I swear if only they had parchment or those Chinese scrolls with ink it would be such a good replica of those old Chinese scrolls that recorded history
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If the bait person remains stationary, the drone will also stop its movement.
I guess this is for grenade dropping drones? Because a suicide drone is definitely not going to stand still. lol
footnote: "Most reliable method of avoiding drones entirely is don't join the fucking army."
I don't think the North Korean soldiers have much choice.
If I were a DPRK soldier sent to Russia, I would be taking notes on how to desert, although Russia and North Korea probably have a decent amount of experience dealing with this, so chances might be slim. Still, I'm thinking the chances look better.
North Korean dessert is delicious
It's to die for
The thing that stops a lot of North Koreans from trying is the whole "We'll torture/imprison/murder your family back home if you do" thing.
Artillery rarely hits the same spot twice...
Lmao. You/Me REPEAT last fire mission, over.
Staying in the same spot just means the Forward Observers have time to get your death on video.
If you only know very inaccurate howitzers then this is somewhat true. Most western artillery will be very accurate up to a few meters though.
Itβs actually a decent idea, if youβre only facing arty. Any defilade beats standing up in an open field, and even the most Gucci shells (@ over $100,000/ea) still have a ~10 meter CEP and require good GPS signal - something that Russia routinely jams.
Hitting the exact same spot with artillery is rare, but chilling out in a shell crater just makes you primo FPV/dropper bait. No good way out except surrender.
Infantry in the open calls for airburst. There's not going to be a shell hole. Laying down in a barrage is only good as an immediate reaction, if you have overhead cover, or if you absolutely cannot leave your position.The second reaction is to call the rallies and hope the rounds drift the other way.
This is Ukraine v Russia in nearly the third year of full scale war, not a testing ground or Able Archer β83. In an idea scenario airburst and/or cluster is absolutely the remedy for enemy infantry in the open, but DPICM is not universally available - nor even conventional HE for that matter, shell hunger is well documented and prolific for the Ukrainians.
Having the super spec gear is neat, but the breadth of the composition matters a lot more than the abilities of your coolest kit if it isnβt widely available.
If you have a post world war 2 fuze then you have an airburst setting.
The overwhelming majority of footage Iβve seen from this war has been HE exploding at ground level, DPICM or self propelled guns are the only cases that Iβve seen evidence of programming/timing being done by gun crews.
M777 and Caesar were cheaper and more effective because both could set up quickly, fire several shells and then be gone in about a minute or two. That was quick enough to avoid counterbattery fire
They arenβt hanging around, getting feedback and adjusting fires - setup, shoot, and go. The PzHs are rare and valuable, most of what youβll see is M777 and Caesar/Bohdana, or towed Soviet leftovers in rear areas.
It's not that kind of thing. You set the fuse with a wrench when you get the fire mission call. As low tech as could be in the field. The FO sends the call in and either requests a fuse or describes the target and lets the battery decide the fuse. Infantry in the open is always airburst and there are videos of that being used, most recently against the North Korean troops who actually did try to just lay down to avoid it.
Entrenched infantry uses ground burst or air burst depending on what effect you want. You can destroy mines and fortifications or try to catch infantry in the open top areas with airburst. Vehicles are likewise ground detonation because you're trying to track or marry a 155 shell to the top of a vehicle.
This all without discussing proximity fuses that go off at waist height. Their purpose is to use over pressure and an impact sheaf to kill everyone in a 30-300 meter by 20-100 meter rectangle.
And again this is set with a wrench right before you load the round, so no adjusting fire or anything is necessary.
And here I am arguing under a misapprehension about airburst for arty being the same βflying shotgunβ kinetic submunition shrapnel the British developed before WW1, or the later flechettes, instead of the 2-10 meter HE burst height used nowadaysβ¦
Thanks for the info, I have some more reading to do clearly about contemporary gunnery methods and sheafs v beaten zones
The notes also call the drone a non-human device. Imagine that's your best description..... Feelsbadman
Could that just be a translation thing? Some things don't translate well and if you take the literal meaning, you'd have things like this in all languages thinking wtf.
무μΈκΈ° (non-human device) is a term that is used commonly in South Korean military alongside λλ‘ (pronunciation of drone written in Korean), so it's not too weird to see it there. They tend to avoid borrowed words for some reason.
I had a native Korean translate it and my comment was basically their reaction
haha okay, well this isn't one of those cases then.
How do they decide who is bait. I'm sure they all line up for that job
The most Asian looking guy has to volunteer
Probably just whoever the drone decides to go after. If I was a drone operator I wouldn't go after the guy exuding pick me energy, he's probably their worst and dumbest private.
Certainly a case of 'too many volunteers'.
Wow, this is incredibly interesting on many levels. Thanks.
does anyone here read squiggle? I'm curious what it says.
I'm Korean, and while I can't make out what it exactly says because of the handwriting, some words are recognisable and the translation in the OP's post seems accurate. I don't see anything they missed out either.
I don't have a Telegram account, so I can't see other contents.
ah, that wasn't there when I first commented.
Full page
Google translate
Well, that clears that up then.
the sound -> drone is another word for roaring.
bow tie -> could be a loop or maybe a propeller, if the Korean word resembles that.
Clever
Yeah, Google translate would freak the fuck out on printed out kanji on signs and billboards and stuff when I was in Japan, within the past 5 years. Iβm honestly surprised it was able to get what it did out of it.
I imagine with the way the Korean language in the North and South have diverged over time it's even more difficult, but man, that is some of the finest gibberish I have seen in years.
"Omuigi can spROID", indeed they can.
Yeah that was my favorite. Could this be the new βAll your base are belong to usβ?
I can imagine hangul is easier to machine translate than kanji?
BRB, performing the pig's music.
Final Fantasy ass coat of arms.
ChatGPT: Just above the drawing, the handwritten Korean text seems to describe a situation or an action plan. Based on visual inspection, here is an approximate transcription and translation:
Transcription (Approximate):
1. μ μ μμΉλ₯Ό νμ νκ³ μ΄λ κ²½λ‘λ₯Ό μμΈ‘νλ€.
2. νμκ³Ό νλ ₯νμ¬ ν¨μ¨μ μΌλ‘ λ°©μ΄/곡격μ μ€ννλ€.
Translation:
1. Identify the enemyβs position and predict their movement path.
2. Collaborate with teammates to efficiently execute defense/attack.
Below the drawing seems to be a set of brief notes or steps. Hereβs a rough transcription and possible translation attempt for the text directly under the drawing:
Transcription (Approximate):
1. κ³ κ°λ₯Ό μμ¬μ μ μ νμΈνκ³ λ°λ‘ νλ
2. μλκ° μμ§μ΄λ λ°©ν₯μ λΆμνλ©° ν¬μ§μ μ μ§
3. μλͺ»λ μμΉμμ μμ§μ΄μ§ λ§κ³ μ£Όλ³μ κ²½κ³νλ€.
Translation:
1. Lower your head to check the enemy and act immediately.
2. Analyze the direction the opponent is moving while maintaining your position.
3. Do not move from an incorrect position; stay alert to your surroundings.
The context seems to involve instructions for an exercise or scenario involving situational awareness and movement.
This is actually a pretty good use for LLMs. It fills in probable words where the writing is unintelligible.
Only problem is you now have a translation that makes you go "hmm, seems right", but you have no way of judging that yourself, so you'd need an expert anyway. Sometimes, having no information is better than having wrong information.