Coordinating dynamic real time systems for sustainable global and heliospheric systems

Radar @RadarHits  8,100 drones in this stunning performance – a new world record set in China. https://pic.x.com/wisfylhho4
Replying to @RadarHits


Filed as: Coordinating dynamic real time systems for sustainable global and heliospheric systems
 
If the software and technology is shared openly with the world, it could help grow new global and space industries and applications. Many people and systems and groups make this possible. It needs 100x battery energy densities, smaller and more powerful propulsion. Many could make displays like this; what matters is what is shown and what it intends to encourage.
 
To run a fusion plant, or space propulsion system, or wingless hypersonic systems, or earth-to-orbit-by-fields, you need coordination of billions of independent systems, each with deeper and connected abilities. 
 
Sustainable global infrastructure systems, to care for and enable the human and related species, requires much greater ability and vision than a demo that tried to coordinate 8100 devices.  It is not necessary to use motor devices for this, but one can also use fields. Perhaps more efficiently and faster.
 
Perhaps there will be robot and drone Olympics one day, or Nobel prizes in technologies that affect all living things.
 
Perhaps countries should show their drone coordination skills by doing peaceful but dynamic things.
 
Perhaps they should trying lifting a ship to orbit, or catch cargo containers from orbit to docking stations. With some vacuum capable drones to help. @SpaceX
 
The people doing these demos today might be the trillionaires of new industries a few years from now.
 
Filed under #GravitationalEngineering, #ElectroMagnetoDynamicFieldMethods, #SyntheticGravitationalFields, #GlobalOpenNetworks, #SustainableGlobalSystems, #VacuumCapableDrones
 
Richard Collins, The Internet Foundation
Richard K Collins

About: Richard K Collins

The Internet Foundation Internet policies, global issues, global open lossless data, global open collaboration


Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *