Which ones of you had the "air-to-air kill of a crewed aircraft by an FPV drone" on your 2024 bingo card?

https://sh.itjust.works/post/23091832

Which ones of you had the "air-to-air kill of a crewed aircraft by an FPV drone" on your 2024 bingo card? - sh.itjust.works

r*ddit [https://libreddit.northboot.xyz/r/NonCredibleDefense/comments/1egr73w/which_ones_of_you_had_the_airtoair_kill_of_a/]

Drones are going to change future warfare so much. Big ships, fortifications, and slow planes/choppers are going to be very vulnerable imo
Up to the time we develop an effective counter.
But it’s enough of a game changer that large and emplaced targets will be overwhelmed. Watching those drone shows and their ability to communicate with each other like a hive mind blew my mind thinking about that from a military standpoint. I think it will be like stealth technology and radar. Most planes are not stealth so old radar is still effective. Some things will be able to protect themselves from drone attacks, but most will be vulnerable in one way or another. I’m just a military gamer and I can think of hundreds of types of drones I’d create if I was planning for a defense or attack, the experts have likely thought of those and thousands more; diggers, crawlers, flyers, dummies until signaled, attaching things coming in and out from ground, air, etc, and on and on.

Neal Stephenson’s The Diamond Age has a “forcefield” of anti-personnel drones around one compound. They form a dome and drift into one another to share power from the ground.

I don’t remember if there’s a reason they’re not just wirelessly charged, aside from mass air-to-air refueling sounding cooler.

The drones were powered by atmospheric static, I think? Or was it solar power? They recharged each other by close contact. The black dust created by constantly battling nanobots was terrifying. More terrifying than the amount of money Stephenson must have spent on stimulants.
I think that’s just how he is. It’s not like Colombia naming a library after Stephen King.