To: Gunslingr3
Bummer. I guess that's the first time something like that has ever happened? Imagine hundreds of years of developing firearms, and now an accident. Back to chucking spears... Naw. The point is that when something like that happens, as it particularly often will if the preparatrory phases of such development are inadequate or slipshod, the resulting problems should be siezed upon and resolved, both preventing similar future incidents and ensuring that the lives of those lost in causing progress to occur were not in vain.
Instead, the OICW program's material was rewritten to indicate that no incidents of the sort involving military personnel had occured. And civilian tech engineerss are easily enough replaced anyway, I guess; the damn things breed like rabbits.
-archy-/-
59 posted on
08/27/2003 11:59:13 AM PDT by
archy
(Keep in mind that the milk of human kindness comes from a beast that is both cannibal and a vampire.)
To: archy
Without knowing anything about the accident, it sounds like the round blew at 1m instead of whatever if was set at (hopefully it can't be set at something that short). You remember a trooper in Afghanistan had to replace batteries in his GPS, when it reinitialized it had the present (local) coordinates. He transmitted those by mistake and got a bomb dropped on himself and his comrades. These kinds of accidents suck, but we learn from them, correct them if possible, and press on.
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