Now here comes an interesting question: what are the implications of a small, cheap, high bandwidth, long range, but slow (jump 0.5 equivalent) FTL broadcast radio? Other than “there goes the non-priority mail contracts”?

On Fri, Oct 4, 2019 at 21:07 Jeff Zeitlin <xxxxxx@freelancetraveller.com> wrote:
On Sat, 5 Oct 2019 16:56:05 +1300, Rupert Boleyn <xxxxxx@gmail.com>
wrote:

>Or it's fast, and cheap per-message, but still requires a huge (and
>fairly expensive) transceiver station, too big to be placed in any but
>the biggest ship, too expensive for a backwater world to pay for itself.
>Thus only major fleet flagships will have FTL comms, and only wealthy
>worlds and those poorer worlds that are in strategic locations
>(especially if the system has limited range, so you need relays). As
>with the railways in the US, worlds will lobby to be the location of a
>relay station, as those on the network will flourish, while those
>off-net will tend to languish.

...and this paragraph more-or-less summarizes a good chunk of my article on
Ansibles in Traveller (URL earlier in thread). :)


®Traveller is a registered trademark of
Far Future Enterprises, 1977-2018. Use of
the trademark in this notice and in the
referenced materials is not intended to
infringe or devalue the trademark.

--
Jeff Zeitlin, Editor
Freelance Traveller
    The Electronic Fan-Supported Traveller® Resource
xxxxxx@freelancetraveller.com
http://www.freelancetraveller.com

Freelance Traveller extends its thanks to the following
enterprises for hosting services:

onCloud/CyberWeb Enterprises (http://www.oncloud.io)
The Traveller Downport (http://www.downport.com)
-----
The Traveller Mailing List
Archives at http://archives.simplelists.com/tml
Report problems to xxxxxx@simplelists.com
To unsubscribe from this list please go to
http://www.simplelists.com/confirm.php?u=DZZu00eGt8rDmt14P7liTVEolKKLZVUJ