(09-18-2024, 12:39 PM)The Real Marty Wrote: [ -> ] (09-18-2024, 11:59 AM)WingerDinger Wrote: [ -> ]I mean, if you think about it, it kinda makes sense from a tactical view. The beepers were for the foot soldiers, the radios are for staff.
They're blowing their way up the ladder..
Ohhhh.. Sounds like a Kamala documentary..
Okay, I laughed at that.
But I wonder, can there be anything else? Foot soldiers, staff, where can it go from here?
They say Kamala soft on crime but very hard on her staff. In her defense though, she has never caused her staff to explode the way Israel did to Lebanon.
I understand 3M just got a humongous order for post-it notes.
The Intel posters on twitter and others are saying that Israel had to blow the devices early because someone found out. Supposedly only the last shipment or 2 were affected.
Reports of solar panels blowing up today.
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I didn't realize that pagers were still being made or used.
(09-18-2024, 04:53 PM)The Real Marty Wrote: [ -> ] (09-18-2024, 04:10 PM)jagibelieve Wrote: [ -> ]I didn't realize that pagers were still being made or used.
Lebanon attack: Why is Hezbollah using pagers and how could they have been made to explode? | Euronews
As a non-state actor with limited capabilities, Hezbollah has used pagers in the past to avoid Israeli interception, according to Elijah J Magnier, a veteran war correspondent and analyst who has been covering the region for 37 years.
"Hezbollah was very determined this time to prevent members from using the mobile phone because any phone that is connected to the Internet is easily accessed by the very advanced Israeli electronic capability," he told Euronews Next.
They need to switch to post-it notes attached to carrier pigeons. (or for you Harry Potter fans Owls) They will need to raise their own or run the risk of them exploding too.
(09-18-2024, 04:53 PM)The Real Marty Wrote: [ -> ] (09-18-2024, 04:10 PM)jagibelieve Wrote: [ -> ]I didn't realize that pagers were still being made or used.
Lebanon attack: Why is Hezbollah using pagers and how could they have been made to explode? | Euronews
As a non-state actor with limited capabilities, Hezbollah has used pagers in the past to avoid Israeli interception, according to Elijah J Magnier, a veteran war correspondent and analyst who has been covering the region for 37 years.
"Hezbollah was very determined this time to prevent members from using the mobile phone because any phone that is connected to the Internet is easily accessed by the very advanced Israeli electronic capability," he told Euronews Next.
Israel says, "how's that working out for you?"
Yippee kai yay mudsuckers!
(11-17-2024, 03:00 PM)homebiscuit Wrote: [ -> ]Why pay an exorbitant amount of money to have a company do a controlled destruction when they can just have the Israeli Air Force do it?
https://youtube.com/shorts/qtLPWE-OlT0?s...vh7aOHYeK4
Dang. As efficient as Germans are I don't know if even they could do that.
Very impressive.
(11-17-2024, 10:56 PM)americus 2.0 Wrote: [ -> ] (11-17-2024, 03:00 PM)homebiscuit Wrote: [ -> ]Why pay an exorbitant amount of money to have a company do a controlled destruction when they can just have the Israeli Air Force do it?
https://youtube.com/shorts/qtLPWE-OlT0?s...vh7aOHYeK4
Dang. As efficient as Germans are I don't know if even they could do that.
Very impressive.
No one does it better than the Israelis.
Going by the comments in the video, they were most likely using
this bit of impressive kit.
...An unguided bomb fitted with a Spice kit can contain up to 100 images of its potential targets.
The bomb is then loaded on a strike aircraft. In the pylon to which the bomb is attached, there is a data link between the aircraft's cockpit and the bomb.
As the aircraft flies in the air and approaches a target, either the weapon systems officer (WSO – the back seater in such aircraft as the F-15E Strike Eagle or F-16I Sufa) or pilot (in single-seat aircraft) can use the TV/IR display in the cockpit to see the image the bomb sends to them. Once they have selected one of the preprogrammed targets or manually fed the bomb with a target, by feeding it with either an image or geographical coordinates to home on, the bomb is ready for release into a guided trajectory.
Once the bomb is released, it begins searching for its target to acquire it and home in on it. This can be done in several ways:
First, there is pure CCD or IR for low lighting conditions image matching, when the guidance section uses algorithms to match the target image in its memory with the image provided by the seeker and align the center of the seeker's FOV with the desired image, a guidance method known as DSMAC.
Second, if the CCD\IR seeker cannot acquire its target for any reason, such as visual obstructions, the bomb can automatically switch to GPS\INS guidance. This means that the bomb aspires to bring itself to the target's altitude at a known geographical location. The bomb receives data on its current location from GPS satellites, or from an inertial navigation system in the bomb itself, that has been fed, through the pylon datalink, with the dropping aircraft's coordinates a fraction of a second before the drop and can therefore calculate its coordinates from the dropping time and on.
Third, there is a manual "man-in-the-loop" guidance option, in which the WSO looks at a backseat TV display to see the seeker's view, sent to them through an RF command guidance datalink, and uses the backseat stick to control the bomb to the target. With a skilled WSO that has a "sensitive hand", this guidance method is potentially the most accurate one employed today for air-dropped munitions and has no measurable miss distance. Its main drawback is that it allows for only one bomb to be guided at a time...