I believe the crux of the issue is that if you make an AI smart enough to be better than meat mercenaries, it is legally a person and you cannot force it to do mercenary work for you.
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I dunno about cannon reasons, but as for canon reasons, I'd expect it's a combo of distrust, social inertia, and the requirement to build the robots in the first place which would require substantial manufacturing which would bring the comic into areas much less likely to be using cannons. :smalltongue:
Well, I don't recall us ever having seen any sort of "robot"...AIs all seem to run ships or just float around like Ennesby. Maybe they just still can't build a robot that's as effective as an organic?
We've seen a few combat robots, Tar feathers and Tarball when Sanctum Adroit showed for the first time in Force Multiplication
They were extremly efficient at fighting indeed
.. and then their obvious flaw became apparent as well when both Max and Ventura hacked them for their own needs. Including making their annie plant explode for massive potential damage.
(Also the shipyards fabers all employ robots as we've seen several time. We'll leave both Enesby's macara and all the anobot ever out for the purpose of the discussion but y'know they technically all counts as 'robots' who can fight.)
The fact that the only force I can remember deploying bots are either the techno fairies (they had those weird mecha tank suits whhich were shown to have their own perspnality when Venture reprogam one later) or Santum Adroit, the 'best of the industry' when it coms to security, let me thinks that the reason most armes don't use more robots is simply mix of costs/efficiency (as power armor is so common in this setting and comes all kind of extra guns, auto aiming and all kind of option that kinda level the playing field) and distrusts of AIs.
We've also seen weaponised nanite swarms before. Not exactly robots, but they do seem to be effective weapons against soft targets and are presumably able to be AI controlled.
EDIT: We also saw Petey use fabber bots for sabotage and fighting, and Tailor was pretty handy with his scissor hand in combat with a bit of reprogramming, and he's not exactly designed to military specifications.
Also Captain Landon's sentient gun/girlfriend. I recall they used a lot of drones fabbed by the gun to put down the nannie-hacked law enforcement agents.
And essentially a built in back-door in the nannies Gav's used. If the modification hardware was not compromised from the beginning, it would be much harder to hack into people. Still, recent rediscovery of personality teraport leaving the body behind might prove that organic beings are not less vulnerable to hacking anyway.
We have already seen this: the All-Star "hacked" the meatforms of four Urtheep Industries employees with exactly this technology. Perhaps the tech for this exact application is currently beyond most non-Strategic Engineers in the galaxy, but it'll get there pretty quickly, especially with Petey on the case.
The uploading and downloading of sleeper agents like Mako seems to indicate that this has been going on for a while, probably via snatching people and forcibly exposing them to compromised nannie hardware. But yes, removing all of the 'souls' of enemy combatants via terraport, or switching someone's personality via terraport would be a lot more efficient and require less set up.
I'm calling today's flashback the longest distant to the present, that actually as plot-relevant information.
Assuming the Schlock storyline happens 13 billion years after the big bang, this flashback takes us back by 6 billion years, that is 4 billion years earlier than the creation of the all-star.
Roundabout. Also, the dinosaurs died out roundabout yesterday, on that level of magnitude.
Perhaps more importantly, though, the implication is that the Pa'anuri were originally created entities rather than coming into existence naturally. They were also created in the Milky Way, so presumably at some point they got kicked out and journeyed to Andromeda?
Or the pa'anuri traveled all the way to the milky way to see what their baryonic brethren were up to, only to discover a horror show of dark matter enslavement and torture.
Am I the only one disappointed with this VERY IMPORTANT exposition being delivered by an omniscient narrator in the midst of an interlude? Is it so much of a foregone conclusion that this is the case that we can just gloss over the foundation of all plots in the comic like this?
The only beings who would have been alive back then and capable of delivering the exposition would be the DMEs themselves, and they're not really the chatty type. So omniscient narrator is the only option he's left himself.
Well, no. It could've still been the civilization that made them and left the Galaxy in a hurry, and has been warning the newer arrivals about their mistakes all this time. Or the dinosaurs could've relayed the story, with the preceding explanation for how they know.
He just... didn't do that.
For what it's worth, Ennesby has (briefly) been a humanoid robot.
Eh. One of the problems with Superman is that any spacefaring society that can travel to other star systems is pretty much impossible to destroy with just one supernova. Sure, the survivors are going to be very different people from the idiots who blew up the sun, but different in the sense of "Horrifying trauma has deeply changed who we are and what we're afraid of."
Krypton in most Superman origin stories is not a interstellar society. While the have the technology, for various reasons they didn't expand out to other start systems or if they did they withdrew back Krypton. In one version they were genetically tied to Krypton and leaving it would eventually kill them. (Clark was altered so that he could leave the planet and live)
Hmmm, so apparently they had an actual reason to blow up the sun...
FYI, the lastest Kickstarter for hardcopies is up and running.
I'm getting the feeling that the point of this interlude is that all these matrioshka brains? They predate the Pa'anuri. Metastable dark matter entities are (relatively) new on the galactic scale.
I thought this was going to be about Oisri's early precursor rather than a world sphere. Oisri itself is only 10 million years old, but clearly, the tech existed well before that.
But, looking at white dwarf stars, they seem to be in volume comparable to an Oth-like planet, and Oisri is only about the size of a small moon.
https://www.schlockmercenary.com/2019-10-24
So that's why they found Boloceade along the ring.
Personally, I wish Howard would be more consistent about whether these pseudo-dinosaur-looking aliens wear clothes or not. What, are Paranoid Red and Goggles Blue just nudists or something? What's going on here?
I mean, in theory, but in practice white dwarves expected lifespans are, like, 20 orders of magnitude longer than the current lifespan of the universe. That's a pretty long battery. And even THEN you could set up annie plants to consume the remaining mass of the star. It's pretty much as close to "forever" as I can think of.