded to the gills with interesting ideas. It's hard to devise alternate High Tech, because most discussions of TL 5-8 consist of things that really happened, rather than neat ideas some TL 4 guy had. You have a few examples of alternate-tech (zeppelins, steam-tech, and the difference engine), but it'd be nice if we had some more. |
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#19 |
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Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: SF Bay Area, CA
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If you're willing to consider "alternative physics", perhaps the nuclear reaction produces the same amount of energy, but over a much longer time. The difference between something that explodes and something that burns is merely the rate of the reaction. I don't, however, know what implications such alternative physics has...
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#20 |
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Join Date: Oct 2009
Location: Denmark
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Good one. It doesn't necessarily involve fascism (that's already used quite a lot in sci-fi and alternate history fiction). It could be feudalism? How would a TL9 Feudal world be?
Or Greek-style democracy (only landowning free (male) citizens may vote)? That would be interesting, especially around TL6-7 IMHO. |
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| divergent technology, technology, worldbuilding |
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