The War Of The Virtual Worlds 366
man_ls writes "The University of Southern California Information Sciences Institute is working with the U.S. Joint Forces Command to harness supercomputer power, to simulate a virtual continent for use in urban battlefield situations. The simulation, set in the year 2015, involves 100,000 entities to simulate, although the system can support more than a million."
What about the weapons? (Score:5, Funny)
I'm wondering... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:I'm wondering... (Score:2)
So there is a market (Score:2, Insightful)
Bush Mode (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Bush Mode (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Bush Mode (Score:2)
Remember.. (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Remember.. (Score:2, Funny)
As Martin Luther King Jr. Once said: (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:As Martin Luther King Jr. Once said: (Score:2)
Unless, of course, you consider his assassin a man of good will.
Qui desiderat pacem, praeparet bellum (Score:5, Insightful)
-- Vegetius
Re:As Martin Luther King Jr. Once said: (Score:2, Insightful)
quite the opposite, I think. If we learn not history, well then are we not doomed to repeat it?
Ignorance is far from bliss - whomever came up with that saying was ignorant to the joy of knowledge, methinks.
Re:As Martin Luther King Jr. Once said: (Score:2)
We learn from history than we can never learn anything from history.
Re:As Martin Luther King Jr. Once said: (Score:2)
And those of us who do learn are doomed to know it's repeating. C'est la vie, I suppose.
Re:As Martin Luther King Jr. Once said: (Score:2)
Re:As Martin Luther King Jr. Once said: (Score:2)
Too many are living in past assumptions about war.
Re:As Martin Luther King Jr. Once said: (Score:3, Interesting)
Here's another quote for you:
"If someone has a gun and is trying to kill you, it would be reasonable to shoot back with your own gun."
-- The Dalai Lama
Very true (Score:5, Insightful)
The unfortunate problem is that even if some are ready to give up the study of and preparation for war, others are not. I might be able to convince another American that it's a good idea, and I might even be able to convince a German or a Finn. But as an American how could I convince a Chetchen, or an Iranian, or a North Korean? Would their own leaders even want to convince them of the rightness of disarming? Leaders of "good will" have always been few and far between.
How can we all stop preparing for war? That is the challenge, but so far I've not encountered any plan that seems even remotely practical, given the cultural, ethnic, and religious schisms that divide people across the globe.
Re:Very true (Score:2)
And just as the leaders of the so called "evil countries" are (arguiably) evil, you will have to admit that your own king is also (arguiably) evil.
Bottom line? We're all the same: the idividual wants piece, but give him power
Re:Very true (Score:3, Insightful)
My point was that for a wide variety of reasons it is difficult for the message of peace to pass through these religious and cultural walls. It becomes doubly difficult
Re:Very true (Score:2)
A. Chechen
The problem with preparing for war (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Very true (Score:3, Insightful)
But that sort of underlines my point. It's difficult to even get Americans to understand that bombing the crap out of people isn't always the smartest way to make the world a safer place. It's that difficult for me to convince the guy sitting next to me that invading Iraq wasn'
Re:Very true (Score:5, Insightful)
I spent my high school years as a Gringo in Peru. While I was there two of my Peruvian friends were killed by terrorists from Sendero Luminoso because they looked like the might be Americans. So excuse me if I have a strong opinion about this subject.
One of the things that I saw while I lived in Peru was that most Peruvians (as individuals) were as nice a people as you might want to meet. Most of the anti-American sentiment that existed in Peru, and there was a *lot* of it, was the direct result of manipulation by various Peruvian political leaders. Peru is a fairly screwed up country, and the political leaders there spend most of their time blaming their problems on the Devils in the United States. Now, I am not going to say that the U.S. hasn't forwarded some pretty bad South American foreign policies over the years, but Peru's major problems stem from rampant corruption of their own political system and not from any policy that the U.S. might have adopted. About the worst thing that U.S. has done in recent years is loan Peru money so that its corrupt leaders could waste it on gewgaws or leave the country with it. Despite the fact that Peru's problems are almost entirely of Peruvian manufacture the United States is every Peruvian politician's favorite scapegoat, and the Peruvian population is uneducated enough that they buy these lies wholesale.
As an example, at one point the government-sponsored TV station ran a totally bogus news story about a string of child abductions in which it was alleged that an American was running around Lima abducting children and stealing their corneas for sale in the U.S. I remember seeing one of these broadcasts on the news and the main graphic featured a silohuette with a question mark on its face backed by a U.S. flag (how they knew it was an American that was stealing the eyes was never told).
Months later one of the independent newspapers ran a story exposing the "Gringo saca ojos" story as a complete fraud, but by then the damage had been done. Heck, my father's SUV was actually attacked by a mob in downtown Lima, and the only thing that saved him was A) he spoke Spanish, and B) he had two of my little sisters in the SUV with him. He was finally able to calm the crowd down by pointing out that he was a father as well, and that he had his two little girls in the car with him. As it was quite a bit of damage was done to the car, and the incident scared the heck out of my entire family.
So what's the point to all this? The point is that it doesn't matter that the people in a country are sane if the people in power in their country are not sane. Most people believe what they are told, even cynical and well-educated people like the average American. If Peruvians are told by the government that America is responsible for their problems, then a lot of them are going to believe it. On a similar note if Moslems around the world are told that America is "the great Satan" by their religious leaders then no amount of positive PR is likely to make the average Moslem disbelieve that. America is a big target, and we make more than our share of mistakes, but much of the hatred for America is nothing more than shrewd political maneuvering. America is the enemy that all sorts of political leaders use to rally the uneducated and ill-informed into their causes.
My grandfather was an missionary for the LDS church (the Mormons) right before WWII. He barely escaped Germany with his life. A few years later he was back in Europe with a U.S. bomber squadron blasting the life out of people that just a few years earlier he had been teaching about Jesus Christ. My Grandfather loved the German people, but for whatever reason they let themselves get put into a position where the folks running the country were insane and dangerous, and so for the sake of the rest of the world he volunteered to blast Germans to bits, many of them complete innocents. Since the German people were unwilling to remove the threat that Hitler represented by themselves, my g
Re:Very true: Talk about Chechen? (Score:2)
My point was simply that people in very different circumstances, with very different history and religion and societies have a difficult time even talking about peace.
The experience of
Re:Very true (Score:2)
Re:As Martin Luther King Jr. Once said: (Score:2)
Re:As Martin Luther King Jr. Once said: (Score:2)
Re:As Martin Luther King Jr. Once said: (Score:3, Insightful)
The very obvious consequence of this would be that all people of good will will get the shit kicked out of them by people of ill will who do not seem to have a problem studying war.
Re:As Martin Luther King Jr. Once said: (Score:2)
I find it amusing that universities will quickly turn down funding from cigarette companies because it is dirty money while military funding is fair game.
Oh, and by the way...we've done alot of the
And as Mr. Miyagi once said: (Score:5, Insightful)
Daniel : Hey - you ever get into fights when you were a kid?
Miyagi : Huh - plenty.
Daniel : Yeah, but it wasn't like the problem I have, right?
Miyagi : Why? Fighting fighting. Same same.
Daniel : Yeah, but you knew karate.
Miyagi : Someone always know more.
Daniel : You mean there were times when you were scared to fight?
Miyagi : Always scare. Miyagi hate fighting.
Daniel : Yeah, but you like karate.
Miyagi : So?
Daniel : So, karate's fighting. You train to fight.
Miyagi : That what you think?
Daniel : [pondering] No.
Miyagi : Then why train?
Daniel : [thinks] So I won't have to fight.
Miyagi : [laughs] Miyagi have hope for you.
Re:As Martin Luther King Jr. Once said: (Score:3, Interesting)
- Dark Helmet, Spaceballs
I wish it were possible to not study war. Of course I would prefer it if everyone went about his business (his because it's usually the male population) without feeling the need to dominate other people or extract money from them or capture them as human slaves. As one of the militia leaders said in Black Hawk Down, "there will always be killing. This is how things are in _our_ world." The main benefit of having a highly trained
Re:Or as the good book said: (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Or as the good book said: (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Or as the good book said: (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Or as the good book said: (Score:5, Informative)
That's hilarious. You clearly need to re-read the Old Testament. On several ocassions the Lord commanded the Israelites to destroy every man woman and child in a city. On at least one ocassion (I'm not a Biblical scholar) Saul was even commanded to kill all of the animals in a city. Saul got in trouble because he decided that instead of destroying perfectly good animals that he would use them as sacrifices.
Perhaps you should have quoted the New Testament.
Re:Or as the good book said: (Score:2)
Re:Or as the good book said: (Score:2)
Ted Tschopp
Re:Or as the good book said: (Score:2)
A passage cited by every pacifist, or by any person against a particular war (when it suits him). That no exceptions were given in that commandment implies a false dichotomy of "kill and go to hell" or "don't kill and not go to hell." I disagree. The "murder" translation of that commandment is probably a better one, else how could God endorse a war by the Israelites in self-defense?
wargames? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:wargames? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:wargames? (Score:2)
The computers simulated the attacks and calculated the casualties. When you number was called up you headed over to the handy dandy vaporization chamber. Of course the girl Kirk is hot for gets her number called up and well lets just say there is a great speech about how war is meant to be ugly and brutal. The sanitized, computer controlled war was indefinate with no end in sight.
Re:wargames? (Score:3, Funny)
This is Slashdot - you used to be able to assume everyone would have seen Wargames. I don't know whether this is a dilution of the geek quotient here, or a sign that the Slashdot audience is now made up of 15 year olds, but I fear for Slashdot's future.*
Jedidiah
* Not really, Slashdot went to hell a long time ago, but it still provides amus
Re:wargames? (Score:2)
Re:wargames? (Score:2)
That's nothing (Score:4, Funny)
Re:That's nothing (Score:2)
Re:That's nothing (Score:2)
Computer? Big deal. I can personally handle millions of bodies now.
Disclaimer: Number of bodies handled may be subject to restraining order limitations.
The hard part (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:The hard part (Score:2, Funny)
wow (Score:5, Funny)
That's one big fucking city.
Re:wow (Score:2, Funny)
You can also find... (Score:5, Informative)
It's the smell! (Score:5, Funny)
And in the future (Score:3, Funny)
SELECT w.GPSCoordinates
FROM Weapons w
WHERE w.DestructionType = 'Mass'
AND w.Owner 'United States'
a more telling output (Score:2, Troll)
$ mail president@whitehouse.gov -s "You're full of shit"
You lied to the American public and th
Harsh Realm (Score:5, Interesting)
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0182587/ [imdb.com]
Reminds me of "A Taste of Armageddon" (Score:2, Funny)
Now where are the casaulty units?
Re:Reminds me of "A Taste of Armageddon" (Score:2)
Re:Reminds me of "A Taste of Armageddon" (Score:2)
Interestingly enough, "Armageddon" comes from "Har-Meggido", meaning roughly "tastes kind of like chicken".
Tax dollar at work (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Tax dollar at work (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Tax dollar at work (Score:2)
In the context of this game, collision detection is not needed, as it is simulating larger scale stratagy.
More specific scenario needed (Score:5, Funny)
And maybe a scoring system where if you have to keep troops there to support the government against its people indefinitely, you get no points, if the puppet government turns into a repressive dictatorship, you get one point, if the people overthrow the government and replace it with a fundamentalist theocracy, you get 2 points, and if you're right in the middle of a big urban street battle with the bad guys and you get a message that says "your capital was just nuked by a country you've been paying no attention to at all", you lose.
No, actually, that'd suck. Nevermind.
2015 ? (Score:2)
wanna make it really cool? (Score:2, Interesting)
Of course, the thing is that this just becomes a big computer game rather than a military tra
Re:wanna make it really cool? (Score:3, Insightful)
I always wondered. (Score:3, Interesting)
some of the tactics I hear about in IRAQ I know I have used in counterstrike years ago.
the FPS gamer is one of the greatest resources of tactical study.. add in a prize for a team that can push out the blue team from the fortress and you just trained your soldiers in the blue team in real combat technique.
Re:I always wondered. (Score:2)
Re:I always wondered. (Score:2)
Seriously, you're mostly right. A week of playing counterstrike teaches you what works(mostly), and what doesn't (always) work. It teaches you to think where the enemy might be, rather where you last saw him, and to be aware of cover, escape routes, sight lines, etc.
Needs some work... (Score:2)
Hmmm. On this picture [isi.edu] there are several cars that have seriously run into each other, and at least one that swerved off the side of the road...
I hear... (Score:2)
100k? (Score:4, Interesting)
Seriously though, this is good for gamers, because this technology will inevitably end up in our games. Planetside tried to make a FPS with that many players, and while their cone of fire killed it (among other things), I definitely see FPSs going in that direction in the future, especially with the increasing availability of broadband.
I've always wanted to have large historic battles, but since the numbers of soldiers were so large back then, it wasn't really feasible for a FPS, but now perhaps they could do it after all. Can you say Battle of Helms Deep with every character being a real person?
Re:100k? (Score:2)
It's still not feasible for an FPS primarily because not many people are interested in playing as peon #27419 who gets to stand in one place for an hour or so and then gets killed by a canon shot/cavalry charge/etc.
But for an RTS this works well. Check out the TotalWar series of games, especially the latest Rome: Tota
Re:100k? (Score:2)
I can see it now:
G1mli: I roxxor dude!! 27!
L3g0las: You teh suxxor!! 29!!!!
Gimlet: 38 over here!
Legolamb: Ph3ar me, 40!!
etc etc
A bit too late? (Score:4, Funny)
Don't ya think they got this running about a year too late? Might have been helpful in this other thing going on in the meat world.
I'm not sure (Score:2)
Then again I can't imagine bush holding on to power for that long.
Mod +1 for paranoid
How about (Score:3, Funny)
Still no cure for cancer (Score:5, Insightful)
Heaven forbid we stop riling up the Muslim world, leave them in peace, and instead concentrate on curing diseases that kill thousands.
3000 Americans died in WTC 911. But every day 5000 Americans die, many of cancer and heart disease...
Lunacy....
Re:Still no cure for cancer (Score:2)
That's what this war is all about. Laying the groundwork for the return or jesus. God has chosen G.W Bush as his instrument in facilitating the return of jesus.
Re:Still no cure for cancer (Score:2)
Certain members of the Muslim world are riled up because we allow women to drive cars.
3000 Americans died in WTC 911. But every day 5000 Americans die, many of cancer and heart disease...
Everybody dies eventually. (Although I support anti-aging research to possibly correct that). There's a huge difference between dying of natural causes and being randomly blown up by lunatics. A nuclear bomb detonated in a major city could kill a million or so directly,
Re:Still no cure for cancer (Score:2)
Our obsession with military and military technology may be a bit scary, but it's not an either/or for curing cancer or anything else for that matter. Cancer research has a LOT of funding, and very little success to show for it.
Distributed? (Score:2)
Software and IT, come and get it. (Score:2)
This is a bad idea. (Score:2, Interesting)
New acronym... (Score:2)
MMMRPG: Massive Multiplayer Mainframe Role Playing Game.
Perhaps thats the noise the simulated people make when you frag them...
MMMRPG! (thud)
Public Policy Simulator Needed (Score:3, Insightful)
I don't think the issue is that the U.S. Military is losing wars, or is somehow not prepared tactically/strategically speaking (though funding and morale may be an issue). I mean, the initial stages of the conflict in Iraq were a military success. Similarly, Afghanistan was a successful military action. This simulator will not address the political/economic/ethnic/religious realities that have to be addressed after the fighting stops.
So, if this helps plan for urban combat, and potentially reduce military and civilian casualties, it's a great thing. But, ultimately, the U.S. has no trouble winning wars.....if I may borrow a cliched phrase, the problem is winning the peace.
For an interesting analysis on the logistics of 'nation building', please see this recently completed report. [rand.org]
Simulate some integrity (Score:2)
With the 2 mainstream presidential candidates fighting over who is tougher on terrorism and how many more soldiers to deploy, it's little wonder ther rest of the world is becoming increasingly alarmed and anti-American.
If the money the US spent on so-called 'defense' were put towards addressing some of the gross injustices ( 3rd world debt, Palestine, multinationals 'acquiring' the world's resources at the expense of practically everyone ), there
Hmmm... (Score:2)
Re:Uh oh (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Uh oh (Score:2)
Here's some statistics from wikipedia....
The United States military budget is larger than the military budgets of the next twenty biggest spenders combined, and six times larger than Russia's, which places second. The United States and its close allies are responsible for approximately two-thirds of all military spending on Earth (of which, in turn, the U.S. is responsible for two-thirds), dollar for dollar.
Re:Uh oh (Score:2)
"prepare"? They're not preparing for anything, they're warmonging. That's a case of war creation more than anything else...
Re:Power of Supercomputing (Score:2)
Your post is well written but wrong. Broad generalizations are a sure sign of ignorance.
Re:Power of Supercomputing (Score:2)
There is irony in this somewhere. Not that I disagree, but the irony is painfully obvious in statements like that.
All general statements are false, including this one.
Re:Power of Supercomputing (Score:2)
Re:Power of Supercomputing (Score:2)
Re:Power of Supercomputing (Score:2)
You really got your ideals from a cheesy sci-fi novel with a message to push?
I guess some people really dig the idea of perpetual (and literal) "class warfare", and endorse the idea of forcible brain-washing for everyone. Sheesh.
Re:You do know that the US lost the war gaming (Score:2, Informative)
That's not true at all, but it is based on a real incident. In the Iraq war game, the Iraq side managed to sink the US aircraft carriers.
They did this by driving up in small boats filled with dynamite. In real life, there would be sailors on deck to shoot those attackers. In the wargame, they didn't use
Re:Any other ideas besides war?!? (Score:3, Insightful)
Just because our military ensures it is well-trained does NOT mean our country is focused on war. The purpose of our military is to protect US (assuming you are an American citizen). Would you want an untrained police force fighting crime? An untrained fire department fighting fires? An untrained surgeon opera