Moon-light, you keep making assumptions with a biais
for bits of very real knowledge that favour your views
whilst conveniently brushing off those that don't
... even
though I suspect that you understand them just as well.
For example, in the above, you rightfully counter a point
brought up by Dash about the
OSF being the sensor used
but the rest is
gnagnagna USA gnagnagna invincible gnagnagna perfect tech gnagnagna Lords and Gods gnagnagna ...
which is much akin to belief and less in line with science.
You certainly know the value of treatment and programming
to be found in poorly versus properly developed games or
applications ( or Macs ) and could go see this latest thread :
where the value of such is "discovered" by the Pentagon.
If you chose to ignore that intangible mathematical treatment
and the likes, there must be a deep set reason and I'm really
not sufficiently free of my time nor enough of a hubristic fool
to try and fix that, sorry!
But I'll leave you with a story as a parting gift :
Years ago, I met the brother of a friend whose team I was training.
That brother was both much shorter than his kin and I and in a very different sport.
8 months later he represented his country in judo at the Olympic Games.
He challenged me to a fight when time would allow and we eventually did.
I was taller, bigger, stronger, more powerful and trained at least as well.
Well, he knew that and used it fully. He couldn't lock for a full break of
be it bone or articulation / joint but I found out he was nearly impossible
to hit and incapacitate as well. After a long while and a particularly hurtful blow,
he forced our combined mass to the ground as he was locked on my back.
I had to apply a solution to end it and using brute strength, rose in that position
and started slamming my back and thus my opponent against a brick wall of the gym,
very at ease with only 80kgs to squat with. That stopped it as he quit to avoid a concussion.
There are a couple lessons there.
He thought he'd win, I thought I'd win with 3-4 blows,
the capacity gap was big enough in my favour but not
so much as to brag about my big Luneburg lenses and,
my favourite, that if we'd have faced out in teams of say
4 of each, I may have had to face 2 or 3 judokas to win.
So read you later and have a great day, Tay.
P.S.
Unable to see your flags, I had a fleeting thought
while redacting the part with the humans/demi/Gods that
maybe you were the author as Greeks invented the concept.