💔Heavy footage that vividly demonstrates how war is changing. Now the intensity of combat actions can be determined not so much by destroyed buildings, but by the amount of optical fibre.

Pilots of the reconnaissance company of the 63rd Brigade showed what Lyman looks like now. The city is holding on, but is gradually being covered by this “cobweb”. Every day hundreds of enemy and our “birds” fly here – and each one leaves its mark🥺

🛡63rd SMBr | STEEL LIONS

https://t.me/ombr_63/1460

  • nimble@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    7 days ago

    I’m interested to see what kind of cleanup can eventually be done. Cleaning up these fiber “cobwebs” can’t be easy.

  • MrEff@lemmy.world
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    7 days ago

    Now is the perfect time to seize the opportunity and write/film a scifi movie about alien spiders that have come to Earth and the ensuing battles against them, leaving our human cities bombed and covered in webs. Will we defeat the foreign invaders off our homeland? Or will the barbaric aliens keep our land as a beachhead to further their conquest? Analogies may apply.

    • krooklochurm@lemmy.ca
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      6 days ago

      Children of time is a very good book about hyper intelligent spiders. Though in the book humans come to the hyper intelligent spider planet and not the other way around.

      It’s very, very good.

  • FaceDeer@fedia.io
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    7 days ago

    It has an eerie beauty to it.

    I remember seeing some photos a while back of bird nests made out of fragments of fibre optic cable, those looked pretty neat too. On the plus side, when this stuff degrades it just turns into sand. So at least there won’t be a toxic waste problem on top of everything else.

      • FaceDeer@fedia.io
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        6 days ago

        Only if the glass gets into your lungs, though. If it’s mixed with the soil it’s just sand.

        Wasn’t aware they used plastic fibers. I guess that would make it lighter, too.

        • Blue_Morpho@lemmy.world
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          6 days ago

          Fiberglass in soil is a hazard to all small animals.

          https://www.foodmanufacture.co.uk/Article/2024/07/02/fibreglass-particles-found-in-oysters-and-mussels/

          Imagine walking barefoot over thousands of tiny syringes. Or eating a seed covered in broken glass that you are unable to wash off because you are a mouse.

          Yes in the very long term it will break down. But that’s probably geologic timeframes because once the fiberglass gets under the topsoil it won’t degrade further unless the soil is disturbed.

          • FaceDeer@fedia.io
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            6 days ago

            If it’s under the topsoil then it’s not going to be eaten by mice or oysters.

            I really think this is one of those problems where people are looking for problems to make a big deal out of, like the massive panic about plastic straws a while back. Especially in this case where it turns out the fibers are plastic to begin with.

              • FaceDeer@fedia.io
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                5 days ago

                You just seamlessly switched from plastic straws specifically to all microplastics from all sources. This is exactly the sort of thing I’m talking about. How much do plastic straws contribute to microplastics? It’s utterly negligible. But it’s something that a public panic can be whipped up over, and people end up thinking they’re actually accomplishing something meaningful by switching to paper straws. It’s outright counterproductive. If I was a Captain Planet villain then I would consider it my greatest accomplishment to get people worked up about plastic straws and thinking that they were significant.

                Same here with these fibre optics. The environmental impact is trivial, be it plastic or glass. The cost of worrying about it is far greater than the cost of just going ahead and using it.

                • Blue_Morpho@lemmy.world
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                  5 days ago

                  You just seamlessly switched from plastic straws specifically to all microplastics from all sources.

                  No, you threw out a concentrated localized source of microplastics by saying, “Its just straws.” That village is covered in thousands of miles of fiber. Most plastic, some glass.

                  How much do plastic straws contribute to microplastics?

                  So if I shredded pounds of plastic and a little fiber glass and sprinkle it from the air on your house it doesn’t matter because straws?

                  GTFO. You’d be the first person crying to the government about how your lawn is ruined.

                  We’re talking about a village covered in fiber optics.

                  If that’s glass fibers in that nest, the baby birds will be dead.

  • fort_burp@feddit.nl
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    6 days ago

    How does that work? I mean, what is the relationship between drones and the fibre? Does each drone have to have it’s own fibre or something?

        • BilboBargains@lemmy.world
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          6 days ago

          These drones are literally hardwired to the controller, the physical layer is a fibre-optic filament through which all the control actions are sent and feedback received. Commercial grade drone control over radio is vulnerable to electronic warfare of which the Russians have a suite of tools at their disposal.

  • zabadoh@ani.social
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    6 days ago

    If the fibers are dense enough in a particular area, doesn’t that make that area drone proof?