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The Pentagon's Supersonic, Shape-Shifting Assassin

grammar fascist writes "CNN reports that Northrop Grumman is under contract to build a new supersonic, shape-shifting bomber by 2020. The main innovation is in its single, rotating wing. From the article: '[It] will cruise with its 200-foot-long wing perpendicular to its engines like a normal airplane. But just before the craft breaks the sound barrier, its single wing will swivel around 60 degrees (hence the name) so that one end points forward and the other back. This oblique configuration redistributes the shock waves that pile up in front of a plane at Mach speeds and cause drag. When the Switchblade returns to subsonic speeds, the wing will rotate back to perpendicular.'"

12 of 489 comments (clear)

  1. Shape shifting? by MustardMan · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So, having one part of the plane change its angle is now shape shifting? WOW. My laptop is a shapeshifter, because the lid opens. My car must be a shape shifter too, the sunroof can take several positions!

  2. Britain isn't a major European economy? by torstenvl · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Britain - 5.1% Portugal - 4.3% Denmark - 4.2% Ireland - 4.2% Austria - 3.9% Luxembourg - 2.6 Netherlands - 2.4

    How about adding an option to post as an ignorant math-challenged fascist instead? 4.6 is nowhere near half of 5.1.

    As a side note, France and Germany have higher reported unemployment because they don't count part-time minimum wage jobs. HTFH.

    1. Re:Britain isn't a major European economy? by vertinox · · Score: 5, Insightful

      And where do you get "fascist" from? Do you even know what that word means?

      To be fair, fascist just mean some one who believes in a strong powerful government over everything else. We just made it a dirty word after WWII because Itality referred themselves as such.

      Of course National Socialism isn't a bad economic policy for a government to have either, but no one would dare use the phrase when talking about modern day governments.

      But still it derides the point that our economy is most likley doing really good right now because of massive military and government spending... Actually kind of like National Socialist Germany in the 1930's. However, such an economy is not sustainable in the long term.

      Germany invaded other countries and looted them and used slave labor to make up for this problem, wheras our war economy just throws it into the big pile of national debt and sell it off to China, Japan, and other places.

      If tomorrow Japan and China decide to either A.) Stop buying debt or B.) Demand their debts back ASAP we'd be hosed.

      Of course they'd be hosed too when the world market economy collapses so for right now they keep buying and profiting on our massive spending.

      --
      "I am the king of the Romans, and am superior to rules of grammar!"
      -Sigismund, Holy Roman Emperor (1368-1437)
  3. Maybe not a waste by Screwy1138 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    While projects like this can easily be seen as waste, they do a couple things.
    This money goes to create hi tech jobs, rewarding people for getting engineering/science/sometimes computing degrees, potentially supporting universities themselves.
    These projects generate knowledge by testing out technologies and supporting businesses or universities that sponsor research.

    In my opinion, this is not waste, even if the end product never comes to be.

    Certainly, this can only go so far, you wouldn't want all your money going to high tech / low success projects, but it is reasonable to have money going towards these things.

  4. Correction: stale data. by torstenvl · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I had done a quick google search and used figures brought up by the BBC. European unemployment rates similar to the U.S. unemployment rate:
    Austria - 4.8% Britain - 5.3% Denmark - 4.8% Netherlands - 5.7% Sweden - 5.5% Switzerland - 3.3%

    The overall unemployment rate in the Euro zone is 8% (this is in large part due to high reported unemployment in Germany and France, explained above, 11.0% and 9.3% respectively). However, the Euro zone unemployment rate reduced by .7% from last year's rate, compared with the U.S. unemployment rate, which reduced .5%.

    Not to be a total jackass, but I really do have to rub this in your face: the Scandinavian countries have historically had the lowest unemployment (historically lower than that of the United States) and STILL have the largest welfare system of all of Europe. If that doesn't provide a counterexample to your nonsensical "Everyone benefits from a dog-eat-dog world" blind faith in Capitalism-as-God, I don't know what does.

  5. Re:What a great idea by argStyopa · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Funny, I thought we already had freely-provided education. Hm, I guess we should throw MORE money at it, I'm *sure* that will solve everything.

    --
    -Styopa
  6. Re:Budget Priortites by Reaperducer · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The thing that the military adds to R&D that academia lacks is urgency. The military responds to a threat, or a perceived threat. Academia can spend generations arguing the same theories to death.

    --
    -- I'm old enough to have lived through six different meanings of the word "hacker."
  7. Re:Budget Priortites by Monster_Juice · · Score: 5, Insightful

    WOuldn't it be more efficient to take the war out of it and spend the money on pure R&D?

    R&D is Research & DEVELOPMENT. You have to build something when you are done otherwise it is not R&D, it is just R. It is also not R&D&War.

    Better yet why not just provide incentives for private enterprise to do R&D and give the money back to the taxpayers?

    Well other than the giving money back part, the US government does this all the time.

    How about R&D through the space program?

    Have you ever heard of NASA?

    Wouln't that be better then making new bombers to drop bombs on miami on a band of al-quada sypathisers?

    Please use facts when making an argument. This is just a dumb statement that shows you have no good points to argue.

    --
    Slashdot +1 funny -4 Insightful +1 informative -2 Redundant
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  8. At what time where you in Sweden? by Iloinen+Lohikrme · · Score: 5, Insightful

    As a Finn I was just wondering, at what time where you in sweden?

    Because when Wartburg was a popular car in Finland, it would date to 1950s, that would make you a really old slashdotter. Mayby you are mixing Wartburg with Lada? Lada was a soviet made car which was also imported to Finland, but it was never popular, and if you mixed those two, then it would date you to 1980s.

    Thought, you are quite right about the fact that having and driving a car in both Sweden and Finland is very expensive, but that's because the car taxes double the cars price and gasolines price, which btw. is just right, because personal driving is expensive to goverment (roads) and to enviroment (polution) and thus taxes should be taken to compensate those costs. Now days there thought is talk about moving to strictly taxing gasoline, and not cars, that would be logical, and it would make people think more about having a own car when a liter would cost from 2 to 3. The reason why americans are driving SUVs is because US goverment is subsidizing personal driving, by not taxing car owners the cost that are associated with using cars.

    On a note, I too think that scandinavian countries tax too much, and there is too much goverment control, our unemployment rate is too high, and the official numbers are cleaned by putting people in to education and to early pension. Thought, I think that american system isn't the answer, thought it has some good points, the society should take care of it's weaks and unfortunates, and provide a minimum level of living, that is the only way in which we can say that everybody is in the same line in life and that people try and take risk in their lifes, without worrying ending up in the street.

    PS. The most popular car in Finland in now days is Toyota, same too in america, or it will be soon ;-)

  9. Re:What a great idea by AhtirTano · · Score: 4, Insightful
    The U.S. spends so much on the armed forces for the same reason that at one point the U.S.S.R had enough nukes to destroy the entire planet a few times over- we want to make the idea of (a major nation) going against us in any significant way (as in more than "we don't support what you are doing") a horrifying thought. We want to have so much power that the rest of the world is FORCED to follow our lead or pay the price for getting in front.

    Of course that's why we spend so much. But some of us don't think we should bully the rest of the world into following our lead. I don't really care what another country does, as long as they don't actively seek to harm our country. Deterant is good enough, and we can achieve that without spending $500 Billion.

    There is also that whole "military spending leads to domestic jobs" thing as well.

    Which is a toothless argument, because almost any field we spend $500 Billion on can generate domestic jobs.

  10. Re:Budget Priortites by Jeremi · · Score: 5, Insightful
    The current group of fanatics we are fighting feels anyone who is not a member of their culture/religion is not worthy to live and must be killed. They would be trying to destroy us even if we stood in the corner with our hands in our pockets, and they are doing this even to people who sympathize with them.


    Your statement is correct as far as it goes, but what you've failed to realize is that "the current group of fanatics" is not a fixed set of people. Like the particles of water vapor that form a cloud, there are constantly individuals entering and leaving the "set of fanatics", and its appearance as a fixed object is an illusion. Like a cloud, its size will grow or shrink depending on the environment around it. Which is why so much of the USA's recent actions have been not only ineffective but counterproductive: if a military operation kills N terrorists, but inspires (more than N) people who were previously non-combatants to become terrorists, then our effort in that operation has actually harmed us more than doing nothing would have.


    The "War On Terror" is not some video game where you can win simply by killing until there are no 'baddies' to kill. It is a political struggle for the hearts and minds of humanity. The terrorists know this, and use it to their advantage. It's time we did the same. When the bulk of the world can't tell the "good guys" from the "bad guys" anymore, the terrorists are winning.

    --


    I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
  11. Re:Budget Priortites by lavaface · · Score: 4, Insightful
    The current group of fanatics we are fighting feels anyone who is not a member of their culture/religion is not worthy to live and must be killed. They would be trying to destroy us even if we stood in the corner with our hands in our pockets, and they are doing this even to people who sympathize with them.

    This is complete and utter bullshit. While I imagine there are some fanatics out there who feel that people who are not a member of their culture/religion must be killed, I would wager that a good number of them live in the US. The primary beef folks in the Midle East have with American policy is that we blatantly and unreasonably yield to Israeli policy at the expense of the Arab population. The western world considers the Arab world with general contempt stretching back to the time after WWI when the west drew up borders and established puppet leaderships. The global population in general rejects the strong brand of American superiority and cultural hegemony that is imposed by fiat on what are supposed to be locally-goverened democracies. Funny thing--many Americans are fed up with this too, albeit on subtler levels.

    As for the government spending money on R&D and production, every penny of your money the government spends on R&D and production ends up in the paychecks of the employees and shareholders associated with the companies that got the contracts.

    Aside from the fact that most of the money for these contracts DOES NOT EVEN EXIST AND IS MERELY DEBT TO BE PASSED ON TO FUTURE GENERATIONS, money could still be spent on R&D for peaceful purposes. You know, things like shelter and food. Buckminster Fuller's vision of a world without material need is a technological possibilty. Unfortunately it's not politically as profitable as war. Profiting from war is a true moral low, but quite beneficial for the Inner Party.