By that logic, if a doll kills a human, it's not murder. It's an industrial accident.
Correct. And that machine will be taken offline to analyze what exactly went wrong. This isnt a military grade t-doll, the 3 laws should be obeyed.By that logic, if a doll kills a human, it's not murder. It's an industrial accident.
yep, by a very complex and unpredictable pice of equipment that just proved its safety protocols are not working, so it should be shut down or destroyed, and the remains studied to ensure that such a thing does not repeat.
"By that logic, if aCorrect. And that machine will be taken offline to analyze what exactly went wrong. This isnt a military grade t-doll, the 3 laws should be obeyed.
Still correct. The only diffrence is the ring leader would be taken apart to understand why it no longer follows orders."By that logic, if adollringleader kills a human, it's not murder. It's an industrial accident." Better?
"By that logic, if adollringleader kills a human, it's not murder. It's an industrial accident." Better?
Does that mean that if we added nanoscopic saw theeth to our kitchen knife it would cut better?Hmm, all methods I know are about material removal. If you want a tool to cut steel, you have to make space for it. Where knives rely on pushing material to the sides, angle grinders scrape it off, making space for the cut-off wheel to do its work. Same goes for hacksaws."
Anyway, this request is pretty straight-forward. You find a recent picture of your client and her weapons.
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They're also complicated, fragile, and really not compatible with sword techniques. Most swords don't try to throw you into or away from the object your slicing. Chainsaws do.I mean, why can't we make a chainsword? Chainswords are cool. Surely it wouldn't encounter any grater energy requirements than an E-sword
They're also complicated, fragile, and really not compatible with sword techniques. Most swords don't try to throw you into or away from the object your slicing. Chainsaws do.
Again, solvable problem. But lightsabers are right there and proven to work.
She's not going to remember anything 'cause no backups during the mission. As far as she's concerned, her team might have been wiped out before even reaching the workshop.its going to be an akward conversation if we end up working alongside her. I mean i'm assuming that we intend to hire some or all of the G&K dolls if we manage our grand plan of stealing their job.
I like this refreshing spin! It's the question I'll have to face pretty soon too as we're getting closer to the end.By that logic, if a doll kills a human, it's not murder. It's an industrial accident.
Who?
The only problem is sawing kinda takes time and a number of strokes. Imagine using a hand saw in combat.Handsaws aren't mechanicaly more complex than knives and can cut through any thickness of material.
Who said plasma? Who said inserts?Also plasma blades still can't cut through tank armor because of the ceramic inserts.
That's why she wants better blades?Alchemist's blades are thick enough to fit a gun in the middle. Looking at the image provided (specifically, the weapon in her left hand, on our right), the blades are visibly centimeters thick only halfway up their length. Alchemist should should be getting her blades stuck in everything already!
I feel you. Me, I was devastated.
She is strong enough to dismantle infantry, but to attempt a cut through armored steel she'd need to swing so fast the blade would break the sound barrier, which might be still beyond her.I figured this was either an already-solved problem, or Alchemist was just that hella strong.
We can, though Imperium fighting style is not what Alchemist excels at.I mean, why can't we make a chainsword? Chainswords are cool. Surely it wouldn't encounter any grater energy requirements than an E-sword
Woops !
No worries, it happens!Woops !
I dont know why, I thought we were working for Gager, forgot it was Alchy
Fair enough. I suppose practicality trumps cool factor. But it was mentioned that we might be able to make wire with this tech, and that could be useful in the future. A wire that thin would be almost impossible to detect, and while it would be kinda flimsy, I can imagine a version of it that will snap in one hit, but will do more damage the more force you hit it with, resulting in an anti-vehicle tripwire. (Or maybe that's unrealistic, again, I mostly think about cool-factor)
So, I was like "okay, this time I'll make the fixed-type choice work. I'll literally write that one option satisfies the requirement, stress that we're sharpening the existing blades, and post the picture that shows how sharpening won't do much for those sticks... oh, and put a minor inconvenience such as power dependency that hasn't inconvenienced anybody so far as everything about Ringleaders requires power." And voila, the mono-molecular option still wins.
Tank armor has ceramic inserts and apparently i totaly missed you meant energy in general in 'energy blades'
I can't cut my tomatoes without crushing them if i don't do a sawing motion. The trick is to do it in a single motion.The only problem is sawing kinda takes time and a number of strokes. Imagine using a hand saw in combat.