Quote:
Originally posted by Tartun
The answer my friend, is the space race. All of that research will either be the product of a war (cold or otherwise) or a massive space exploration project. Cell phones, Microwaves, Ballpoint pens, contact lenses, modern polymers in general, computers that fit on a desk let alone a single normal sized room, all of these things are the result of either a war or the space race, or the combination of the two.
I'd generalise and say that any race will do; but it has to be one that's heavily funded by two competing governments. Imagine projects to set up research stations on the Pacific floor. That would probably cost billions, but it'd result in technological improvements that would vastly benefit submarines. (Who knows, maybe it'd result in subs becoming a viable alternative to aeroplanes for international travel!) It's a very expensive way to move forward, and it needs the government to push it, basically, because there's no way that a company would get back their costs (Reckon NASA could make a profit. selling zero-gravity experiences and outer space travel? They could run profitable trips, no doubt, but they're not going to recoup the dev costs of the rockets. That's fairly obvious I think. It's not - dare I say it - rocket science.)