Well piloting a fighter jet is enough to handle. But to pilot your own fighter jet while remotely piloting one or multiple aircraft flying with you would probably be substantially more difficult.
Especially so if they're in close proximity with you, and you have to keep them from running into your aircraft, or even into each other.
I for one am shocked that The Magic School Bus conviently decided not to warn us of these dangers of nano-scaled foreign objects travelling through the human body:(
Now if the gravity on the Moon was light enough for astronauts to easily bounce around, lose their balance and fall over, what would the chances be of having astronauts easily walk on the surface of an asteroid? (assuming the surface is solid enough for a fully suited human to stand on in the first place)
The Moon is quite a bit more massive than even Ceres is, and we had slight issues walking around up there.
I wonder which will come first?
processors with 10 cores
or
razors with 10 blades
Well piloting a fighter jet is enough to handle. But to pilot your own fighter jet while remotely piloting one or multiple aircraft flying with you would probably be substantially more difficult. Especially so if they're in close proximity with you, and you have to keep them from running into your aircraft, or even into each other.
I tried to become a hacker once, but I suck at reading the Matrix code.
I wonder if any of these pilots can rub their stomach and pat their head at the same time too.
I wonder if they stuck a sign outside of the room, drawn in crayon that said "No Iranians Allowed!"
I for one am shocked that The Magic School Bus conviently decided not to warn us of these dangers of nano-scaled foreign objects travelling through the human body :(
Now if the gravity on the Moon was light enough for astronauts to easily bounce around, lose their balance and fall over, what would the chances be of having astronauts easily walk on the surface of an asteroid? (assuming the surface is solid enough for a fully suited human to stand on in the first place) The Moon is quite a bit more massive than even Ceres is, and we had slight issues walking around up there.