The Jet Fighter Laser Cannon 464
fahrbot-bot sends in a Register piece about DARPA issuing the penultimate contract for what is intended to be a jet-mounted laser cannon. The Reg outdoes itself in a BOTEC involving downsizing to shark scale. "The US military will shortly issue a brace of contracts for 'refrigerator sized' laser blaster cannons. One of the deals will see a full-power ground prototype built which will be the final stage prior to America's first raygun-equipped jet fighter. ... If it scales down far enough, this would seem to put handheld HELL-guns within an order of magnitude of the striking power offered by conventional small-arms. A 9mm pistol bullet has about 750 joules muzzle energy: a 5kg portable HELL-ray weapon would put out this much energy in a blast less than a second long. ... A dolphin can carry a human being weighing up to 100kg along for a ride. A thoroughbred shark in good training can surely match this. Thus, we seem to be looking at practicable head-[laser] output in the 20-kilowatt range."
Tags (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Tags (Score:4, Funny)
I see your uid, but you get an obligatory "you must be new here". All aircraft-mounted laser weaponry stories must be tagged with "realgenius", "ihatepopcorn" or some variant thereof.
Re:Tags (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Tags (Score:5, Funny)
Hmmmm... Sharks vs. Jets... I presume this implies a "Westside Story" tag as well...
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Re:9mm? (Score:4, Informative)
Fail.
From you're own link, the bullet performance shows 702J as the highest energy output.
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You're/your before I get castrated by the grammar Nazis.
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Well, it's all irrelevant anyways, because if you want to compare damage, duration is just as important as energy. A one second laser pulse is nothing like a millisecond bullet impact. And furthermore, how the heck are you going to keep the beam on a single spot for a whole second, esp. at any sort of distance? Perhaps if you're talking stationary armor or something and you've got a tripod...
One of these cells may leave a nasty burn or blind you, but it's not going to kill you.
(Speaking of blinding: if s
Re:9mm? (Score:4, Insightful)
The fighter mounted one has 200 times the power, and I assume it is steered to target by computer. It could blind IR sensors on a jet fighter at quite a distance. Blinding the opposing pilot is also an option, since current strategy is to keep your eyes on the enemy. Just do a rapid raster scan across the target. I'd have to do a little math to figure out how long it would take to punch a hole through aircraft skin or detonate incoming ordnance.
It would be interesting to know the specs in more detail....
Re:9mm? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:9mm? (Score:5, Informative)
As for the size of the wound, that depends on how tightly you focus the beam.
There are limits to that. The divergence of the beam depends upon the size of the optics. For a man portable weapon system, I'd guess 10 cm is about the maximum optics diameter that would be useful. Assuming a wavelength of 1 micron, 10 cm gives a divergence of 1e-5 radians, so at 100 meters you could focus to a 2 cm diameter spot for an irradiance of 240 watts per square cm. At 1000 meters you're up to a 20cm spot for a fairly insignificant irradiance of 2.4 watts per square cm. If you want something useful at a kilometer, it's not going to be man portable.
Lets put that into terms every slashdotter will understand. Remember your 5 cm diameter magnifying glass and its 20cm focal length? It projected an image of the sun 1.7 mm in diameter with an irradiance of 122 watts per square centimeter, almost exactly half of our laser gun at 100 meters, and 50 times larger than our gun at 1000 meters.
So now, lets build a magnifying glass to match our laser gun. We want a 2 cm diameter spot, so we'll need a longer focal length, by the ratio of 20/1.7, which turns out to be 235 cm. We'll also need 750 watts of sunlight or 0.53 square meters of collecting area. That means a lens 82 cm in diameter. Feel free to build one and put a steak in the focus for one second. Please post your results to slashdot. I personally doubt that a second in that spot would be fatal to a human, but it would hurt a hell of a lot.
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I'd be interested in numbers on those outcomes. Did police agencies who switched from 9mm to a larger caliber have measurably better outcomes, under some relevant measure (controlling for other variables, of course), after the switch than before? Do agencies in comparable situations that use different calibers have anything measurably different about their outcomes?
Re:9mm? (Score:4, Interesting)
Mostly they did it for stupid reasons, if you really read up the informed sources on these things.
The truth is 9mm is every bit as capable across a broad range of handgun scenarios that LE are likely to face as any other reasonable semi-auto cartridge (.40, .45, .357Sig), assuming one makes the correct ammo choices (on that point I'll concede: correct ammo choices matter more in 9mm than they do in .45, but not by a huge amount). Add to that the 9mm's lower perceived recoil, faster followup shots, and larger round counts in the same physical magazine size, and the 9mm looks quite good. That's why most of the world's militaries, including the US, and all NATO and UN types, have standardized on 9mm. Operator skill and unpredictable situational factors will make far more difference than any you can find between the calibers in any case, so the whole argument is really just a religious debate.
Back to the point about the fed branches though. The FBI originally tested the 10mm Auto to replace 9mm. The 10mm Auto actually *is* arguably a superior round to everything mentioned above in terms of "incapacitate in as few shots as possible". That is, of course, if you're willing to make the tradeoffs in mag capacity, ammo/gun weight, and extreme recoil. Once they had mostly settled on 10mm Auto, they did some testing with agents, and found that many (mostly females - it's in the reports, I'm not trying to be sexist here) simply could not handle the 10mm recoil and would not use it. So S&W came up with a "10mm short", which became the .40 we know today, as a compromise package that would be "like the 10mm (at least in diameter)" but lower recoil. It's basically a 10mm Auto that's been cut down with a lot less powder behind it.
And like all irrational "compromise" solutions of that sort, it's a complete practical failure. All objective testing indicates at best it's on par with its 9mm and .45 cousins (certainly nothing like the original 10mm), and arguably you're better off with one of those two. It just takes generations for people to admit those kinds of mistakes and move past them when you've got industry giants and federal government branches involved.
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Re:9mm? (Score:5, Informative)
Expanding rounds are forbidden from being used in war by the Hague Convention of 1899 [wikipedia.org]. Full metal jacket rounds may be better at penatrating armor, but the real reason they are used is because using expanding ammunition (in war) is a war crime.
[the relevant section of the treaty] [yale.edu]
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There's a reason why even the professionals are trained to shoot CoM first.
Semi-professionals are trained to shoot two-to-three shots CoM and then to reassess the situation. Real professionals put two in the chest and one in the head.
Of course, I do agree with you that real professionals also do not use 9mm ammunition... or handguns for that matter.
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Care to share your psychological theory about why people post hateful remarks on the Internet?
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Unfortunately your father in law is misinformed. It's common for even people with a great deal of field experience to be misinformed about these things. Ask a qualified ballistics expert and you'll find the diameter of the entrance wound is a relatively small factor. Proper bullet design, and proper consideration of the correct weight to use for the platform in question, are much bigger factors. A 147gr Winchester RA-9T ("LE" ammo, but civilians can legally buy it if they find nice dealers) out of any f
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Sounds like they needed to blame something.. then change something to make it look like they're actually making things better.
Re:9mm? (Score:5, Funny)
Really? Compare the USP and the Glock pistols in Counter-Strike - which one does more damage?
Re:9mm? (Score:5, Funny)
the knife:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cudCajMNRM0&feature=player_embedded [youtube.com]
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Those people are not up to date. The .50 Action Express (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/.50_AE [wikipedia.org]) is a much better gun-penis ;-)
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If you feel you're going to need a .50 cal, then grow up
there, fixed it for you. 9mm is my caliber of choice. Where it hits is more important than how big it is, and with 9mm you get a LOT more practice.
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and with 9mm you get a LOT more practice.
If that's your metric then the .22LR is the best self-defense round.
Its not the only metric, but it is a big one. I'd rather have my 9 that I get to put a couple hundred rounds in a month than a 45 that i can fire about half as much. Even a 22 can be deadly if placed well by someone with enough skill/luck. Accuracy and capacity both go down with increasing caliber so there has to be a balance though. I'm much more comfortable with 10+1 of 9mm than I would be with 6+1 of .45 (I know you can get more than that, but mine is a subcompact)
With good JHP ammo, 9 is plenty on an
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Re:9mm? (Score:4, Interesting)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saiga-12 [wikipedia.org]
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-jPI5j3jjqo&feature=player_embedded [youtube.com]
Even with a 10 shell box magazine, load that with slugs. Assuming you're military with authorization to do so, get one with a short barrel, maybe an assault grip, and you'd have a helluva semi-auto hand-cannon or super high caliber smg...
As to so many people yelping about the Desert Eagle, it has the potential to *occasionally* look kinda cool, but if you're really needing a high caliber pistol, you'd be going with a revolver anyway. A revolver basically can't jam, and can use much higher and uncommon rounds that any other handgun design would not be able to handle the stresses of firing.
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9mm is obviously better because it's Metric.
The Future (Score:5, Funny)
When I read the summary I wondered if they'd be putting one of those on flying robot drones and then I realized that yes, it's 2009 and we live in the fucking future.
Re:The Future (Score:4, Informative)
Give credit [xkcd.com] where credit is due.
We live in a world where there are actual fleets of robot assassins patrolling the skies. At some point there, we left the present and entered the future."
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That line bears only the most vague resemblance to his post. This is not the patent system. Credit is not due just because someone else came up with a similar idea before you.
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Something went wrong with the future.
We crossed into a time-line where there are no flying cars. Who's going to go back in time and fix this?
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Flying cars had (and have) two basic flaws that prevent their implementation:
a) Controlling a vehicle in three dimensions takes more skill than the average person has. Remember the last idiot you saw on the road? Which would have been today if you've driven today, by the way. Now imagine him *flying*.
b) a vehicle that generally operates with the ground 500 or 1000 feet below it needs better reliability than can be obtained with the way the average car is maintained. Doubly so when you remember you not o
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Basically we can boil your argument down to "people are too fucking cheap and stupid".
I totally agree. If it were not for concerns about government totalitarianism I would wholly support a 100% public transportation system in which only licensed, heavily regulated, and *REGULARLY TESTED* operators could use any transportation equipment in a public space.
The average person just does not have the responsibility and skill to be operating motor vehicles next to other average people. The real problem is that y
Effect on humans? (Score:3, Interesting)
I've never heard an analysis of effects on humans. Bullets are good a disrupting tissue, often causing death. A laser might deliver a cauterized burn, or blindness if in the right spot.
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Blinding weapons are a violation of the Geneva Conventions (Protocol IV, if I recall correctly - and no, the USA isn't a signatory to Protocol IV last I looked).
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Blinding weapons are a violation of the Geneva Conventions (Protocol IV, if I recall correctly - and no, the USA isn't a signatory to Protocol IV last I looked).
Weapons designed to blind are a violation. Weapons that may inadvertently cause blindness are acceptable. Just about every weapon we have can cause blindness. I suspect this weapon will be designed to burn a hole into their head rather then blind.
But Law of War also says you limit collateral damage. Will diffuse reflections from these lasers cause collateral blindness. When dealing with highpower lasers in a dynamic environment, there's really no predicting where reflections might end up.
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Blinding weapons are a violation of the Geneva Conventions (Protocol IV, if I recall correctly - and no, the USA isn't a signatory to Protocol IV last I looked).
And?
Weapons designed for the purpose of blinding people would violate the convention. Weapons designed to kill people which may, on occasion, blind someone, are perfectly legal. Soldiers get blinded by bullet fragments and shrapnel too, you know.
Re:Effect on humans? (Score:5, Interesting)
The fluorescence/phosphorescence was the most interesting thing to me. They're the same effect but different phenomena: you hit something really hard with a bunch of UV, and the surface -- the stuff that didn't get ablated -- is now covered in molecules with electrons blown up into higher orbitals. The ones that fall down immediately (within nanoseconds) are what produce fluorescence. The ones that have absorbed enough energy that they're in an orbital/spin combination that won't allow them to directly drop down to their original orbital, take a long time before they can do something like electron tunnelling to return to their orbital -- where by 'long time' I mean from a millisecond up to maybe six hours. So that's where you get actual glow-in-the-dark. I could put a notecard up in the beam and trigger a shot, and there'd be a nice yellow glow off the piece of paper for maybe half a second, and then the paper itself would be a moderate brown color. Next shot and it'd be gone. The individual shots were on the order of a microsecond long.
Interesting factoid that I wish I didn't know: fluorine gas smells somewhat like Elmer's Glue. Deep UV lasers often use fluorine as an excimer and when you have to replace the cavity mirrors, no matter how many times you purge it with argon, there's still some fluorine in there when you finally open it up. Gack *cough*.
Mirrors (Score:3, Funny)
Time to get into the mirror business! It's a lot easier to deflect protons than bullets, I'll tell you that.
Re:Mirrors (Score:4, Informative)
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It's a lot easier to deflect protons than bullets
Umm...
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Cheers
Re:Mirrors (Score:5, Funny)
How can you guys deflect protons when you're being so negative?
Acronym of an acronym? (Score:2)
"LASER" = Light Amplification by Stimulated Emission of Radiation. It strikes me as wrong to use the first letter of an acronym as the last letter of another acronym.
It should be HELLASER = High Energy Liquid Light Amplification by Stimulated Emision of Radiation.
Re:Acronym of an acronym? (Score:5, Funny)
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It could be worse. It could stand for the HELL Energetic Liquid Laser.
Also, I'm wondering when the military brainchidren are going to develop the GREATSATAN weapon. Surely this too will help improve our image among people who already think we're controlled by the devil.
Legal Mambo-Jumbo (Score:2)
...a brace of contracts...
I get lost with all the legal verbiage.
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over one second? (Score:4, Interesting)
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It might depend a bit on your objectives. If you want to spread terror by setting fire to (say) Baghdad then cruising around the sky with a laser might be more efficient than dropping bombs all over the place.
Re:over one second? (Score:4, Insightful)
But you can keep a laser focused on something a lot easier. Light moves a whole lot faster than a supersonic missile. If you think of it as a "photon machine gun," it's a lot easier to keep the "bullets" hitting the target when your bullets fire rather rapidly and can move at the speed of light. One second of laser-shining-on-a-moving-object can't be TOO hard.
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tho especially considering the criticality of weight, it's a lot easier to coat a missile with chrome than armor plating.
One would assume that all ICBMs around the world are either already chromed or can be retrofitted very easily should the laser tech become more mainstream.
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In any case, these lasers just have to replace some roles for more expendable munitions, assuming firing the laser is significantly cheaper than dropping a bomb or firing a smart missile.
Obligatory (Score:2, Funny)
Val Kilmer seen running around MIT hollering with joy.
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"Pacific Tech" from Real Genius was modelled on (very closely, in many areas) Caltech, not MIT.
Recoil (Score:2)
Does firing a laser bring recoil opposite the laser's direction with the energy equal to that in the laser, the way firing a bullet does?
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Does firing a laser bring recoil opposite the laser's direction with the energy equal to that in the laser, the way firing a bullet does?
Yes, but not enough to notice. In theory a laser can be used as a rocket drive, as can my LED torch. Just not a very good rocket.
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If the recoil has the energy of the projected laser but in the opposite direction, the way a bullet gun's recoil does, how is it not enough to notice? The lasers in this article, including the hypothesized portable version, pack quite a wallop.
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If the recoil has the energy of the projected laser but in the opposite direction, the way a bullet gun's recoil does, how is it not enough to notice? The lasers in this article, including the hypothesized portable version, pack quite a wallop.
The recoil has the momentum of the projected laser. Photons, like atoms, have mass-energy which, along with velocity determines momentum. But a lot of energy gives very little mass. So photons have a lot of velocity (C) and hardly any mass, so they have hardly any momentum for a lot of energy.
The atoms in normal rocket exhaust have less velocity but heaps more mass-energy, most of which is just dead weight.
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Right - momentum is equal in trajectory and recoil, not energy. There's not a lot of momentum in even a high powered laser beam compared to the inertia of the laser machine firing it, absorbing the recoil.
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Should be simple
e=m*c^2
m=c^2/e
momentum = mass * velocity
=v*c^2/e
Or maybe thats naive.
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Moving Mass (Score:2)
Think about how a gun works - you are accelerating a substantial mass (bullet). With a laser, you are accelerating photons which have almost no mass, so even though the same amount of energy is involved you have far less recoil.
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Does firing a laser bring recoil opposite the laser's direction with the energy equal to that in the laser, the way firing a bullet does?
Most of the energy of a laser is in the heat, and very little in the mass of the photons being fired. Bullets work the other way, their energy is almost all in the mass, and very little in their heat.
So lasers have almost zero recoil.
That being said, the kinetic (mass) energy of a bullet is basically converted to heat when it hits, and it can be considered to burn/melt th
Wake me ... (Score:2)
Wake me when they make a {voice=Arnold}"phased plasma rifle in the 40 watt range" {/voice}
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I think we are way beyond 40 watts now.
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The idea is to have a weapon with LOW power requirements
Does not exist. Most (non-tactical) weapons are designed to do a maximum amount of disruption to the enemy, that means doing "work". Hence the majority of weapons deliver the most energy they practically can on target, in a way that's destructive.
When you say "power" I think you mean to say "energy". And there's a lot of kinetic energy in say, a bullet. In the case of the lasers, it's in the temps created by the photons. Either way you are sending
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40 watt? So basically, you want a flashlight.
Is a comparison to bullets apt? (Score:2)
It seems to me that 750 joules of kinetic energy in a bullet would do a lot more damage to a target than 750 joules of electromagnetic energy. A laser can only burn through tissue, and that'll always take longer than a metal slug takes to penetrate, given the same amount of energy, right?
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no.
It depends on the lengths of time the 750 is delivered
"A laser can only burn through tissue,"
I don't know why you think that, for 400 bucks you can buy a LASER that cuts metal.
Re:Is a comparison to bullets apt? (Score:4, Informative)
Yes and no. The amount of energy isn't a terrible base line of comparison if you are doing "apples to apples". There are really 3 factors involved; the energy, how rapidly and efficiently the energy is transferred to the target and over how much area. Sunlight is a pretty good way of illustrating this. In full sunlight you can assume that 1 square foot (30cm x 30cm) receives about 100 watts of energy. Since 1 Joule is 1 watt per second that means that in about 7.5 seconds an area roughly the size of your chest would receive about as much energy as a 9mm bullet.
Obviously this has practically no effect on you. However take a magnifying glass a bit over 1 foot across (32 cm) and focus all of the energy into a spot a little under 1/3 of an inch (9 mm) across and all of a sudden you're causing some serious skin trauma. Likewise if the sun were suddenly 7.5 times brighter you would start to peel and blister in a hurry. Combine all the light of 7.5 seconds into a circle 1/3 of an inch across and apply it all in 1/100th of a second and you'll inflict some real damage.
Unfortunately the laser in their example delivers all its energy about 100 times slower than that. There's also a question of how big the target spot is and of course the fact that just the color of the target can cause a substantial amount of the energy to be reflected (substantial in this case being perhaps a few hundred Joules). So while the total amount of energy isn't a terrible way to compare them that does assume that the beam is focused relatively tightly (probably a safe assumption) and delivers the energy as a sudden single shot (which it clearly doesn't). As it is the comparison is less "apples to apples" and more "apples to orangutans".
Kent... Wake up Kent. (Score:2, Funny)
All you'd need is a large spinning mirror and you could vaporize a human target from space. Better go make sure someone didn't steal Kents tracking system.
Plus sharks with FRICKIN LAZER BEAMS attached to their heads?
I like the first movie better.
Energy T Y P E matters -- HOT water (Score:2)
Darpa’s ‘Liquid Laser’ Gunship (Score:2)
That's great, but... (Score:2)
From TFA:
If it scales down far enough, this would seem to put handheld HELL-guns within an order of magnitude of the striking power offered by conventional small-arms. A 9mm pistol bullet has about 750 joules muzzle energy: a 5kg portable HELL-ray weapon would put out this much energy in a blast less than a second long.
Since 9mm guns tend to be pistols they weigh a lot less than 5kg (11 lbs.). Most semi-automatic pistols are also capable of accurately firing 3-4 rounds per second and as has already been men
Laser blasters are the weapons of barbarians. (Score:5, Funny)
How did we get sharks to fly at jet speeds? with a (Score:2)
How did we get sharks to fly at jet speeds? with a laser on them?
That does it! This is insane! (Score:3)
A dolphin with a laser taped to its head, nailed to an airplane?!!
THIS IS MADNESS!
...and so does "final stage prior to..." (Score:5, Informative)
Which is exactly the sense in which it is used here, as is indicated by the language from TFA quoted in TFS: "the final stage prior to America's first raygun-equipped jet fighter."
So, in the series in which the last (or "ultimate") stage is the contract for a laser-armed jet fighter, the contract for the ground-based prototype is the second to last (or "penultimate") stage.
So, great job of knowing what "penultimate" means, but next time work on reading and understanding the post in which it is used before accusing someone of using it wrong.
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... where "ultimate" means "last". If you assume "last = best" (and thus "ultimate" = "awesome", as is common) then "penultimate" is "the next best thing". None too shabby, especially in situations where "ultimate" is assumed to be unachievable. (Example: assume there is a concept of an "ultimate weapon", which no weapon can match. That concept is itself unachievable. The penultimate weapon, then, is the next-best-thing, the most awesome weapon that actually exists; it will lose its standing as the penultim
Re:Penultimate means "second from last" (Score:5, Funny)
Michelangelo: I've got it! I've got it! We'll call it "The Last But One Supper"!
Pope: What?
Michelangelo: Well there must have been one, if there was a last supper there must have been a one before that, so this, is the "Penultimate Supper"! The Bible doesn't say how many people were there now, does it?
Pope: No, but...
Michelangelo: Well there you are, then!
Pope: Look! The last supper is a significant event in the life of our Lord, the penultimate supper was not! Even if they had a conjurer and a mariachi band. Now, a last supper I commissioned from you, and a last supper I want! With twelve disciples and one Christ!
Michelangelo: One?!
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On slashdot, you're allowed to take a word, find a longer word that sounds a bit like at and assume it's just a cleverer synonym of the original word. If anyone calls you on it, you just whine about languages evolving.
I'd expect an illuminary like you to know that.
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Sounds perfectly cromulent to me.
Re:why is this word never used correctly? (Score:5, Informative)
One of the deals will see a full-power ground prototype built which will be the final stage prior to America's first raygun-equipped jet fighter.
This prototype is second to last(penultimate) contract in this project. The last one (or ultimate) will be for the actual jet. The use is valid.
It is used correctly (Score:2, Redundant)
[At risk of being modded redundant (but since none of the three posts I've seen making the same criticism of TFS have been yet, maybe not)]
This is exactly the sense in which it is used here, as is indicated by the language from TFA quoted in TFS: "the final stage prior to America's first raygun-equipped jet fighter."
So, in the series in which the last (or "ultimate") stage is the contract for a laser-armed jet fighter, the contract for the g
Re:why is this word never used correctly? (Score:5, Funny)
It begs the question of why people use big sounding words and phrases they obviously don't understand. It literally makes my head explode.
Re:why is this word never used correctly? (Score:4, Funny)
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No, the "ultimate" contract "for what is intended to be a jet-mounted laser cannon" would be the contract for a jet-mounted laser cannon. The contract described here as "penultimate" is for "a full-power ground prototype" intended as to "be the final stage prior to America's first raygun-equipped jet fighter" and which is, therfore, correctly described by TFS as being "the penultimate contract for what is itended to be a jet-mounted laser cannon".
There is lots o
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Not only Godwinned but also... Satan? Surely there's a law for that too...
Even though this read mostly like a paranoid rant, it contains just enough grains of truth to be uncomfortable. It IS corporate welfare for Boeing and Raytheon, America DOES fund its own enemies, and the deaths of American soldiers DO enrich military contractors.
The only reason the last paragraph remains a paranoid rant is because I'm worth more to Goldman Sachs as a LIVE victim, rather than a dead one. My taxes justify their bailo