Patrick McKenzie (patio11) is joined by Bean, a pseudonymous defense industry expert, to explore the intellectual crossovers between military and civilian domains. The conversation reveals how the defense industry's fundamental constraint of having only one customer (a monopsony) creates entirely different incentives than tech, leading to conservatism and 30-50 year product lifecycles. Bean argues that drones are largely modern iterations of cruise missiles we've had since the 1950s, and explains why current anti-drone defenses make swarm attacks less threatening than headlines suggest.
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Full transcript available here: www.complexsystemspodcast.com/defense-with-bean-of-naval-gazing/
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Timestamps:
(00:00) Intro
(00:29) The overlap between tech and defense
(01:35) Operations research in World War II
(02:55) Mathematical insights and military strategies
(05:28) The role of operations research in modern warfare
(16:59) Tech and defense (Part 1)
(19:48) Sponsor: Mercury
(21:00) Tech and defense (Part 2)
(26:07) Economics behind the defense industry
(32:07) SpaceX's early challenges and achievements
(33:00) The Super Hornet development story
(34:39) Military procurement lessons
(37:42) Aerospace industry retention rates
(38:42) Lockheed Martin's dominance and supply chain
(40:55) Drone technology and military applications
(46:53) Anti-drone defenses and future warfare
(48:01) Naval warfare and historical perspectives
(01:01:03) Wrap