supersquirrel

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[–] supersquirrel@sopuli.xyz 3 points 3 days ago (2 children)

Have you tried Beyond All Reason?

[–] supersquirrel@sopuli.xyz 2 points 3 days ago

It is a truly a digital esport if there ever has been one.

[–] supersquirrel@sopuli.xyz 1 points 3 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago) (2 children)

Operation Harsh Doorstop multiplayer - I can't get enough of Project Reality style semirealistic battlefield games.

Motortown: Behind The Wheel - the driving just feels so damn good...

Cataclysm Dark Days Ahead - specifically Sky Islands mod to give the game a more "run based" focused feel. This game has passed an event horizon of environmental richness no other adventure game comes close to, the landscape truly feels alive and it is very addictive in a good way.

Call Of Duty Mobile & Other Battle Royale Mobile Games - such as (now defunct) Apex Legends Mobile or Farlight 84, never spent money on it in addictive way I just find higher level competitive battle royale gameplay fascinating.

[–] supersquirrel@sopuli.xyz 3 points 3 days ago

No, get ready for our collapse.

[–] supersquirrel@sopuli.xyz 17 points 4 days ago (3 children)
[–] supersquirrel@sopuli.xyz 6 points 4 days ago (2 children)

Can you crosspost with an internal link not raw url? It kicks me out of app into my mobile browser with that link.

[–] supersquirrel@sopuli.xyz 4 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago) (2 children)

I love Ulysses (originally parts of it were called "Stephen Hero") and Finnegans Wake but Portrait Of The Artist As A Young Man dives to deep into the intensity of catholicism as a suffocating force that I didn't have to endure so it felt hard to connect with at points, but I also was very strangely moved by Dubliners.

You owe it to yourself to check out the chapters of Ulysses from Stephen's perspective, they are in many ways an extension of the best parts of Portrait Of The Artist.

Episode 3 Proteus in particular is a trip especially the Irish Radioplay Version.

https://archive.org/details/Ulysses-Audiobook-Merged

Ulysses is also where Stephen Daedalus says his most remembered literary quote of all time "History is a nightmare from which I am trying to awake."

Yeah I love James Joyce, I find his writing obtuse, annoying, challenging and never easy to summarize but his writing has changed how I see the world in a way no other artist has and it isn't even close. James Joyce is still too radical of a writer for our time and it has been ~100 years since Ulysses.

[–] supersquirrel@sopuli.xyz 2 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago) (1 children)

No, you can't call Star Trek idealistic, or at least you can't contrast it to Star Wars as more idealistic.

Star Trek is VERY cynical about the capacity of humans and other sentient species to do evil.

1992

The Eugenics Wars (WWIII) begin.[14] At the height of his influence, the genetically augmented tyrant Khan Noonien Singh is said to be the absolute ruler of more than one-quarter of Earth's population. (WWIII is retconned to be in the 2050s by TNG's Encounter at Farpoint and Star Trek First Contact and to being a conflict separate from the Eugenics Wars; SNW's "Strange New World" retcons it to taking place in the 21st century, prior to WWIII.)

2026

World War III begins on Earth. Colonel Phillip Green and a group of eco-terrorists commit genocide that claimed the lives of thirty-seven million people. (ENT "In A Mirror Darkly, Part Two") (In TOS, WWIII took place in the 1990s and is established as an alternate name for the Eugenics Wars[14] while DS9's "Doctor Bashir, I Presume?" had the Eugenics Wars in the 22nd century. SNW's "Strange New World" retcons the Eugenics Wars to the 21st century, but prior to the outbreak of WWIII.)

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_Star_Trek

Star Wars is far more idealistic, evil is about power and a cynical leaders that do anything to get more power... Star Trek has a consistently much more unnerving portrayal of evil as a much more nuanced force that is often irrational and difficult to resolve into pure pursuit of power that it is always attracted to it.

[–] supersquirrel@sopuli.xyz 1 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago)

Yes... or is it that Israel is a looking glass into the US or South Africa 20 years ago? Is it not a technology-supercharged return to the parts of the 20th century where colonial powers committed, sustained and exploited genocide for profit?

Or rather is this not the cynical fulcrum the blazen bigotry of Netanyahu and similar Israeli leaders are trying to secure their future across? That is, if they tie the colonialism and genocide of Palestinians to the US.. then US society will naturally be forced to invisiblize the Palestinian Genocide the same way it has invisiblized the other ongoing genocides in the US.

Netanyahu and conservative leaders like him in Israeli society are absolutely counting on the shakey liberalism of the US and other western powers not being able to survive this degree of self-reckoning, and so far they are absolutely right. Everything is perfectly on schedule for the west to arrive as the savior to Palestinians right at the moment that the genocide nearly fully completes.... enabled the whole time by US weapons and diplomatic cover.

US police have trained heavily with the IDF, the connection between the Israeli society becoming genocidal and the US struggling to avoid drowning to the same fate goes back to the origins of the US, the systems of violence and exploitation it festered and the ideologies of eugenics and white supremacy it has consistently pursued.

This is why I get so upset about the Palestinian Genocide vs the multitude of other heinous crimes occuring as we speak on earth, it doesn't matter that Gaza is across the world from me and it isn't just that the scale of suffering is incomprehensible, it is that the actions of the US government make what happens there directly relevant to my ability to sleep at night here in the US.

[–] supersquirrel@sopuli.xyz 1 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago) (3 children)

Ok fair I meant only the main movies and tv shows, I am not comparing the full universe of Star Wars to the full universe of Star Trek, especially because didn't Disney make all of that non-canon?

Also noted, Knights Of The Old Republic II is good, I mean it was peak Bioware so definitely I will take that note.

There is a DNA that is fundamentally different to Star Trek though, an ability to be both epic and everyday, big existential war and small micro story, philosophical and then action packed. There is plenty of awful Star Trek... ooof plenty of it.. but there is also a spirit to Star Trek that I think makes it different than Star Wars which isn't to say there isn't good Scifi within the Star Wars universe.

[–] supersquirrel@sopuli.xyz 7 points 5 days ago* (last edited 5 days ago) (1 children)

in a world menaced by the climate crisis, nuclear weapons, *artificial intelligence and killer robots.

*delusion that we have created artificial intelligence

“History is best told as a story of organised crime,” Kemp says. “It is one group creating a monopoly on resources through the use of violence over a certain territory and population.”

In terms of what kind of history you can make a living covering in a "pop-science" fashion yes, but this is a MASSIVE claim to make without serious conclusive evidence proving this is what motivates the trajectory of history primarily.

Why isn't History best told as a story of lawmakers attempting to create a sustainable coherent body of laws that don't collapse inwards eventually?

Why isn't History best told as a story of revolutions in domestic labor technology? The pottery wheel, the loom, the dishwasher... etc...

Why isn't History best told as a story of different meals and culinary traditions?

Why isn't History best told as a story of organized religion, friendship, communities, or ideologies?

We choose to see history this way and in doing so play right into the hands of the ruling class. The act of retelling History by necessity must challenge the primacy of authoritarian regimes in the human story because otherwise all History does is retell the propaganda of the past.

 

Edit 2 Also consider the capacity of an unmanned Shark Aero type ultralight with a parachute system to house a valuable suite of sensors in the passenger seat, if operating deep in friendly territory even if the aircraft was targetted and shot down by a shahed turned anti-air ambush device or some other type of drone attack, the hard to obtain sophisticated electronics could be potentially ejected and recovered thus at a strategic level deterring the idea of even targetting these deep backline aircraft in the first place.

https://militarnyi.com/en/news/russian-altius-drone-crashes-due-to-unknown-electronic-warfare-measures/

Edit While not a shark, this is a demonstration that the electronics warfare principles behind the design of this EW shark are a real pressure point that can be pressed by Ukraine.

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=SjkEV0XB8E4&pp=ygUUdWtyYWluZSBzaWxlbnQgc2hhcmvSBwkJwQkBhyohjO8%3D

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=d6CJtoibnWc

Also see above videos.

Amazing to see, although Super Tucanos would have obviously worked, this ultralight turboprop civilian is perfect as an ultra-lightweight electronics warfare platform designed to effectively and cost efficiently disrupt large Russian shahed style flying bomb attacks.

This is the kind of practical, non-flashy weapons development that wins wars.

Go along for a ride in the shark (I like the account name :P).

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=Angsf1SWecI&pp=ygUgc2hhcmsgYWlycGxhbmUgdW5leHBlY3RlZCBmbGlnaHQ%3D

Rundown of this unexpected warhorse from a civilian buyer informational video.

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=JObUKp4R64Q

"This is the most efficient platform you can buy with the 912 [aircraft] engine in it."

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rotax_912

[the civilian version of the aircraft weighs without fuel ~325 kg]

"I will get to ~8000 feet in about 10 minutes" pilot on the high power to weight ratio of the plane.

This is not a "frontline" aircraft at least in the traditional sense of the word, and it is hilarious to see people bashing this thing like it is going to lose air to air missile duels or be dodging SAMs. A single surface to air missile designed to shoot down fast jets can easily cost a multiple of what this aircraft sells for on the civilian market bought in single units. This is designed as a backline workhouse designed to be cheap and scalable enough to protect cities from mass cheap shahed attacks.

The cherry on top is being able to train Ukraine's next generation of pilots at the same time. Honestly flying in one of these has to be a really special experience, they are custom designed to inject a joy of flying into the pilot and passenger, not a joy derived from the drug of war and violence but of flight and the freedom inherent to it. Fear and respect a nation of people who understand flight or make a similar mistake nations did during the age of sail that dismissed smaller nations of mariners as pushovers that could be overwhelmed by sheer force and number, sailing expertise be damned. No, the pilots will always win, kings just sometimes forget it and think they must be the more powerful of the two because their throne is chained to the ground.

A king desperately pretending he is a pilot to project the illusion of having the individual power to change the world with his own two hands. Keep lying to yourself, fool.

I would not be so confident as Russia is throwing away the lives of their precious pilots while they set a clarion call over Ukraine to learn to fly and then provide basically infinite trainer drones to practice interdicting/ shooting down all day as much as they have the human capacity to train. It will inveitably produce a generation of pilots that can steamroll Russia with whatever airframe they have access to, military or not.

This is a target practice drone masquerading as a weapon. Fear those who cut their teeth downing waves of these, for they will be formidable, relentless and highly experienced.

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=nT9cH3jR5Y0

It is called a shark after all!

The Wind Rises

Imagine if you were a frontline UAV pilot in Ukraine and had turned your love of FPV racing and the adrenaline inducing high speed action of flying drones into an ability to kill... that leaving a mark on you however I can't imagine it does.... and yet had never had the time or money to actually learn to fly in an airplane and one day somebody approached you with the opportunity to rotate into the backline and learn to fly real airplanes while still keeping your country safe?

Imagine for a minute how you might feel the first time you were able to use your honed killing skills to do something even more basic and powerful, lift your body with an involuntary cry of joy into the air... now experiencing the true raw potential of flight as a full body experience.

I can see the potential in this "weapon system" to do the most important thing necessary to decisively winning a war, which is create a potential so much more powerful than violence that it washes it away like rain. To say "fine, optimize your factories to train my next generation of pilots" is the kind of response that dismantles empires...

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=W_8bszJPriY&pp=ygUWc2hhcmsgcGlsb3RzIGFlcm8gcGlrZQ%3D%3D

 

Ukraine has been highly successful at countering Russian artillery. Any gun firing can be spotted by counter-artillery radar, like the U.S. -made AN/TPQ-36 Firefinder, which tracks shells in flight and calculates their source. New Ukrainian-made acoustic detectors which recently went into mass production are likely to figure increasingly.

...

Surprisingly, drones are preferred because they are faster. It is highly counter-intuitive that 100 mph drone will reach a target quicker than a 700-mph artillery shell, but what counts is how long it takes to hit the target.

“With FPV drones, even though the flight time can be minutes depending on the distance, the first strike often hits,” Michael explains. “With artillery it often takes several rounds to hit the target, especially in dynamic conditions.”

Like Ukraine, Russia has been ramping up FPV production at pace, and plans to build 2 million in 2025, compared to 3 million artillery shells. At this rate, both countries will soon be fielding more FPVs than artillery shells.

Russia’s artillery is rapidly being eroded as the thousands of guns in storage are put into service and destroyed. When it is gone, the days of massed firepower will have passed. But the era of massed precision drone strikes will just be beginning.

I actually think this is a very incorrect conclusion, it reminds me of how US media would talk up the threat of guerilla resistance fighters in Afghanistan and Iraq and while there is definitely truth to it (and those fighters were certainly to be respected in their effectiveness), the reality is that the reason you fight a guerilla resistance is because you cannot fight a traditional war, and the reason you use cheap drones to do long range strikes is because you cannot protect any of your actual artillery well enough to use it in a threatening manner.

See this article as a counterpoint to this narrative.

https://warontherocks.com/2025/06/i-fought-in-ukraine-and-heres-why-fpv-drones-kind-of-suck/

All that said, if a member of a NATO military were hypothetically to ask me whether NATO countries should acquire first-person view drone capabilities, based on my experience and given the current state of the technology, I would probably say no, whether they are radio-controlled or fiber-optic. The vast majority of first-person view drone missions can be completed more cheaply, effectively, or reliably by other assets. Furthermore, other authors have noted that drones still do not come close to matching the effects that can be achieved by massed artillery fires. Additionally, experts on artillery systems consistently note the greater reliability and range of artillery.

Also see this article in Small Wars Journal

https://smallwarsjournal.com/2025/05/05/beyond-the-hype-why-drones-cannot-replace-artillery/

Drones are a valuable addition to the modern battlefield, but they are tools, not harbingers of a revolution in military affairs. The lessons from Ukraine demonstrate that UAVs can augment and expand traditional fires, particularly in situations characterized by shortages and static fighting. However, they cannot and should not be viewed as substitutes for the artillery and rocket forces that are fundamental to operational maneuver and ultimate victory in large-scale warfare. The future of fires lies not in replacing proven capabilities with unproven technologies, but in integrating them to create a more versatile, resilient, and effective fire support network

Otherwise I think the forbes article makes some good points, but be very skeptical of the claim that artillery is outdated and that Russia could be using it when it isn't. The fact that as the number of Russian artillery systems have plummeted frontline reports still indicate that Russians have maintained a saturation of fire at the front only means Russia has less artillery pieces but values them so much that they are using a smaller number of artillery pieces at a much more unsustainable rate and for some reason (who could ever guess why?!?!) US media wants to spin this into a pro-Russian narrative about the old ways of war being utterly obsolete....

Ask an artillery operator or expert why using one artillery piece to fire many shells is not anywhere as good of a plan as using many artillery pieces to fire less shells at a more leisurely rate. The difference is massive in the lifespan and accuracy of the weapons system.

https://www.rusi.org/explore-our-research/publications/special-resources/tactical-developments-during-third-year-russo-ukrainian-war

One can extrapolate the same truth from what informed Ukrainian military experts in this report from February detail.

The above figure must be read in the appropriate context. During extended discussions with Ukrainian officers on multiple axes and from multiple brigades – two of which had an exceptionally high rates of efficiency with FPVs – the officers repeatedly reiterated that they needed artillery. They emphasised that UAVs alone were inadequate and that they were most effective when used in combination with artillery.

For example, artillery was effective at suppressing or displacing EW and air defences or suppressing infantry protecting key targets from bomber UAVs. Artillery was also able to defend the front in poor weather and was generally more responsive. Combined UAV and artillery operations often maximised the destruction achieved with, for example, an FPV immobilising a vehicle and artillery killing dismounts as they emerged. To give an example of the difference, a fires officer described the hours it had taken to plan and eventually immobilise a tank using FPVs, compared with an engagement where a platoon of Russian tanks were manoeuvring and, having located them with a drone, he fired five BONUS shells at them, knocking out all three tanks within two minutes.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bofors/Nexter_Bonus

https://militarnyi.com/en/news/ukrainian-troops-destroyed-the-t-90m-with-a-bonus-round/

The pervasiveness of the threat of FPVs, however, which can hunt while their crews are relatively safe, makes them a persistent cause of attrition. Ukrainian commanders would like to inflict casualties on Russian forces from approximately 15 km from their defence lines, with the persistent threat of FPVs forcing the Russians to move quickly rather than deliberately and therefore making them more susceptible to canalisation from artillery- or drone-deployed mines, and thereafter broken up with artillery.

Although these combined strikes are most effective, Ukrainian officers noted that they were rarely able to bring about this layered effect because of a scarcity of artillery. One of the main reasons for such a high proportion of kills being caused by FPVs is the relative lack of artillery in Ukrainian units. A brigade responsible for defending 18 km of front noted that it had four working howitzers. 152mm- and 122mm-howitzer rounds are in very short supply. Although 155mm shells are available in considerably greater volume than earlier in the conflict, artillery officers noted that they had few guns and limited spares. They also often had shells, but few accompanying charges. It may be that ammunition and spares are being stockpiled to hedge against the risk of disruption of supply during the forthcoming political manoeuvring over negotiations, as higher formations appeared more comfortable with their level of supply.

For the brigades, while shells were available, charge bags were far scarcer, so that few guns were equipped for engaging at long range. Units also almost exclusively had access to high-explosive shells and some artillery-deployed mines, with very occasional access to dual-purpose improved conventional munitions (DPICM), and almost no availability of BONUS shells or other specialised ammunition. The ability to fire proper groupings of shells was also inhibited by the fact that units were receiving propellent charges sourced from a wide range of countries, which varied considerably in composition and quality, and thus in accuracy.

While updates to the Kropyva fire control application used by the AFU can include preloaded adjustments to account for common national variants, the persistent challenges introduce inefficiency into the provision of fire support and exemplify the second-order effects of piecemeal and uncoordinated industrial support. Taken together, these mean that artillery is currently significantly underperforming, even when it is available.

...

First, the need to expand production of explosive energetics and shells remains. Ukrainian officials report that they received approximately 1.6 million 155 mm shells in 2023 and 1.5 million in 2024. As the availability and quality of shells on the international market decreases, more will need to come from production lines. Investment must be sustained in Europe to expand industrial capacity in this area. But Ukraine’s ammunition availability is not relevant if it does not have serviceable artillery pieces. It is therefore also critical that industrial efforts in Europe are rationalised to ensure a supply of replacement barrels and other spare parts for donated fleets, and that the number of howitzers provided to the AFU is increased.

In regards to fires, this should be done alongside the financing and increased scaling of UAV production, as the two capabilities are complementary. Both areas will be critical to European defence, so investing in this industrial capacity is a win-win for European security. Mechanisation is also critical to battlefield survivability.

Infantry fighting vehicles and lighter tanks are disproportionately valuable for the mobile reinforcement of sectors under pressure in the defence. APCs, meanwhile, are indispensable for logistics, medical support, troop rotation and offensive action. The number of vehicles required means that while modern infantry fighting vehicles are a significant combat multiplier, they are also overly expensive and complex for a large proportion of the tasks for which APCs are equally capable and much more affordable. Ukraine’s international partners should therefore prioritise the continued mechanisation of Ukrainian units with both IFVs and APCs. The priority for both is serviceability.

the end of mass fire artillery can be seen exploding in these pictures (most of the hot gas goes out the muzzle breaks on either side)

https://en.defence-ua.com/events/how_ukraine_freed_snake_island_from_russian_forces_bohdana_howitzers_combat_debut-15000.html

As Richard M. Swain points out in his excellent history of the Third Army during the Persian Gulf War, theorists, historians, and commentators frequently align themselves in one of two camps of explanation. Swain calls them the romantic school and the realist school. Romantics believe that maneuver can be so adroit that a discerning enemy will admit defeat at the hands of an operational master and will surrender to the brilliance of the enemy’s operational art. The realist school—occupied primarily by practitioners, especially those of an artillery heritage—believe that the end result of military operations is death from indirect fire. The more you shoot, the less damage the enemy can do. Victory happens not through psychoshock or silk scarves in the air but from 155 mm and larger artillery fires.

...

In chapter 4, J. David Pressley II, a history graduate student from the University of North Texas, analyzes the German utilization of combined arms operations at Riga and the Baltic islands in the final months of the eastern front during World War I. He discusses several tactical and operational innovations witnessed during these German attacks, which were promulgated into official German doctrine and quickly transferred to the Italian and western fronts. This return of movement to the battlefield was actually based primarily on overwhelming firepower—indirect and direct fire—at the point of penetration, not on some romantic notion of adroit operational art, mystical psychoshock of the enemy command-and-control systems, or getting inside his OODA (observe, orient, decide, and act) loop. Today’s doctrine writers, senior leaders, and those who would become senior commanders and staff officers would do well to read this chapter, especially if they believe they have found the magic keys to the kingdom in some new technology.

https://www.armyupress.army.mil/Journals/military-review/english-edition-archives/september-october-2018/chaos/

https://kyivindependent.com/video/?slug=ukraines-artillery-braces-for-shell-shortage-as-us-halts-aid

https://united24media.com/latest-news/18-million-shells-for-ukraine-czech-led-ammo-surge-marks-war-turning-point-9219

example of Ukraine tightly integrating artillery with drone spotters

https://en.defence-ua.com/video/ukrainian_zuzana_2_system_delivers_scores_deep_strike_with_nato_howitzer-50.html

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submitted 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) by supersquirrel@sopuli.xyz to c/ukraine@sopuli.xyz
 

The data collected from various sources is combined into a single information model and forms a detailed map of the mine danger in the surveyed area.

One of the key advantages of the development is its ease of use: after completing the overflight, the operator simply removes the flash drive, inserts it into the computer, and in 5-10 minutes a ready-made map appears on the UADamage platform.

This is no longer an experimental model: the company has surveyed more than 61,000 square meters of minefields and digitized 520,000 square meters of territory upon request. Recently, UADamage, with the support of Brave1, raised $400,000 in investment to scale the technology.

A paper for the insufferable nerds among us. Who me!?!?! No you!

https://www.mdpi.com/1424-8220/21/9/3175

 

PGZ, one of Europe's largest arms manufacturers, aims to increase its production of large-calibre shells from about 30,000 a year to between 150,000 and 180,000 annually over the next six years, per the FT.

Poland isn't the only European nation seeking to increase its production of 155mm shells. The UK's BAE Systems has said it is seeking a sixfold increase in its production this year.

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=--JmEF446fE&vl=en

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=bBM6gcQh_NU

Example of what these do on target ranges.

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=rA4mAEbNChE

Example of what a basic 155mm shell does on direct impact to an older Russian tank.

 

...and so it goes with a barrage that something loud is repeated over and over again perhaps to the consternation of some of those receiving the charge.

The reason I post this is here is that while it is difficult to judge as an outside observer how the overall war in Ukraine is going for Ukraine, what can be said confidently is that until a few months ago Ukraine didn't have a steady domestic supply of 155mm artillery (Bohdana), ammunition and European support for various artillery systms in the 155mm NATO system to the degree it does now.

What can be said that is undeniable is that Ukraine managed to keep Russia at bay without significant (especially 155mm) artillery support and ammunition, which and this is the reason I make this post, is the foundational part of the western/US military armored manuever doctrine. Both for defense and offense. Now Ukraine increasingly has this capacity which according to basic logic means this is a major shift in balance of power in the war.

In Vietnam, artillery shifted beyond its traditional role of supporting maneuver operations to instead focus on harassment missions. However, in a potential future war with the Soviet Union, a clash that would rival WWII, artillery units could not survive in static firebases. Nor could thousands of rounds be fired unobserved to produce a psychological effect on the enemy. Instead, this future conflict required three unique mission sets for indirect fire: close support, counterfire, and interdiction.

The first mission set, close support, had always been indirect fire’s fundamental role, employed in concert with maneuver forces. Close support is how artillery units directly influence the tactical fight—providing smoke, illumination, and explosive rounds in conjunction with maneuver operations or to support troops in contact. In a high-tempo fight, however, artillery is not expected to defeat the enemy; instead, it facilitates maneuver forces engaged with the enemy by obscuring tanks with smoke or separating them from the infantry with HE rounds. Additionally, the untested Copperhead and ICM had the potential to directly impact the battle by destroying or neutralizing armored vehicles.

The second mission set, counterfire, is the deliberate positioning of artillery assets to find and destroy enemy artillery pieces. Like close support, counterfire had been an indirect fire staple, as artillery is one of the best weapons to kill artillery. Although this mission did not change, planners needed to understand how it could affect the battlefield. In 1981, the Field Artillery Tactics Department explained that artillerymen had to move beyond thinking “of counterfire as an artillery duel which had little impact on the frontline.” Suppressing enemy artillery pieces would reduce a potential threat to maneuver forces, allowing maximum application of direct fire systems in the close battle against the numerically superior Soviet Union. With the destructive capacity of tanks and infantry fighting vehicles, even an individual vehicle could turn the tide of a battle.

[[note, this is why the 30 or so abrams main battle tanks given to Ukraine were such a weird "gift" not only were they lacking any modernization in terms of fire control/stabilization and more importantly survivability, the entire idea of an Abrams tank as it is designed with the intense amount of logistics needed to transport the tank and sustain it on the battlefield ASSUMES you are bringing along an absolute metric fuckton of mobile artillery to make sure when the enemy tries to attack your huge logistics chain that you can fire cannons back at them all day long and tempt them to charge your tanks head on and get obliterated... Let me emphasize something, it is FAR more difficult to get an Abrams tank ACTUALLY to the battlefield and support it than an artillery system so the first thing any general trained in western armored combined arms doctrine would ask is "Where is all the artillery!?? Are we just relying on air power?" if handed a couple of Abrams tanks and without artillery support. A single Abrams MBT with decisive artillery support can do an unbelievable amount of damage very very quickly but an Abrams MBT without artillery support is just an unbelievably heavy liability]]

The final mission set, interdiction, is how artillery units shape the battlefield by removing an enemy’s capabilities or disrupting its ability to deploy assets. The Field Artillery Tactics Department commented that “by reducing the enemy’s forward momentum and commitment flexibility, interdiction gives the friendly force commander the opportunity to maneuver.” This mission relies on upgraded indirect fire maximum ranges and artillery raids to influence enemy formations before the battle, reducing the number of vehicles an enemy can commit to an engagement. Although the MLRS extended the artillery’s most lethal round beyond thirty kilometers, continued improvements would be needed to fulfill the task of interdiction. If the maximum range did not improve, artillery units would be forced to cross into enemy territory and rely on dangerous raid operations.

...

The final challenge for artillery was mobility. The rapid changes to the operational environment generated exploitable opportunities for friendly forces relative to the enemy. As a result, mobility would be key to the employment of indirect fire; self-propelled artillery would be essential to the division’s mission. In particular, the M109 self-propelled howitzer was a very capable weapon for the Gulf War, even though it had been around since the 1960s. Corn and Lacquement explain that the M109 “proved its effectiveness in every battle with the Iraqi Army.” However, the system received mixed reviews.

The Gulf War demonstrated how fast the tactical situation on the ground could change, and artillery, even self-propelled artillery, struggled to match the speed of the maneuver forces it was assigned to support. Historian Richard Stewart comments that the US self-propelled howitzers “proved too underpowered to keep pace with mechanized and armored assaults.” Historians Frank Schubert and Theresa Kraus similarly concluded that although “the M109 155-mm. field artillery piece won praise for fire effect on targets,” its mobility was lacking. Scales acknowledged the same fault, concluding that “self-propelled cannon artillery can accompany the general pace of the advance but lack the ‘dash’ speed to conform to the close-in maneuver of modern direct fire fighting vehicles.” The Army needed to modernize its self-propelled system.

To improve mechanization, the artillery branch would need to invest in self-propelled artillery that can keep up with the armor and mechanized units it supports. Simultaneously, improvements needed to focus on increasing artillery ranges so that artillery units could provide support without staying abreast with maneuver forces. While this mobility conversation focused on self-propelled systems, it added to the overall mobility debate and raised questions about the future of towed artillery. If the 3rd Armored Division DIVARTY had used towed-artillery battalions instead of self-propelled battalions, would these units have been able to stay forward and engaged? While a four-day conflict does not provide enough information to dismiss towed artillery as a capability, it did highlight that towed equipment may not be designed to support some mission sets.

...

Desert Storm’s high operational tempo solidified the importance of mobility for the artillery: the speed of the general advance coupled with rapid changes in the tactical situation forced indirect-fire assets to quickly adapt and travel across a large battlefield. To deliver the required rapid crisis response, the Army would need to create lightweight and deployable equipment. According to field artillery historian Boyd Dastrup, military leaders believed “strategically deployable, survivable, and lethal field artillery systems would replace the heavy systems fielded during the Cold War.”

After the war, the artillery community focused on mobility improvement for all types of indirect-fire assets. For towed cannons, this meant development of lighter howitzers that could be moved via helicopter. Even the MLRS was assessed for strategic lift requirements, and the Army decided to create a wheeled rocket launcher variant—the High Mobility Army Rocket System (HIMARS)—to maintain the lethality of DPICM rockets with a platform that was easier to deploy in a crisis.

This book focuses on tactical improvements to the Army’s self-propelled artillery systems. Desert Storm provided the Army with a glimpse at what a future mechanized conflict could entail. While successful during the war, self-propelled systems needed to improve to perform more effectively in a high-tempo conflict. To accomplish this, the development followed two separate paths: modernization of an existing system and creation of a new one.

 

Flying is a blast on the Steam Deck!

The game is Operation Harsh Doorstop which has a mod called OHD Vehicle Overhaul which has four helicopters in it with very simple controls but actually pretty nice flight models. blackhawk, apache, mi8 and ka-52.

Other games that are really fun to fly in on the steam deck are the ww2 fighters in Easy Red 2, Overload a modern take on Descent and the quadcopter simulator Liftoff!. It is interesting to me how often I run into mouse and keyboard players that categorically refuse to consider using a cheap xbox controller or gamepad for vehicle control in games like this. It is like pc gamers are fixated on mouse and keyboard and the only valid competitor are super excessive simulator control inputs like driving wheels or complex flight joysticks and setups.... and yet with the onboard controls of the steam deck I am able to fly circles around mouse and keyboard players even when they have an absolutely hilarious framerate and graphics fidelity advantage on me.

https://lostpod.space/w/id9wMqsEmHSD9xQCTchQ9r

Some more acrobatic/smooth flying for fun in mi8 with nearby blackhawk, notice how easy it is to be smooth with gamepad joysticks! I believe the blackhawk crashed because I got it to try and do too intense of a flip/manuever to follow me passing underneath, either way you can see how I keep out manuevering the blackhawk even though the blackhawk in a lot of ways can outfly the mi8 I am in (though in some ways the mi8 can out power it in OHD).

https://lostpod.space/w/fYo9DBAxwWSace7X7X486t

aborted rooftop drop after ambush

 

Horse without legs tail and head

 

If someone can figure out what IA stands for, and the meaning that reflects, than we are one step closer to staving off the utter annihilation of our species from data centers hoovering up more and more electricity until climate change accelerates catastrophically.

 

We are all victims, even the dads.

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