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  • "Very old thread" search

    Hi,

    I need to find a very old thread, but it seems like I can't go that far back in time by a search. There was a complete research done in this thread about different historical battles between units with a big technological difference, so I cannot just make this research again.

    How can I find back this thread that took lots, lots, LOTS of posts to get its final results?
    Go GalCiv, go! Go Society, go!

  • #2
    Archive?

    Also, you may want to wait until the archive search is fully implemented. See one of the many active threads on this subject available to you now, only in the Community forum.
    I'm building a wagon! On some other part of the internets, obviously (but not that other site).

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    • #3
      which forum was it in? - some of the smaller forums, if youre patient and know roughly when something was, its not to hard to browse the archives, if search isnt working.
      "A person cannot approach the divine by reaching beyond the human. To become human, is what this individual person, has been created for.” Martin Buber

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      • #4
        If you remember a poster from that 'very old thread', you may be able to scan his posts from his profile page...assuming those do not also get truncated by the archieving process.

        Monk
        so long and thanks for all the fish

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        • #5
          A better way if you remember anything is to go into the archive and sort the posts by poster or title.

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          • #6
            When you guys say archive, do you mean simply going by the search hyperlink up there? Because I did that: by the keyword "trifna" since I was a poster.

            It was in the Civ3 thread, whattever name it morphed to, where new ideas were discussed at the time.

            Thanks
            Go GalCiv, go! Go Society, go!

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            • #7
              Look in the dropdown forum bar. There are lots of archived posts from various forums. If you go into search you can choose to search a certain archive, but it wont work. Hence if the post you want is indeed in the Civ3 archive rather than being an active (albeit buried) thread in the Civ3 forum you need to use more cunning search techniques, like the ones I posted.

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              • #8
                If it was that massive one then ordering the archive by views or replies should bring it up near the top. Or do as Bloody Monk suggested, search for all your posts and try and locate it if you have an approximate date.
                Even if it isn't archived, keywording your name won't work unless you were named (or quoted). Just posting won't show you up.
                Concrete, Abstract, or Squoingy?
                "I don't believe in giving scripting languages because the only additional power they give users is the power to create bugs." - Mike Breitkreutz, Firaxis

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                • #9
                  Definitely, I wont find it by search, should it be by my own threads or general search or search by title... It was cut somehow.

                  Does anyone know if a moderator is able to give me access to something? This thread was basically making a list of historical battles with each side having a very different technology and the low-tech side winning; it was looking at the outcome, at the common factors, to which extent the losses were higher for the low-tech army that won...

                  It can't be done twice... while interesting, it's too long. We got to the conclusion that battles where low-tech units won were in fact in a situation where the low-tech units were largely overwhelming the high-tech, so the high-tech wasn't able to fight all at once. The low-tech side had seriously higher losses (all the time if I remember).
                  Go GalCiv, go! Go Society, go!

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                  • #10
                    Are you sure it's not archived?
                    Be good, and if at first you don't succeed, perhaps failure will be back in fashion soon. -- teh Spamski

                    Grapefruit Garden

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                    • #11
                      Is this by any chance the thread you're looking for?
                      Administrator of WePlayCiv -- Civ5 Info Centre | Forum | Gallery

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                      • #12
                        Originally posted by Locutus
                        Is this by any chance the thread you're looking for?
                        It's not it... The other thread had me and korn69 as principal participants and maybe the thread was started by korn also. It doesn't help any search request anyway.

                        I'm now manually looking in the archives. I searched until page 185 of the archives yet... For some reason, it does not go right when I ask to put the threads in order of "number of replies". there's no other option: I'll continue my manual search.

                        Thx.
                        Last edited by Trifna; October 20, 2004, 16:09.
                        Go GalCiv, go! Go Society, go!

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                        • #13
                          I FOUND IT!! I FOUND IT!!!



                          It was on the 208th page, with "korn" right in the title. If you were wondering what I was searching for and why I didn't want to make the research all over, this is what I was looking for:

                          Upgrade of what I found in Britannica encyclopedia. What is not in what I said but would have been interesting simply are things I didn't found in Britannica (such as weapons used). Infos that have an asterisk (*) next to it are from people on the forum.


                          -Glorious victories through Superior Technology, Training, Organization, or Industrial Base

                          Thermopylae
                          August, 480 BC
                          Greek (300 Spartans, their helots and 1100 Beotians) vs Persians
                          Greek lost: all
                          Persians: considerable losses

                          Notice: Persians won but it was a good resistance for the Greeks. The troops I named here (Greeks) are what was used to let all the others escape.


                          Salamis
                          480 BC
                          Persians (800 galleys) vs Greeks (370 triremes)
                          Persians lost: 300 galleys
                          Greek lost: 40 triremes

                          Notice: Greek lured Persians in the narrow waters of the strait of Salamis where the massed Persians ships had difficulty maneuvering.


                          Operation Desert Storm (Iraq)*
                          1990-1991
                          USA (1848 tanks + air power) vs Iraq (4230 tanks)
                          USA troops: Abrams M1, M1A1 and M1A1(HA)
                          Iraq troops: 50 T-72, 1600 T-62, 700 T-54 (Soviet tanks)
                          USA lost: 9 permanent lost, 9 had to be repaired, no casualty within crewmen
                          Iraqi lost: 4000 tanks

                          Notice: USA losts are mostly due to mines. On average, an Abram outranged an Iraqi tank by about 1000 meters.
                          My comment: Informations are not complete. Anti-air, others? What's about air power?
                          Sources:





                          -Ruinous defeats in spite of Superior Technology, Training, Organization, or Industrial Base

                          Isandhdlwana
                          January 22nd-23rd, 1879
                          Zulu (20 000 men) vs British (1700 men)
                          Zulu lost: 3000 to 4000
                          British lost: 1580

                          Notice: Zulu advanced unnoticed
                          My comment: This is partly because they attacked all at the same time (stack unit someone? )


                          Battle of Adwa
                          March 1st, 1896
                          Italy (14 500 men) vs Ethiopia (100 000 men)
                          Italian lost (killed, wounded or captured): 70%
                          Ethiopian lost: not said

                          Notice: Italian columns were disorganized and Italians lack adequates maps of the area. Part of the Italian losts are due to a retreat in difficult terrain, harrassed by hostile population.
                          My comment: Seems partly due to terrain and number of men all there at same time (almost 1:7 ratio)


                          Dien Bein Phu
                          November 20th* to May 7th, 1954
                          France (15 709 men*) vs VietMinh (socialists Viets) (40 000 men)
                          France troops*: tanks, artillery and air support
                          VietMinh troops*: guns (light to heavy), anti-air, mortars
                          France lost*: 1800 killed, 5000 wounded
                          VietMinh*: 8 000 to 12 000 killed, 15 000 to 30 000 wounded


                          Notice: French (fortified) taken by surprise. Roads were cut so troops and supplies could only come by air. VietMinh were popularly supported (dunno if it changes anything). Heavy artillery broke French lines.
                          My comment: I guess 40 000 men is alot, espescially if they had the jungle advantage where French and American were seriously not trained to.


                          Little Bighorn
                          June 25th, 1876
                          USA vs Amerindians (cleary overwhelming Americans)
                          American troops: cavalry
                          American lost: more than 200 (they only talk of Custer's 7th cavalry who was completely vanquished)

                          Notice: Part of the cavalry was surprised to see some encampment where they weren't thought to be and it caused some problems to the tactic. Unaware about it, the other part of cavalry arrived alone with the group they were supposed to attack. Lost of strtegic edge that they thought they would have (river). Amerindians were alerted of Custer's attack because of other attacks they already had (Custer is the one that was surprised to see some troops where he didn't thaught). Other than Custer's 7th cavalry, the other retreated (they had attacked before him).
                          My comment: Here again we see a common factor: more troops at the same place. Also terrain advantage/disadvantage that got a place.


                          Spartacus
                          71 BC
                          Rome (8 legions=54 000 men*) vs Spartacus (ultimately, Spartacus had at least 90 000 men)
                          Spartacus lost: erm... alot including the 6000 crucified

                          Notice: They lost this battle (and died), but they also beated 2 consuls in 72 BC it is said. But I'd say they were the ones with more troops, and not the romans. 90 000... Not every consul has 50 000 men, no? Notice that not all slaves are combatants.*


                          Agincourt
                          October 25th, 1415
                          French (20 000 to 30 000 men) vs English (5900 men)
                          French troops: many of the troops were mounted knights in heavy armor
                          English troops: 900 men-at-arms and 5000 archers
                          French lost: 1500 knights and 4500 men-at-arms
                          English lost: less than 450 men

                          Notice: French unwisely chose a battlefield with a a narrow frontage of only about 1000 yards of open ground between the two woods, making large maneuvers almost impossible.



                          Similarity: more troops on the winner's side at the same battle at the same time. (stack unit someone? )
                          Not surprising, since one strategy is trying to catch the opponent's troops by little parts.

                          That's what I found. You guys should all look at getting this encyclopedia. Encarta is peanut compared to it. It's marvelous


                          About Napoleon in Russia, I read about this war and I know that troops were frozen (winter). Many died because they hadn't enough supplies or from frost. All this not helping morale to make things worst. I guess going from France to Russia in winter is a great change of temperature...
                          This, plus a bit more in the discussions around.

                          Quoted from http://apolyton.net/forums/showthrea...0&pagenumber=6
                          Go GalCiv, go! Go Society, go!

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