R
Roland
Guest
Quote:
Originally Posted by Roland
Actually more of an XB-70 Valkyrie.
In the books, the original Mark I grey armor was controlled by buttons, switches, control studs, etc. It was crude yet effective. The next several versions utilized mechanical actuators as well.
By the Mark V suit (mid-70s), the armor was indeed controlled by a cybernetic interface in the helmet. The thought-controlled interface used by Tony Stark and Mitchell Gant is more science than fantasy today. Research with SQUIDs is catching up with yesterday's fiction.
Actually, the telepresence suit was a remote operated unit. It was essentially just a combat chassis contolled via a remote operator using virtual reality. There was no person inside the suit.
They're also powered by purely sci-fi gizmos, like a "beta particle power supply." Over the years, various IM writers have borrowed heavily from science fiction. Others have tried to keep the technology plausible and practical within the confines of futurist fantasy.
Originally Posted by Roland
Actually more of an XB-70 Valkyrie.
In the books, the original Mark I grey armor was controlled by buttons, switches, control studs, etc. It was crude yet effective. The next several versions utilized mechanical actuators as well.
By the Mark V suit (mid-70s), the armor was indeed controlled by a cybernetic interface in the helmet. The thought-controlled interface used by Tony Stark and Mitchell Gant is more science than fantasy today. Research with SQUIDs is catching up with yesterday's fiction.
as i recall this is correctin the books it was called excuse my spelling,nuromemetic telepresense![]()
Actually, the telepresence suit was a remote operated unit. It was essentially just a combat chassis contolled via a remote operator using virtual reality. There was no person inside the suit.
in the books there powerd by both electricity and solar energy
They're also powered by purely sci-fi gizmos, like a "beta particle power supply." Over the years, various IM writers have borrowed heavily from science fiction. Others have tried to keep the technology plausible and practical within the confines of futurist fantasy.
