US Military Builds MMO Earth Simulator
transient writes "BBC reports that the US military is creating a second Earth with help from There. At the moment, only Kuwait City has been modeled, but the ultimate goal is to model the entire Earth using existing terrain data and a super-accurate physics model. While combat will be part of the game, 'the emphasis in the artificial Earth will be on human interaction rather than conflicts involving lots of military hardware.'"
It makes sense that they'd do this. After all, there have to be a few people at the Pentagon who understand that you can't make people stop hating you at gunpoint, and that they'd do well to have a simulator that allows them to get a feel for the social environments where terrorist organizations have the best luck in recruiting. The more they understand the role society plays in terrorism, the better they'll be able to counteract it.
Break recruitment, and you're dealing with a handful of international criminals rather than a terrorist network.
Obliteracy: Words with explosions
If as they mention, soldiers will be ultimately trained using this system, it's inevitable that commanders and people not-on-the-ground will start to treat the theatre-of-operations more like a game - that's just how humans are wired. I'm not sure that blurring the distinction between war and games is really such a good idea...
War is terrible. Games are fun. Ne'er the two should meet. IMHO.
Simon.
Physicists get Hadrons!
Um, what is that supposed to mean?
Echoes of Jorge Luis Borges, who wrote in a story about a map of the world that was as big as the world itself....
If putting a bullet in someone's head isn't "interaction" I don't know what is...
Yes.
let the outcome of virtual wars be accepted as if it had really happened (minus the loss of life)
If both sides were trusting and trustworthy enough to follow those rules, there wouldn't be a need for war in the first place.
Um, in order to really do it accurately, the model would have to include the military base, building and facility in which the earth II simulator resides, and the model would have to have a model of that etc to infinity - like what you get with two mirrors.
try { do() || do_not(); } catch (JediException err) { yoda(err); }
Maybe they're talking about military tactics or something when they say "human interaction," but to me it seems like they're trying to say "no, really, it's not a military-oriented project." Come on people, this is the Army. If this system is mainly for military purposes, then just come out and say it, ok? Really, we pay you guys to worry about situations that involve "lots of military hardware." There's no need to pretend that you're really trying to solve world hunger or something.
[b.belong('us') for b in bases if b.owner() == 'you']
Solution: Send Earth II building and computer to The Moon.
Stop saluting, put the flag down, turn off Fox and get your own brain back. The US military isn't as great as the US media and hollywood portrays it. They have no regard for human life or peace, yet America thinks they can't do a thing wrong.
Need I mention the fiasco in Iraq? US soldiers killing US/allied soldiers? Grenade attacks? Spooked troops shooting their comrades? Patriot attacks on friendly aircraft? Attack helicopters shooting blocks of appartments? US flags being waved everywhere? US soldiers killing Iraqi police? The list goes on. Wake up! Think about it for 2 seconds... if they're so good, why do they keep screwing up all the time?
Imagine "Blackhawk Down" set in 2005.
What if the troops have no idea how to get home when their chopper is shot down or the natives put up another barricade?
A 3d environment like this is a very effective and fast way to memorize the map and layout of the city.
Also good for convoy training, preparing for ambush training, etc.
"Science flies us to the moon. Religion flies us into buildings." - Victor Stenger
Hoo, looks like someone's spouting what they've been fed by right-wing commentators..
It's on the verge of libellous to suggest that the BBC is deliberately and routinely biased against the US. I presume that you've never analysed the news coverage which is presented to you in any kind of critical way, or you'd figure out that "loving to trash the US" means something completely different to "reports both sides of a story rather than automatically following some kind of uncritical "Whoop, go US! U-S-A! We rule!" stance. The latter stance is the point of view of the Fox Newses of this world.
Bias is in the eye of the beholder. During the Iraq war the BBC was angrily accused of bias by both anti-war activists and pro-war folk like the government. If you're being accused of bias by people on both sides of an argument, you're doing pretty well.
The recent hoohah that led to the resignation of both the Chairman and Director-General of the Beeb resulted from one point in a live discussion between a presenter and a journalist that was broadcast at 0607 one morning and never repeated. That point was found to be untrue (heh, well, technically untrue) and top people in the BBC resigned. Doesn't sound like systematic bias to me.
(What moderator decided the post I'm replying to was "Insightful"? Yeesh.. if unsubstantiated regurgitated sniping counts as insight..)
Someone really ought to merge The Sims with Battlefield 1942.
Meet new people! Pimp out the neighbohr's teenage daughter! Strafe your boss' car! Curse each day about not respawning next to your car and watching your son drive of with it instead! WOOT! And you gain valuable military experience as well!
Hate me!
The problem with the book analogy is scope.
It is definately cheaper to print a book than create a virtual world to intereact with a virtual book. Especially at that time.
It might be cheaper to build a fake city and staff it with actors than to build a virtual world. But considering the state of the art right now in VR worlds, it likely won't be.
It's definately cheaper to build an artificial world to model the entire planet than it is to build a fake planet and staff it with actors. Not to mention where you're going to put it and what you're going to make it out of... (Chia-Earth, anyone?)
It's all about scope and purpose.
The biggest problem I can see is keeping the model up to date. Geography, cities and populations are always changing. If their intent is to have a virtual world that can be used to study the real world, they're going to have their work cut out for them. Frankly, I can think of better things to spend money on.
=Smidge=
Not quite... it just means that our process just made a recursive call to itself.
I wonder what the stopping condition is? And I sure as heck don't want to be around when the garbage collector comes to destroy our objects because the reference broke.
This is not a sig.
Maybe Violence settles the argument in the short term. But to settle all your arguements your gonna have to kill 6 billion people because for each person you kill your gonna piss 10 more off.
MacOS X, I've upped my standards, Up Yours...
Does anyone remember the article on keeping troops "battle ready" for days on end?, well keep those cocktails away from this NUT JOB.....
Problem is, everyone has a different idea of what "best interests" means. Joe McCarthy certainly had the best interests of the US in mind. So did communists. They just had different best interests.
J Edgar Hoover had the US best interest in mind when he framed Martin Luther King, Jr with forged audio tapes of bogus conversations.
McCarthur had the US best interests in mind when he tried to start WW III with Red China.
The generals who had plans in the early 60s to fake terrorist attacks in the US and blame it on Castro had the US best interests in mind.
Oliver North had the US best interests in mind.
Poindextor and TIA had the US best interests in mind.
I myself don't particularly appreciate other people having my best interests in mind. They don't know my best interests and they don't care.
And that includes you. To all you and your ilk who have my best interests in mind, I say FUCK YOU, I can decide my own best interests.
Infuriate left and right
"This "war on terrorism" is more than people fighting people, but ideas fighting ideas. You can't shoot an idea."
Yes you can. Just shoot the human that holds on to such ideas. Or...scare them into giving up. It worked on Japan in WWII.
Now, whether or not you feel this was moral is up for you to decide and debate.
Life is not for the lazy.
Sure, you'll never convince Osama that he's wrong. So what? He's one person and he will eventually get old and die.
But you CAN work to establish and support governments that are NOT based upon religious teachings and that DO have rights for women. If you do that, al Queda and other organizations like them will die within a few generations because no one will WANT to be a part of them.
The problem is that it will take a few generations and none of the politicals in the US are willing to put effort into a program that will solve the problem for their grand-children. It's MUCH easier to take a "tough on xxxxxx" stand and advocate violence.
Most people don't remember enough of their history to know that even the "greatest Democracy in the world" (the US) started out without rights for women or blacks and so on. It took us many generations to get to the point we're at now. Don't expect instant solutions to complex problems.
So you're correct in "good luck talking al Qaeda over - I'm sure you'll be able to convince them, through logic and reason, that Sharia isn't really a good system of government, and that women should have full rights as citizens."
But that is just one facet of the whole problem. And it is NOT a major facet. Estimates of al Queda membership before our invasions was about 1,000 individuals. Many of you had graduating classes that were larger than that.
Thanks for the plug, Alexandre. As a not-for-profit in the public interest, TOPP/VTP needs all the help it can get.
This news about millions of dollars going to There.com is both good, and disappointing. It's good in that any increase in the funding and attention for modelling the earth is, in general, a good thing.
It's disappointing in that There.com is a highly secretive, closed, proprietary environment, which guarantees that none of these millions of taxpayer dollars will actually bring the public closer to having a model of the earth.
-Ben Discoe, Project Manager, VTP
I think there is a profound misunderstanding of the role of the Pentagon here. The Pentagon does not initiate hostilities. Our elected politicians do. If you don't like war, don't vote for a warmonger. But don't harp on the professionals whose job it is to win wars. Because as soon as some misguided politician starts one, you can be darn sure the best way out of it is to win it.
You fools! You've played right into his hands. He's just been waiting for this to happen :(
Can't you follow a simple argument? With his examples of Germany and Japan, he was refuting the othe poster's claim that you can't stamp out evil because resentment for you from the peers of those you killed will propagate.
The existance of the Japanese and German populations who do not subscribe to Nazism, do not hold Hitler in high regard, and do not hate us for the elimination of both, precisely support the grandparent post's argument.
What exactly were you trying to provide a counterexample to?