On 25/06/2015 2:59 AM, "Richard Aiken" <raikenclw@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> On Wed, Jun 24, 2015 at 9:14 AM, Grimmund <grimmund@gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>> On Wed, Jun 24, 2015 at 2:39 AM, Richard Aiken <raikenclw@gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>> > In a combat environment, successfully being able to *ignore* the input from
>> > all but one of your data sources at a time would not be a survival-enhancing
>> > ability . . . .
>>
>> Depends. If, for example, you have thumbnail video feeds from the
>> rest of your (say, 4 person & a skeet drone) fire team, being able to
>> ignore the other three views to focus on your own feed (unless, say,
>> you need to look at a situation from someone else's view, or the
>> skeet's view.)
>
>
> [snip of remainder]
>
> Agreed.
>
> Actually, that's pretty much what I was assuming.
>
> But the poster I was responding to
Yes Richard, I have a name
>was assuming that the troops they describe could control their drones without expensive and time-consuming special training, since they would be born knowing how to do this.
Who said this?
Have you seen how different the field garb of a US infantryman is these days from civilians, yet there is to my knowledge no Army course on how to dress oneself.
>
> I was pointing out that young people today who seem to be naturally multi-tasking aren't really doing anything of the sort. They're simply blocking out other inputs as static until they choose to take notice of them.
This is because there isn't really 'multitasking' for human beings with original issue mind.
A cybered infant would have to do the same (or they would never attain a human-like sense of self).
>
What about a GMed infant with molecular scale mods?
> A trained infantryman - on the other hand - will maintain a degree of situational awareness of those other view, so that if something possibly dangerous pops up in one of them, he'll be able to switch his full focus to it.
>
There is no 'partial focus', one is either focused or not.
Battlespace awareness is a problem, particularly in an information- rich environment such as 'swarming'.
Extended personal awareness is not same as combat awareness in a unit employment, never mind a formation.
GregC
> Richard Aiken
>
> "Never insult anyone by accident." Robert A. Heinlein
> "A word to the wise ain't necessary -- it's the stupid ones that need the advice." - Bill Cosby
> "We know a little about a lot of things; just enough to make us dangerous." Dean Winchester
>
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