Man, that's gotta be hell on any wildlife left living in the areas in which it's used. (I mean, I get the necessity, but dang)
Tillers too when this war ends (with Russia's defeat) and it's time to plant crops.
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Man, that's gotta be hell on any wildlife left living in the areas in which it's used. (I mean, I get the necessity, but dang)
Tillers too when this war ends (with Russia's defeat) and it's time to plant crops.
the whole war is really bad for the environment. not just locally. tanks don't run on solar. burning fuel depots, etc..
we need to stop putin and his enablers.
Thereβs also a good chance a lot of these areas are smattered with land mines too.
asdf
Well I mean the psychopathic and narcissistic rich bastards in charge aren't gonna feel the effects so why should they care?
You are devastatingly correct on all points. We are AT BEST a few years from the cliff. If we do avoid the cliff, it will be so extremely painful for every single person on the planet that our societies will crumble. There will be a massive population crash as industrialized agriculture is made largely impossible. The chaos in this situation is impossible to overstate.
Mind you, if we don't avoid the cliff, we still go through that, but worse.
Then the crops grow, and theyβre all full of microscopic glass fibre. Then the foodstuffs are shipped to the world. Then the foods are eaten and the GF joins the microplastics in our bloodstream.
It looks like spiderwebs which immediately made me think of No Doubt.
Leave a message and Iβll call you back
I gotta screen my phone calls
So whilst the drones are super-effictive (for now) they pose several serious problems - 1. Fibres can get tangled, maybe even affecting vehicles or other machinery, cars, whatever and 2. If you can view these from the air, you can use an fpv drone to trace them back to the operator (meaning they'll need to change position more frequently and probablyclean up before returning to old positions). 3. That's gonna be a heck of a cleanup operation.
A war always is a "heck of a cleanup". These cables are by far not the worst part of it.
Given how thin those are, and how many there are it might be a waste of time to try to follow them.
None of your points are even remotely close to an actual problem, let alone a serious one lol
A drill and reel could wind up the fiber if the drone has exploded and the cable is loose. If the cable is still attached to the drone, it could send a signal to a device at the end to cut/blow up the fiber attached at the drone's end.
Guessing it's impractical as they're not doing it.
And here I thought drones were radio controlled...
They were, now they aren't.
You can interfere wirh radio waves, but not a fiberoptic line
My scissor begs to differ.
And how long are you going to survive in the no man's land, operating your scissors?
I think I could manage a good few seconds.
Each cable can generate 80kg of fertilizer
Win-win
Huh?
Presumably a corpse.
I believe the implication is that when the Drone kills a soldier their body will fertilize the ground.
What? Why is there so much fiber optic cable?
From Internet (not op):
Fiber-optic first-person-view drones areΒ jam-proof. Sending and receiving signals along millimeters-thick but miles-long optical fibers, these FPV drones are impervious to the radio interference that can ground wireless FPV drones. That doesn't mean it's impossible to defeat a fiber-optic drone.
Just need sissors and a pogo stick to bring one down.
Russians can just mark their location to make it easier.
Are they tethered to the operator?
The drones have a spool of fiber optic cable. Some spools can reach 40km. The spool unwinds as the drone flies and yes it would either lead back to the operator or they could in theory have a node that it connects to and then from there connect to operator via cable or wireless. Really fascinating stuff imo
Now Iβm curious how much a 40km long spool costs
Just several hundred dollars, and a visit from the ATF.
Looking at Alibaba, the "bare fiber for FPV drone" cost around $600 for a 50km spool.
So that's where all of the USA's fiber rollouts ended up
The drones are fly-by-wire