• KillingTimeItself
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    51 month ago

    There’s a huge debate on how to communicate the simple idea of “danger, don’t dig here” on top of nuclear dumps.

    actually it turns out the answer is quite simple, do nothing, you don’t want anybody digging there, and why would anybody dig there if nothing is there.

    And if they are capable of digging down to where the waste lies, chances are they’re advanced enough to know about radiation and other relevant risks, so we don’t really have to think about it all that hard.

    also voyager 1 was launched in 77, we’re coming up on 50 years, so we could use voyager as a stand in for that specific ship, it’d be weird if we just, sent someone out into space, and didn’t ask any questions, or try to get any follow up information or anything.

    The human race is much too nosy for that.

    • @[email protected]
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      31 month ago

      , it’d be weird if we just, sent someone out into space, and didn’t ask any questions, or try to get any follow up information or anything.

      I think you kind of missed my point here.

      Think about the infrastructure needed to communicate with Voyager. How many people would be capable of rebuilding it, if it would break? Given something like a major war, or a pandemic, might those people die or simply be shifted to more pressing issues? Since a sleeper ship doesn’t have an active crew, stuff might simply break on their side too. Maybe an asteroid hits the dish.

      I’m not arguing that it’s impossible to build technology to keep in touch, I’m arguing that those who do the touching vanish. That’s a different angle.

      • @[email protected]
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        31 month ago

        The space beacon doesn’t have to be far out. Just far enough no one nukes it in WW3.

        The FTL civilization will likely notice a radio signal from within our solar system.

        • @[email protected]
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          11 month ago

          You’re looking the wrong way, literally.

          It’s not about us being found by another civilization, it’s about a sleeper ship being forgotten by us.

          • @[email protected]
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            31 month ago

            I want a future FTL capable Earth civilization to find the sleeper ship. The Earthlings are likely to notice a radio signal within our solar system as they build up for FTL.

            We can forget all about it. The beacon will be attractive to them.

            • @[email protected]
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              01 month ago

              What are you talking about?

              A ship travelling to another star system will not fly as slow as Voyager and will be well outside of the solar system within decades. What kind of beacon do you think would be strong enough to ping continuously, for 3000 years, at increasingly high energy levels? We’re talking megawatts of power.

                • KillingTimeItself
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                  01 month ago

                  Beacons don’t have to move.

                  often they don’t, that’s where the term beacon comes from. Saying that they don’t have to is a little wrong, since it’s probably more accurate to state that “they don’t have to stay stationary” instead.

      • KillingTimeItself
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        11 month ago

        voyager still works today, so no problems there. It’s had a few issues, but those were able to be fixed remotely, interestingly enough.

        It’s unlikely that the entirety of humanity would ship itself off in one go, it would take hundreds, probably thousands of ships to remove humanity from the planet, and even then not everyone would want to leave.

        So as far as managing infra, it would be fine, those would be the last people to leave, simple as that, and even beyond that some remote communication and admin would be possible.

        You could easily keep like 5% of the sleeper ship population up and working on it, i would expect that to be the case frankly. You could likely manage it pretty effectively from that point on, if certain services fail you could automatically wake up a maintenance team i suppose.

        I think you’re thinking way too 21st century, when this post is thinking 77th century.