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File: IMG_20260602_095443.jpg (561 KB, 2160x1178)
561 KB JPG
What new technologies brought the biggest change in how wars are fought?
Examples:
>guns
>planes
>nukes
>drones
>>
>>65202182
the overshot waterwheel.
the maudsley screwcutting lathe.
>>
Radios

I mean unless you wanna go back to signal flags
>>
>>65202182
guns, if your side cant hold the line your reach matters jack shit
>>
Canned food. Shit lasts all decade so you can actually supply forces rather than being dependent on "Forage".
>>
>>65202182
Bessemer process.
>>
Gunpowder
Artificial Nitrogen
Nuclear Engineering
Cybernetics
>>
File: a4r7oeydoyhsretryhtg.jpg (356 KB, 800x450)
356 KB JPG
Large open-die forging presses like this one quite literally were the key to the jet age. This one single machine is of incredible strategic value.
>>
>>65202452
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hpgK51w6uhk
>>
>>65202417
This is the answer. And it enabled larger scale wars
>>
>>65202182
Agriculture and canning probably
>>
>>65202505
Also forgot the haber process. Both massively increased agricultural productivity and easy fixation of nitrogen making explosives/ammunition production much easier. Most of the major changes in warfare have as their initial point some technology that increases the carrying capacity of military age males in the warring countries. That's been the case through all of human history for hundreds of thousands of years until very recently, as in just a few decades.
>>
>>65202182
metal cartridges
>>
>>65202460
>>
>>65202191
This is the correct answer, at least for the strictly military side. Having your ability to effectively command over a larger distance than runner is of absolute importance
>>
>>65202460
I don't buy it. You can transport hardtack, salted meat and sauerkraut just fine without canning.
>>65202555
>>
>>65202182
metallic cartridges (which also required fulminates I guess), without which guns would still be single-shot muzzle-loaders
smokeless powder (it's no coincidence that all the brightly colored military uniforms quickly disappeared once it was viable to mass-produce/field)
more indirectly, the general industrialization of agriculture enabled fielding of significantly larger standing armies
>>
>>65202182
Agriculture
Cities (Yes, cities are technology)
Writing and numbers (try keeping records and doing logistics without them)
Preserved/long lasting foods
Walls, trenches, fortifications
>>
There's a big separation between pre-stirrup and post-stirrup war, with some scholars arguing that it was the leading cause of the shift from primarily infantry based combat to cavalry based.
>>
>>65202182
More mundane shit: Steam engine. You could force project across oceans in days instead of weeks, even put it on land over rail. Telegraph cable. You can communicate beyond visual range instantaneously.



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