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-   -   5/19/2003: Shipping container back-up (http://cellar.org/showthread.php?t=3404)

bjlhct 05-20-2003 12:27 AM

Heh, just point and shoot, anyone can do it, right?

Of course, the guys loading hellfires and big mortars are probably pretty buff too.

Couldn't they get you guys bikes or something? I heard about some guys in Afghanistan using mules. Camels might work to for terrain that's impassable except by foot.

Although the big heavy gun isn't complained about as much once the fighting starts. I heard that there's a new 6.8mm round for the m16 - just replace the barrel and receiver on it, I think.

It could be worse, you could be carrying a Dragon, right? I have a feeling 100lb land warrior suits are going to be found in a ditch somewhere in a couple decades.

xoxoxoBruce 05-20-2003 04:46 AM

Or eliminate the warrior. OK, I spelled unmanned wrong,:p

elSicomoro 05-20-2003 09:37 PM

Has anyone ever seen the video for MC 900 Ft. Jesus's "If I Only Had a Brain"? Griff and that other guy are just ramping it up to another level.

The various colors remind me of the collages on the walls at Market East Station.

You're not a nut, Griff, you're ummm...unique. There we go.

Tobiasly 05-21-2003 01:11 AM

The inability of the army to get good, reliable electronic equipment down to the squad and team level never ceases to amaze me. In this day and age, I can't understand why we're still using those godawful 126 radios with about a 1-km range in the field, buggy handmike, etc. Everyone just goes to Radio Shack or Wal Mart and buys a Motorola FRS radio instead. It's ridiculous. I won't even start in on the 20-year old MILES system (the "laser tag" gear we use in training).

So my faith in them getting the Land Warrior system right on the first try is pretty low. Guess we'll see.

mitheral 05-21-2003 09:43 AM

Container advatages
 
One of the big advantages of containers is the realised massive reduction in shrinkage. The actual goods in a container are only handled by interested parties (the manufacturer and the buyer). All the shipping employees along the way only touch the container, an amazingly hard object to smuggle out in your lunch box.

bjlhct 05-21-2003 11:36 PM

Been playing Trogdor again Bruce?

bjlhct 05-22-2003 12:54 AM

A lot of people don't realize the enormous infrastructure that exists for "everyday things." You're groceries have probably been in a truck for a couple thousand miles, your oil comes from halfway across the globe, etc. The fact that it holds together as well as it does is a testament to all the planning that gets done for these things. The shipping container is one of the glues that hold an industrial, globalizing society together.

They're also really cheap, often below cost because of the way it's set up (don't want to ship 'em back) so they lend themselves to all sorts of nifty uses for us mortals.

warch 05-22-2003 03:42 PM

Legos.

xoxoxoBruce 05-22-2003 04:21 PM

Quote:

Been playing Trogdor again Bruce?
Damn good at it too! But that picture I posted came from an official Boeing publication. All unmanned systems.
Quote:

You're groceries have probably been in a truck for a couple thousand miles,
I recently saw some Dole peaches that were grown in Greece, packed in Thailand, for Dole in California then sold in Philly.:rolleyes:


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