Gas-Powered Boots As Metaphor For Cold War
News.com has a piece up looking at a set of gas-powered boots that were developed during the cold war. While the technology itself is interesting, article author Andrew Kramer uses it as a launching point for a discussion of Russia's technological stagnation during the cold war. Outside of military applications, many of the innovative ideas developed in the former USSR during the 80s and early 90s were left to rot on the drawing board. The boots were eventually brought to market, but failed sometime last year. They do, of course, also go into how the boots work: "Taking a step down will compress air in the shoe--as in a typical sneaker, said Enikeev, who was a designer on the project. But then, a tiny carburetor injects gasoline into the compressed air and a spark plug fires it off. Instead of fastening a seat belt, the institute's test runner, Marat D. Garipov, an assistant professor of engineering, strapped on shin belts at a recent demonstration. Then he flicked an ignition switch."
Also, check this:WTF? Where could the 'inventor' of tetris have gained patent protection? Methinks the author of tfa has no idea what they're talking about.
Oh - and what you really came to the comments for - links to pics & vids: Video #1, Video #2, and a nice diagram of how they work.
There are shills on slashdot. Apparently, I'm one of them.
This is true, of course, but even "Communism" (Socialism, really — USSR never completed the "building of Communism") could've done much better than it did, if it did not spend so much on the military. They tried to keep up with the West on military spending, which meant, pretty much, no resources for anything else... I believe, this was the GP's point...
The Cold War drained them of everything and bankrupted the country, while leaving the US with "merely" a huge national debt...
In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
>invent something militarily useful and it will dissappear from public knowledge.
Man, wouldnt it be cool to have something like the internet (a military project) in the US (to spread to the rest of the world) where we could complain about the oppressive military-industrial complex and falsibly equate the soviet and US systems. damn you secretive regimes! Oh wait...