Camou-fog
Notes
This post concerns another piece of essential
mission gear for nanotroopers…something called camou-fog.
Wikipedia defines camouflage this way:
“Camouflage is the use of any combination of
materials, coloration, or illumination for concealment, either by making
animals or objects hard to see (crypsis), or by disguising
them as something else (mimesis).”
1. What is it?
Camou-fog is a linked, programmable, re-configurable mesh or lattice of
coordinated, synchronized nano-robotic elements that can reconfigure into any
shape, form or color or texture for which it has stored templates. Here’s the idea…
Note that the substance is fully programmable and reconfigurable. This means it can resemble any surface or substrate for which it has configuration templates. Camou-fog is a bunch of bots…ANAD clones. Because of that, the stuff can be made to look like anything. The possibilities are literally limitless. Only the configuration template design and the memory capacity of the bot master limit what can be done. That and the laws of physics.
2. How is it made and stored?
Camou-fog is resembles what was once called utility fog. It’s an evolution of the original idea. Camou-fog is composed of individual nanobots,
with a single master bot for command and control. And it’s stored in a canister or containment
capsule, and launched from same. Every
nanotrooper carries a camou-fog dispenser loaded with tactical config templates
for the most common applications.
Special templates can be provided for unique missions.
3. Deployment and Tactics.
Camou-fog is not an invisibility cloak, a la Harry Potter or a Klingon cloaking
device. The stuff is used mainly for
camouflage (stealth approach and assault), deception ( to make an ANAD assault
look like dust storms, flies, rain drops, etc), diversionary feints and probes
(forcing the enemy to react in the wrong direction or against an non-existent
threat a la Patton’s paper tank army in Operation Overlord). Camou-fog can also be used to support simulated threats and
attacks. It’s always used with other
swarming tactics (see UNQC Field Manual).
Typical Quantum Corps operations in
which camou-fog might be used are:
a. Surveillance
b. Reconnaissance
c. Infiltration/Pre-emptive
Actions
d. Precision
Strike
e. Assault
f. General
War
g. Post-Conflict
4. What camou-fog should not be
used for. How it can be defeated.
Camou-fog can be defeated by messing up the config templates, by keeping them
from replicating or linking, by jamming comms, by making rapid changes in the
environment faster than the swarm can adapt to, by unexpectedly altering the
environment, by forcing the camou-fogged object to move against the background,
detecting other emissions (emission control and discipline are vital). Camou-fog bots are vulnerable to HERF
barrage, as is any ANAD style botswarm. If you can’t see or detect something
camou-fogged, just blow the camou to kingdom come with thunderbolts of rf
energy.
5. Hazards and precautions. As with any piece of mission gear for
nanotroopers, there are some caveats in using camou-fog. It’s not a panacea for pulsing, synchronized,
converging, or swarming attacks. Use of
camou-fog should be integrated into any attack plan, like any other gear or
weapon, for best effects. Camou-fog must be coordinated with other
tactics. It should never be used as a
substitute for good tactical judgment (see UNQC Field Manual). Below are some typical tactical deployments
in which camou-fog might be used:
a. Deception
and concealment
b. Feints
c. Diversions
d. Swarming
attack
e. Dispersal
f. Entrapments
and ambushes
g. Managing
configuration changes
6. Large-scale uses and applications. Camou-fog can also be used for static
structures, such as fake fortifications, even whole villages, weapons
emplacements, natural forms such as trees or hills, or to otherwise conceal
something or deceive an enemy. Camou-fog
is particularly useful in helping a nanotrooper unit blend into an environment
and of course, that blending can be real-time and changeable, as the
environment changes.
So
you see that camou-fog can be quite handy to nanotroopers in conducting routine
or even special operations. It’s best
traits include its programmability and reconfigurability. It suffers from the same limitations of any
nanobotic device but the true worth of the stuff is in all the imaginative uses
nanotroopers can put it to, often things not even in the manual.
Next
month’s post to Quantum Corps Times
will be posted on September 1. This post
will take a slightly different direction, looking at a place called Engebbe,
Kenya, where the original ANAD was born.
We’ll cover a little of ANAD’s early history as well.
See
you on September 1.
Phil
B.
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