RainOfSteel
SOC-14 1K
That’s why I’d like to see three TL ratings to differentiate between local manufacturing capability, local exceptional manufacturing capability, and local import capability.Originally posted by Psion:
Not at all. Your stance is that a world must produce everything a TL has to offer to be classified at that TL. My contention is that it only be able to produce OR maintain SOME aspects of it. Otherwise, it seems to me that all Non-Industrial worlds would have very low TL indeed, because they import most technological goods.
Yes . . . i.e. Gordon R. Dickson’s Dorsai! series.Originally posted by Psion:
I beleive that very few, if any, worlds that engage in interstellar trade on any great scale would produce everything locally. It doesn't make economic sense to produce something locally you could get cheaper elsewhere.
There is a distinction between being able to manufacture something, and actually making it. Every world that can manufacture any particular TL product need not be engaged in manufacturing every product available at that TL. However, with the correct manufacturing tools (including the ability to custom manufacture those tools on demand), it should be able to make any particular product of that TL. It’s true, of course, that custom orders will be expensive one-offs, but if the world can’t do this if someone shows up with the money to pay for it, then I believe it shouldn’t be considered to be at that TL.Originally posted by Psion:
As an example, great many motherboards could be produced in the US, but most are produced in Taiwan and other places in Southeast Asia. We could manufacture them here, but this would require building up the industry to do so. But we have people locally who can maintain the technology and repair it; it's safe to say that we have the appropriate TL.
I’d like to point out that if the TL value can be interpreted to mean “Yes, the locals have access to gear of this TL commonly”, but can’t actually produce that gear, then we open ourselves for a world of hurt. Does this mean that only Industrial worlds actually make anything? Who actually makes everything? You no longer can look at a TL-15 world and say, yes, I can go there and have TL-15 goods made for me; because you could get there only to discover that it’s all coming from somewhere else, even if the closest other TL-15 world is a subsector away, and even in that case, you don’t know if that world can make TL-15 goods. I think we’d be lost in a sea of maybes and we-don’t-knows under that definition.
The WBM system splits the UWP TL into 14 values. While this detail provides a wealth of information, a great deal of that detail is lost in the ordinary UWP TL value.Originally posted by Psion:
To me, this means that a world of a given TL might (or might not) produce SOME technology locally, enough to make it a viable trade partner. But more importantly it means that the world has a lifestyle that expects that TL and the infrastructure to deliver it to the populace at large.
It just so happens that I have WBH (which is basically a compilation of grand census and grand survey) right here. It calls world UWP TL the "high common tech level", and defines it as "the highest level of technology commonly enjoyed by the world's population." Some phaseology I have heard in world description in Gateway to Destiny seem to operate by this description.
CT: Book 3 Says: “The technological level of a world determines the quality and sophistication of the products of the world . . .”
GT: First In says: “A world’s base tech level is the level of technology that the world’s population most commonly uses and can produce for itself with local skills and resources.”
The first and most recent sources on world building seem to be in agreement.
I’d like to think I’m talking about a value that contains a compression of other information, losing detail in the process, but which cannot, perforce, represent all that information. Since it can’t represent all of it, we must choose what it, in its lack of detail, does represent. The sources above are clear.Originally posted by Psion:
What you are talking about is referred to as "acheivement TL", which is represents the best acheived locally, not necessarily available publicly.