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#51
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There is a new system in the works by the europeans, Galileo. It is
supposed to be independent of military control so you won't see threats of system shutdown. I'm sure the pentagon is working out how to jam it, etc. http://www.esa.int/export/esaNA/GGGM...C_index_0.html http://www.eubusiness.com/press/EUPress.2003-12-22.1818 Let the cat'n'mouse games continue. In previous centuries road signs were moved around and fake maps made to confuse the enemy, I doubt that has happened in a while. But the stakes are always getting higher, no one died as a direct result of a sign movement (the guys with guns lying in ambush on the other hand...) -lance smith |
#52
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![]() Let the cat'n'mouse games continue. In previous centuries road signs were moved around and fake maps made to confuse the enemy, I doubt that has happened in a while. But the stakes are always getting higher, no one died as a direct result of a sign movement (the guys with guns lying in ambush on the other hand...) Including the last one... In the '80s I had a friend that was assigned to a recon unit of a USA Mech Inf. batallion in Germany. According to him his squads primary duty if the ballon went up what to destroy every highway, road and other such marker in what I thought was a fairly large area of Germany. |
#53
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![]() "Jay Honeck" wrote in message news:v1Cwd.276204$R05.193754@attbi_s53... But there are only a few dozen major computer networks providing the backbone of the internet in the U.S. This is all speculation, of course, but I would bet you ten bucks that there is an NSA task force whose main job is to maintain the capability of (a) monitoring (b) defending, and (c) disabling these networks, as needed. Could they take down the whole internet? No. But could they prevent 90% of Americans from seeing the internet? You bet -- at least for a time. -- In the late 1980s the military split off from the Internet and onto what, I believe, they call Mil-net. However, I wonder how much of Mil-net (routers, backbone, etc.) is truly seperate from the Internet. Since there are always bugs in software/hardware (especially if it has never been tested as is the case in shutting down the Internet) I would expect that a shutdown of the Internet will have totally unanticipated effects on the military networks. Since so much of society is now interwoven into the Internet we probably will be shooting ourselves in the foot if we shutdown the Internet in a time of crisis. Earl G |
#54
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On Fri, 17 Dec 2004 15:23:15 GMT, "G.R. Patterson III"
wrote: Ron Rosenfeld wrote: I did not see that article, and cannot locate it just now. But I don't understand the logic that would imply that for a TSO146 GPS unit. Can you elaborate? Well, I found that one and couldn't find the reference I thought I read. But I did find another article that contained this "Currently, two manufacturers of GA avionics — UPSAT and Chelton — have WAAS-certified receivers that can be used for 'sole-source' IFR navigation, meaning no other navigation systems are required on the aircraft. UPSAT expects to receive certification for vertical navigation ('glideslope') within two months. Other manufacturers will be offering WAAS receivers soon." That states I was wrong. This latter stuff you quote is what I thought also. As the owner of a CNX80, I did not think other equipment was required (although, of course, it is present). And the vertical navigation to which your article refers has been available on the CNX80, as a free, factory-installed upgrade, since the beginning of October. Mine is going in next week for that upgrade process. Ron (EPM) (N5843Q, Mooney M20E) (CP, ASEL, ASES, IA) |
#55
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![]() wrote in message ups.com... There is a new system in the works by the europeans, Galileo. It is supposed to be independent of military control so you won't see threats of system shutdown. I'm sure the pentagon is working out how to jam it, etc. http://www.esa.int/export/esaNA/GGGM...C_index_0.html http://www.eubusiness.com/press/EUPress.2003-12-22.1818 There's been noises in the past that the Chinese might want to be part of that project, and also that the birds might carry hardware for encrypted communication/datalink as well. That's the part that really got the DoD's attention. A large part of our military advantage these days lies in the incredible speed at which we can move information around securely from bottom to top and back down again. It's safe to assume that strategic rivals like China would get around to doing this on their own sooner or later, but cooperating with the Europeans to do so would make a rather interesting geopplitical statement. -cwk. |
#56
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![]() "Larry Dighera" wrote in message ... The Missile Defense Shield (or whatever they're calling it) is being *DEPLOYED* now, before it is fully developed! If it were merely an experiment, it's lack of performance might be more reasonable. But hey, it's only a trillion dollar bill.* :-( Well, given the rather precarious attachment with reality that the Norks have, count me as glad to see we at least have some chance of a shoot-down in case they decide to go postal. Longer term we have to be thinking about the Iranians as well. They're going to build their bomb sooner or later and the missiles to carry it. Having intercept capability, even a 50-50 one, reduces the odds that it will ever come to shooting. -cwk. |
#57
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#58
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![]() "Earl Grieda" wrote in message nk.net... ....snip... I would expect that a shutdown of the Internet will have totally unanticipated effects on the military networks. Since so much of society is now interwoven into the Internet we probably will be shooting ourselves in the foot if we shutdown the Internet in a time of crisis. The infrastructures of society evolve slowly and do so with great inertia. It is not easy to change direction quickly without unanticipated effect. For example, trying to make a "sudden" move away from air travel after 9-11 caused a spike in automobile deaths. 1000 people more than normal died on the roads in just the three months following ( http://www.sciencentral.com/articles...392244&cat=1_7 ) .. Any big infrastructure change.... whether closing the internet or closing down the GPS system or moving away from an automobile-oriented society.... will certainly be "shooting ourselves in the foot", if done suddenly. So the reasons for doing it have to be huge. So also, are the reasons for trying to foresee where the current infrastructures *should* be changing.... (power usage and/or power generation, for one example)... so that their evolution can be planned, or at least anticipated. It's gonna take a long time to get there. |
#59
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"Slip'er" writes:
set back by what critics called a stunning failure of its first full flight test in two years. I would hate having my experiments all open to public scrutiny. If my experiments cost $80M a pop I would expect them to be open to public scrutiny. |
#60
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"C Kingsbury" writes:
"Larry Dighera" wrote in message ... The Missile Defense Shield (or whatever they're calling it) is being *DEPLOYED* now, before it is fully developed! If it were merely an experiment, it's lack of performance might be more reasonable. But hey, it's only a trillion dollar bill.* :-( Well, given the rather precarious attachment with reality that the Norks have, count me as glad to see we at least have some chance of a shoot-down in case they decide to go postal. Longer term we have to be thinking about the Iranians as well. They're going to build their bomb sooner or later and the missiles to carry it. Having intercept capability, even a 50-50 one, reduces the odds that it will ever come to shooting. The problem is this tends towards the emotional, away from the rational. There are always limited resources to secure our safety. Therefore our dollars should always be funding those projects with the best estimated marginal rate of return for security. So the half-assed MDS (or whatever it's called), with a very sorry history of performance and reliability, is being given tens of billions of dollars, while obvious stuff like checking incoming cargo, or trying to round up Russia's nuke material, is apparently underfunded and proceeding much slower than it could. But those aren't macho. It looks better on your resume to have done a mighty missle project than rounding up loose nukes or figured out how to check containers efficiently. Islamic terrorists, and probably not even N. Korea, are not fundamentally a military problem, but we are treating it as such. There may indeed be military elements to reducing the islamic terrorist threat, but military solutions should not be primary. Bush and his idealogues are fighting the last threat, global communism, not the current threat. |
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