Re: [TML] Relic tech and Scarcity-Driven Imperium (was: Salvage Operations (and Submarines)) Phil Pugliese 30 Mar 2016 23:14 UTC

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CT & MT are only consistent in that they both posit high(er)-capacity merchant vessels.
In CT that meant up to 10,000DT (possibly 20,000) while MT, true to it's name, 'mega'-sized everything.
So, "you pays your money & you takes your choice".

--------------------------------------------
On Wed, 3/30/16, Craig Berry <xxxxxx@gmail.com> wrote:

 Subject: Re: [TML] Relic tech and Scarcity-Driven Imperium (was: Salvage Operations (and Submarines))
 To: xxxxxx@simplelists.com
 Date: Wednesday, March 30, 2016, 3:57 PM

 As I said in another
 post, CT and MT can be viewed as consistent on this issue.
 CT concentrated on the world of small-scale operations. You
 wouldn't need to mention container ships if you were
 explaining air courier services. The world of the latter is
 effectively independent of the former. So I see CT talking
 about tramp traders and their commercial ecosystem, which
 runs alongside but is largely independent of the
 high-capacity dedicated freighter lines.
 On Wed, Mar 30, 2016
 at 3:52 PM, Phil Pugliese (via tml list) <xxxxxx@simplelists.com>
 wrote:
 This email was sent from yahoo.com which does not allow
 forwarding of emails via email lists. Therefore the
 sender's email address (xxxxxx@yahoo.com)
 has been replaced with a dummy one. The original message
 follows:

 --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

 And yet a previous poster has stated that economies of scale
 become insignificant once the 3kDT-10kDT level is reached
 w/i the TU.

 So, at that point, the analogy the w/ 20th century
 post-container cargo maritime economy breaks down.

 You, & MT say "It must happen like this" while
 I, & CT maintain, "Well, it didn't". 
 That's just another inconsistency w/i the TU that
 appeared with the advent of MT. Not to mention all the
 others before or since. (Or maybe the TU just hasn't 
 made it into a position analogous to the '20th
 century'  yet? Maybe it never will? Maybe it will,
 eventually?)

 There's lot's & lot's of things in the OTU
 that any number of folks view as "inexplicable".
 It's in the nature of the beast.

 In any case, & in my experience, inevitably, an
 individual decides on a desired outcome, in this case
 commerce modelling & then works backwards from there.
 (Wasn't that how the TU came to be n the first place?)

 Which is only natural when selecting a gaming universe to
 play w/i.

 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

 On Wed, 3/30/16, Craig Berry
 <xxxxxx@gmail.com>
 wrote:

  Subject: Re: [TML] Relic tech and Scarcity-Driven Imperium
 (was: Salvage Operations (and Submarines))

  To: xxxxxx@simplelists.com

  Date: Wednesday, March 30, 2016, 1:36 PM

  We know

  there are economies of scale in Traveller ships. It's

  cheaper to move a ton of cargo on a larger ship. If there

  are enough tons of cargo moving between a pair of
 systems,

  simple capitalism will result in larger ships being used
 to

  move it, up to a limit constrained by factors such as

  required route and timing flexibility and maintenance

  downtime. E.g., even if you could move all the commerce

  between A and B in one ship, you would want at least a
 few

  of them so if one gets pulled for maintenance you only
 lose

  1/N of your capacity. Or if a new market heats up, you
 want

  to have the ability to reallocate some fraction of your

  capacity to that run, rather than all or nothing. And

  further, you probably want daily departures for the 57th

  century equivalent of Amazon Prime. :)

  And even with all that, you end up

  with very large container ships, just as we have today,
 with

  those same constraints in place. You don't need to
 know

  anything beyond the available tech, the desired trade

  volume, and the relative absence of regulations or
 similar

  dampening factors (e.g., ongoing warfare or pervasive

  piracy) for that answer to pop out. To suppress that
 result,

  you need to change one of those assumptions.

  On Wed, Mar 30, 2016 at

  1:24 PM, Phil Pugliese (via tml list) <xxxxxx@simplelists.com>

  wrote:

  This email was sent from yahoo.com which does not allow

  forwarding of emails via email lists. Therefore the

  sender's email address (xxxxxx@yahoo.com)

  has been replaced with a dummy one. The original message

  follows:

  ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

  I've always been highly skeptical of

  "inevitable" evolutions of anything.

  My experience is that such a thing is usually highly

  subjective.

  In this case, one could easily posit that the supposedly

  "inevitable" result did not occur in the TU

  'cuz the post-containerization 20th century is not a

  perfect (or perfect enough) analogy to the TU. Or that
 the

  17/18th centuries are better analogies. Or any number of

  other speculative onclusions.

  Once again it really just comes down to a personal

  preference. It's really all about exactly what sort
 of

  TU is desired. In other words there is a desired outcome

  & the process is required to support that.

  After all, isn't that what the original conception of

  the TU was all about?

  -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

  On Wed, 3/30/16, Craig Berry

  <xxxxxx@gmail.com>

  wrote:

   Subject: Re: [TML] Relic tech and Scarcity-Driven
 Imperium

  (was: Salvage Operations (and Submarines))

   To: xxxxxx@simplelists.com

   Date: Wednesday, March 30, 2016, 12:54 PM

   The

   problem is that you really can't create a

  consistent

   explanation for a civilization with Traveller tech

   (including cheap energy and easy travel), relatively

   laissez-faire capitalism, and pervasive local scarcity

  that

   *doesn't* result in the spacegoing equivalent of

  modern

   container ships. It's just the natural evolutionary

   direction that the market will push freight shipping to

   follow. Never mind that it's equally tough to

  account

   for pervasive local scarcity given the tech
 assumptions,

  as

   exhaustively discussed already.

   My explanation for the CT view of

   shipping is that it was simply what mattered to

  small-lot

   shippers. The boat that runs supplies out to Two
 Harbors

  on

   Catalina Island off Los Angeles is a converted WWII LST

  with

   a crew of three. They sail to and from Long Beach
 Harbor,

  a

   gigantic container port. They pass many freighters
 along

  the

   way, most hundreds of times their size. But none of
 them

  are

   carrying a week's worth of groceries and fuel to

  Two

   Harbors, so from their point of view, those giant ships

  are

   economically irrelevant, part of the

   scenery.

   On Wed, Mar 30, 2016 at

   12:43 PM, Phil Pugliese (via tml list) <xxxxxx@simplelists.com>

   wrote:

   This email was sent from yahoo.com which

  does not allow

   forwarding of emails via email lists. Therefore the

   sender's email address (xxxxxx@yahoo.com)

   has been replaced with a dummy one. The original

  message

   follows:

   --------------------------------------------

   On Wed, 3/30/16, Bruce

   Johnson <xxxxxx@Pharmacy.Arizona.EDU>

   wrote:

    Subject: Re: [TML] Relic tech and Scarcity-Driven

  Imperium

   (was: Salvage Operations (and Submarines))

    To: "xxxxxx@simplelists.com"

   <xxxxxx@simplelists.com>

    Date: Wednesday, March 30, 2016, 10:40 AM

    > On

    Mar 29, 2016, at 4:50 PM, Tim <xxxxxx@little-possums.net>

    wrote:

    >

    > On Tue,

    Mar 29, 2016 at 06:48:22PM +0000, Phil Pugliese (via

   tml

    list) wrote:

    >> I've seen

    'official' stats for up to 10,000DT's

  &

   have

    heard of

    >> others up to

    20,000DT's.

    >>

    >> Would that be enough to run the CT

    3I?

    >

    > Yes,

    certainly.  Economies of scale in the construction

  and

    operation

    > rules in most versions start

    being fairly negligible around the 3k-10k

    > dton range.  You would just need more of

    them to support the trade

    > volumes than

    you would of 100k dton ships, at about the same total

    > cost.

    Yet

    this is not reflected in real-world experience: the

   trend

    has been to ever-larger container ships rather than

  more

   of

    them.

    Why?

   ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

   'Cuz the OTU (at least until DGP/MT came along) is

  based

   upon the 17th/18th century & not on the

   post-containerization 20th?

   Works for me!  ;-)

   Which is only to be expected since I prefer CT. Someone

  who

   prefers MT is bound to differ, of course.

   p.s. someone posted a very treatise to the list over 20

   (pre-TNE) years ago detailing the fundamental changes
 in

  a

   lot of the basics that occurred when MT appeared. My

   impression was that the author  was making the case

  that

   the CT 3I & the MT 3I were actually two different

   'critters' &, rather than attempting to

   reconcile them, it was easier/better to just pick one
 or

  the

   other & go with that.

   -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

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  "Eternity is in love with the productions

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 "Eternity is in love with the productions of
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