How to prevent electronic advancement beyond the early cold war era?











up vote
8
down vote

favorite












Here are what I wants in my world:




  • Early generation of computer with a bulky size and very limited capability, like the text-based computer in Fallout universe.

  • Limited guidance and detection system. Missiles are exist but the range is very limited and could be avoided with countermeasures or even by a skilled pilot. Radar & sensor exist, but like above, the range is limited and might show a false alarm.

  • Early generation of jet engines that slow enough for the fighter pilots to occasionaly engages in machine gun dogfight.

  • Colored television exist. So does the handheld transciever.

  • BONUS: No atomic bombs and no space exploration.


The problem is I want the electronic devices in this world to stay in early cold war era for as long as possible. Let's say, it need a thousand years or more to discover smartphone, or even better: NEVER.



Since magic does exist in this world, I had been thinking about making the people in this world (or even the world itself) to emits Electromagnetic Pulse (EMP) that would fry any electronics that use transistor but not the other one that use vacuum tube so they'll only have the "classic" electronics.



Does the EMP really works that way? Does the absent of transistor really matter for a world to move foward the era? Or actually the vacuum tube is enough to recreate the world we currently living in? Do you have more plausible solution to this problem?










share|improve this question







New contributor




arlilo is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
















  • 2




    I'm not 100% sure on historical accuracy, but if you do away with the transistor or make it so it was never invented, your going to be stuck in an WWII era. Its pretty easily to freeze technology in a story, simply by letting something never be invented or conceived of in the first place.
    – Shadowzee
    7 hours ago






  • 1




    Related questions: Stunting Technological Growth After World War II and Is a world with no technological improvement possible?.
    – Elmy
    5 hours ago










  • Follow Fallout, the Cold War went Hot. Boom - instant technological stagnation!
    – Joe Bloggs
    3 hours ago










  • You say the "Cold War Era" but does the Cold War itself still have to have happened?
    – colmde
    3 hours ago















up vote
8
down vote

favorite












Here are what I wants in my world:




  • Early generation of computer with a bulky size and very limited capability, like the text-based computer in Fallout universe.

  • Limited guidance and detection system. Missiles are exist but the range is very limited and could be avoided with countermeasures or even by a skilled pilot. Radar & sensor exist, but like above, the range is limited and might show a false alarm.

  • Early generation of jet engines that slow enough for the fighter pilots to occasionaly engages in machine gun dogfight.

  • Colored television exist. So does the handheld transciever.

  • BONUS: No atomic bombs and no space exploration.


The problem is I want the electronic devices in this world to stay in early cold war era for as long as possible. Let's say, it need a thousand years or more to discover smartphone, or even better: NEVER.



Since magic does exist in this world, I had been thinking about making the people in this world (or even the world itself) to emits Electromagnetic Pulse (EMP) that would fry any electronics that use transistor but not the other one that use vacuum tube so they'll only have the "classic" electronics.



Does the EMP really works that way? Does the absent of transistor really matter for a world to move foward the era? Or actually the vacuum tube is enough to recreate the world we currently living in? Do you have more plausible solution to this problem?










share|improve this question







New contributor




arlilo is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
















  • 2




    I'm not 100% sure on historical accuracy, but if you do away with the transistor or make it so it was never invented, your going to be stuck in an WWII era. Its pretty easily to freeze technology in a story, simply by letting something never be invented or conceived of in the first place.
    – Shadowzee
    7 hours ago






  • 1




    Related questions: Stunting Technological Growth After World War II and Is a world with no technological improvement possible?.
    – Elmy
    5 hours ago










  • Follow Fallout, the Cold War went Hot. Boom - instant technological stagnation!
    – Joe Bloggs
    3 hours ago










  • You say the "Cold War Era" but does the Cold War itself still have to have happened?
    – colmde
    3 hours ago













up vote
8
down vote

favorite









up vote
8
down vote

favorite











Here are what I wants in my world:




  • Early generation of computer with a bulky size and very limited capability, like the text-based computer in Fallout universe.

  • Limited guidance and detection system. Missiles are exist but the range is very limited and could be avoided with countermeasures or even by a skilled pilot. Radar & sensor exist, but like above, the range is limited and might show a false alarm.

  • Early generation of jet engines that slow enough for the fighter pilots to occasionaly engages in machine gun dogfight.

  • Colored television exist. So does the handheld transciever.

  • BONUS: No atomic bombs and no space exploration.


The problem is I want the electronic devices in this world to stay in early cold war era for as long as possible. Let's say, it need a thousand years or more to discover smartphone, or even better: NEVER.



Since magic does exist in this world, I had been thinking about making the people in this world (or even the world itself) to emits Electromagnetic Pulse (EMP) that would fry any electronics that use transistor but not the other one that use vacuum tube so they'll only have the "classic" electronics.



Does the EMP really works that way? Does the absent of transistor really matter for a world to move foward the era? Or actually the vacuum tube is enough to recreate the world we currently living in? Do you have more plausible solution to this problem?










share|improve this question







New contributor




arlilo is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











Here are what I wants in my world:




  • Early generation of computer with a bulky size and very limited capability, like the text-based computer in Fallout universe.

  • Limited guidance and detection system. Missiles are exist but the range is very limited and could be avoided with countermeasures or even by a skilled pilot. Radar & sensor exist, but like above, the range is limited and might show a false alarm.

  • Early generation of jet engines that slow enough for the fighter pilots to occasionaly engages in machine gun dogfight.

  • Colored television exist. So does the handheld transciever.

  • BONUS: No atomic bombs and no space exploration.


The problem is I want the electronic devices in this world to stay in early cold war era for as long as possible. Let's say, it need a thousand years or more to discover smartphone, or even better: NEVER.



Since magic does exist in this world, I had been thinking about making the people in this world (or even the world itself) to emits Electromagnetic Pulse (EMP) that would fry any electronics that use transistor but not the other one that use vacuum tube so they'll only have the "classic" electronics.



Does the EMP really works that way? Does the absent of transistor really matter for a world to move foward the era? Or actually the vacuum tube is enough to recreate the world we currently living in? Do you have more plausible solution to this problem?







reality-check electromagnetism cold-war






share|improve this question







New contributor




arlilo is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question







New contributor




arlilo is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this question




share|improve this question






New contributor




arlilo is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









asked 7 hours ago









arlilo

413




413




New contributor




arlilo is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





New contributor





arlilo is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






arlilo is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.








  • 2




    I'm not 100% sure on historical accuracy, but if you do away with the transistor or make it so it was never invented, your going to be stuck in an WWII era. Its pretty easily to freeze technology in a story, simply by letting something never be invented or conceived of in the first place.
    – Shadowzee
    7 hours ago






  • 1




    Related questions: Stunting Technological Growth After World War II and Is a world with no technological improvement possible?.
    – Elmy
    5 hours ago










  • Follow Fallout, the Cold War went Hot. Boom - instant technological stagnation!
    – Joe Bloggs
    3 hours ago










  • You say the "Cold War Era" but does the Cold War itself still have to have happened?
    – colmde
    3 hours ago














  • 2




    I'm not 100% sure on historical accuracy, but if you do away with the transistor or make it so it was never invented, your going to be stuck in an WWII era. Its pretty easily to freeze technology in a story, simply by letting something never be invented or conceived of in the first place.
    – Shadowzee
    7 hours ago






  • 1




    Related questions: Stunting Technological Growth After World War II and Is a world with no technological improvement possible?.
    – Elmy
    5 hours ago










  • Follow Fallout, the Cold War went Hot. Boom - instant technological stagnation!
    – Joe Bloggs
    3 hours ago










  • You say the "Cold War Era" but does the Cold War itself still have to have happened?
    – colmde
    3 hours ago








2




2




I'm not 100% sure on historical accuracy, but if you do away with the transistor or make it so it was never invented, your going to be stuck in an WWII era. Its pretty easily to freeze technology in a story, simply by letting something never be invented or conceived of in the first place.
– Shadowzee
7 hours ago




I'm not 100% sure on historical accuracy, but if you do away with the transistor or make it so it was never invented, your going to be stuck in an WWII era. Its pretty easily to freeze technology in a story, simply by letting something never be invented or conceived of in the first place.
– Shadowzee
7 hours ago




1




1




Related questions: Stunting Technological Growth After World War II and Is a world with no technological improvement possible?.
– Elmy
5 hours ago




Related questions: Stunting Technological Growth After World War II and Is a world with no technological improvement possible?.
– Elmy
5 hours ago












Follow Fallout, the Cold War went Hot. Boom - instant technological stagnation!
– Joe Bloggs
3 hours ago




Follow Fallout, the Cold War went Hot. Boom - instant technological stagnation!
– Joe Bloggs
3 hours ago












You say the "Cold War Era" but does the Cold War itself still have to have happened?
– colmde
3 hours ago




You say the "Cold War Era" but does the Cold War itself still have to have happened?
– colmde
3 hours ago










4 Answers
4






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
3
down vote













Natural EMP sources in the environment. Call it an excessive sunspot activity. That means microcomputers and integrated circuits are extremely unreliable, it takes individual transistors or better vacuum tubes to work reliably.



You would have to handwave why hardening methods are not applied in your setting, but it could be explained as chicken-and-egg. Microchips never work for long, and so nobody bothers to build and shield them.






share|improve this answer




























    up vote
    1
    down vote













    In order to halt the development of electronics, you could remove silicon (and German and gallium) and force technology to stay with, or return to, vacuum tubes.



    In my proposal, I'm not going to remove it, rather make it unfit for purpose.
    Silicon is one of the most abundant elements in the crust. It will therefore be a great feeding substrate to an alien species of bacteria that landed on earth with one of the meteors impact during the late 40s, early 50s. For instance, in February 1947, a large bolide impacted the Earth in the Sikhote-Alin Mountains, Primorye, Soviet Union. It may take a decade for the bacteria to expand throughout the planet and start happily munching silicon and related compounds. So, even if you discover transistors, they'll degrade quickly, eaten by our visitors, and far too quickly to be used in any meaningful manner. Of course you could encase the circuits in plastic, but these nasty bacteria can sense the silicon within and will perforate the casing with the ease and restlessness with which their earthly cousins go about making oral cavities.






    share|improve this answer





















    • Why not from the start? Have spores of these bacteria present everywhere, they just need elemental silicon to form a colony. We haven't noticed them before because they oxidised all available silicon then went into stasis. Now that we're kind enough to refine more silicon for them...
      – nzaman
      23 mins ago


















    up vote
    0
    down vote













    How about high static energy? So the electric energy does not come from the People or the World itself, but exists in the athmosphere.. if you walk, you are loaded with a little energy and if you touch something metallic, it is released.
    Electronics are very easiely destroeyed by this. In the real world, you unload before working with electronics. In the setting's World, there could be so much static energy that it is not possible to unload enough to let electronics survive.
    Vaccuum tube electrics are much more resistant to this.



    So you can have any Tech that will not be destroyed by electric energy, but no transistors, no CPUs and so on.



    While the moon landing was computed with the equivalent of a 386, it would be hard to impossible to do this without integrated circuits.



    This should prevent nearly everything from your list, but with atomic bombs I do not see why they should not work - on a 1945-1955 level. You could still have drop-down-bombs, but no ICBMs, no cruise-missile.






    share|improve this answer

















    • 1




      Ehm... Michael Faraday would like to exchange a few words with you.
      – NofP
      1 hour ago


















    up vote
    0
    down vote













    You say magic exists in this world. This gives you great license to pretty much do whatever you like.



    First of all, the fact that magic even exists could have the knock on effect of making electronics a lot less interesting and less in demand. Many of the "nerds" who would have been researching electronics are a lot more interested in magic and so things like transistors and furthermore electronics are left unexplored. There is no great push for this kind of thing because magic can do many of the jobs that early electronics could do.



    Colossus, for example, would never have been invented if someone could magically decode the enigma messages in WWII (and Enigma might never have been used if the Germans magically encoded their transmissions in a way that was beyond the capability of any computer, or found a way of magically delivering messages that couldn't be intercepted).



    Alternatively, perhaps magic itself emits a sort of EMP or maybe some sort of electromagnetic pollution that renders transistors or other electronic components useless. If this were the case, it would have been very difficult to even invent them, if we assume that people wouldn't know about the pollution until the electronics stopped working around spells, if they never worked in the first place, they'd have no reason to suspect magic as the cause or even that electronics could have worked.






    share|improve this answer





















      Your Answer





      StackExchange.ifUsing("editor", function () {
      return StackExchange.using("mathjaxEditing", function () {
      StackExchange.MarkdownEditor.creationCallbacks.add(function (editor, postfix) {
      StackExchange.mathjaxEditing.prepareWmdForMathJax(editor, postfix, [["$", "$"], ["\\(","\\)"]]);
      });
      });
      }, "mathjax-editing");

      StackExchange.ready(function() {
      var channelOptions = {
      tags: "".split(" "),
      id: "579"
      };
      initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

      StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function() {
      // Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
      if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled) {
      StackExchange.using("snippets", function() {
      createEditor();
      });
      }
      else {
      createEditor();
      }
      });

      function createEditor() {
      StackExchange.prepareEditor({
      heartbeatType: 'answer',
      convertImagesToLinks: false,
      noModals: true,
      showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
      reputationToPostImages: null,
      bindNavPrevention: true,
      postfix: "",
      imageUploader: {
      brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
      contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
      allowUrls: true
      },
      noCode: true, onDemand: true,
      discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
      ,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
      });


      }
      });






      arlilo is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.










      draft saved

      draft discarded


















      StackExchange.ready(
      function () {
      StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fworldbuilding.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f132670%2fhow-to-prevent-electronic-advancement-beyond-the-early-cold-war-era%23new-answer', 'question_page');
      }
      );

      Post as a guest















      Required, but never shown

























      4 Answers
      4






      active

      oldest

      votes








      4 Answers
      4






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

      votes








      up vote
      3
      down vote













      Natural EMP sources in the environment. Call it an excessive sunspot activity. That means microcomputers and integrated circuits are extremely unreliable, it takes individual transistors or better vacuum tubes to work reliably.



      You would have to handwave why hardening methods are not applied in your setting, but it could be explained as chicken-and-egg. Microchips never work for long, and so nobody bothers to build and shield them.






      share|improve this answer

























        up vote
        3
        down vote













        Natural EMP sources in the environment. Call it an excessive sunspot activity. That means microcomputers and integrated circuits are extremely unreliable, it takes individual transistors or better vacuum tubes to work reliably.



        You would have to handwave why hardening methods are not applied in your setting, but it could be explained as chicken-and-egg. Microchips never work for long, and so nobody bothers to build and shield them.






        share|improve this answer























          up vote
          3
          down vote










          up vote
          3
          down vote









          Natural EMP sources in the environment. Call it an excessive sunspot activity. That means microcomputers and integrated circuits are extremely unreliable, it takes individual transistors or better vacuum tubes to work reliably.



          You would have to handwave why hardening methods are not applied in your setting, but it could be explained as chicken-and-egg. Microchips never work for long, and so nobody bothers to build and shield them.






          share|improve this answer












          Natural EMP sources in the environment. Call it an excessive sunspot activity. That means microcomputers and integrated circuits are extremely unreliable, it takes individual transistors or better vacuum tubes to work reliably.



          You would have to handwave why hardening methods are not applied in your setting, but it could be explained as chicken-and-egg. Microchips never work for long, and so nobody bothers to build and shield them.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered 6 hours ago









          o.m.

          57.4k682191




          57.4k682191






















              up vote
              1
              down vote













              In order to halt the development of electronics, you could remove silicon (and German and gallium) and force technology to stay with, or return to, vacuum tubes.



              In my proposal, I'm not going to remove it, rather make it unfit for purpose.
              Silicon is one of the most abundant elements in the crust. It will therefore be a great feeding substrate to an alien species of bacteria that landed on earth with one of the meteors impact during the late 40s, early 50s. For instance, in February 1947, a large bolide impacted the Earth in the Sikhote-Alin Mountains, Primorye, Soviet Union. It may take a decade for the bacteria to expand throughout the planet and start happily munching silicon and related compounds. So, even if you discover transistors, they'll degrade quickly, eaten by our visitors, and far too quickly to be used in any meaningful manner. Of course you could encase the circuits in plastic, but these nasty bacteria can sense the silicon within and will perforate the casing with the ease and restlessness with which their earthly cousins go about making oral cavities.






              share|improve this answer





















              • Why not from the start? Have spores of these bacteria present everywhere, they just need elemental silicon to form a colony. We haven't noticed them before because they oxidised all available silicon then went into stasis. Now that we're kind enough to refine more silicon for them...
                – nzaman
                23 mins ago















              up vote
              1
              down vote













              In order to halt the development of electronics, you could remove silicon (and German and gallium) and force technology to stay with, or return to, vacuum tubes.



              In my proposal, I'm not going to remove it, rather make it unfit for purpose.
              Silicon is one of the most abundant elements in the crust. It will therefore be a great feeding substrate to an alien species of bacteria that landed on earth with one of the meteors impact during the late 40s, early 50s. For instance, in February 1947, a large bolide impacted the Earth in the Sikhote-Alin Mountains, Primorye, Soviet Union. It may take a decade for the bacteria to expand throughout the planet and start happily munching silicon and related compounds. So, even if you discover transistors, they'll degrade quickly, eaten by our visitors, and far too quickly to be used in any meaningful manner. Of course you could encase the circuits in plastic, but these nasty bacteria can sense the silicon within and will perforate the casing with the ease and restlessness with which their earthly cousins go about making oral cavities.






              share|improve this answer





















              • Why not from the start? Have spores of these bacteria present everywhere, they just need elemental silicon to form a colony. We haven't noticed them before because they oxidised all available silicon then went into stasis. Now that we're kind enough to refine more silicon for them...
                – nzaman
                23 mins ago













              up vote
              1
              down vote










              up vote
              1
              down vote









              In order to halt the development of electronics, you could remove silicon (and German and gallium) and force technology to stay with, or return to, vacuum tubes.



              In my proposal, I'm not going to remove it, rather make it unfit for purpose.
              Silicon is one of the most abundant elements in the crust. It will therefore be a great feeding substrate to an alien species of bacteria that landed on earth with one of the meteors impact during the late 40s, early 50s. For instance, in February 1947, a large bolide impacted the Earth in the Sikhote-Alin Mountains, Primorye, Soviet Union. It may take a decade for the bacteria to expand throughout the planet and start happily munching silicon and related compounds. So, even if you discover transistors, they'll degrade quickly, eaten by our visitors, and far too quickly to be used in any meaningful manner. Of course you could encase the circuits in plastic, but these nasty bacteria can sense the silicon within and will perforate the casing with the ease and restlessness with which their earthly cousins go about making oral cavities.






              share|improve this answer












              In order to halt the development of electronics, you could remove silicon (and German and gallium) and force technology to stay with, or return to, vacuum tubes.



              In my proposal, I'm not going to remove it, rather make it unfit for purpose.
              Silicon is one of the most abundant elements in the crust. It will therefore be a great feeding substrate to an alien species of bacteria that landed on earth with one of the meteors impact during the late 40s, early 50s. For instance, in February 1947, a large bolide impacted the Earth in the Sikhote-Alin Mountains, Primorye, Soviet Union. It may take a decade for the bacteria to expand throughout the planet and start happily munching silicon and related compounds. So, even if you discover transistors, they'll degrade quickly, eaten by our visitors, and far too quickly to be used in any meaningful manner. Of course you could encase the circuits in plastic, but these nasty bacteria can sense the silicon within and will perforate the casing with the ease and restlessness with which their earthly cousins go about making oral cavities.







              share|improve this answer












              share|improve this answer



              share|improve this answer










              answered 1 hour ago









              NofP

              2,558420




              2,558420












              • Why not from the start? Have spores of these bacteria present everywhere, they just need elemental silicon to form a colony. We haven't noticed them before because they oxidised all available silicon then went into stasis. Now that we're kind enough to refine more silicon for them...
                – nzaman
                23 mins ago


















              • Why not from the start? Have spores of these bacteria present everywhere, they just need elemental silicon to form a colony. We haven't noticed them before because they oxidised all available silicon then went into stasis. Now that we're kind enough to refine more silicon for them...
                – nzaman
                23 mins ago
















              Why not from the start? Have spores of these bacteria present everywhere, they just need elemental silicon to form a colony. We haven't noticed them before because they oxidised all available silicon then went into stasis. Now that we're kind enough to refine more silicon for them...
              – nzaman
              23 mins ago




              Why not from the start? Have spores of these bacteria present everywhere, they just need elemental silicon to form a colony. We haven't noticed them before because they oxidised all available silicon then went into stasis. Now that we're kind enough to refine more silicon for them...
              – nzaman
              23 mins ago










              up vote
              0
              down vote













              How about high static energy? So the electric energy does not come from the People or the World itself, but exists in the athmosphere.. if you walk, you are loaded with a little energy and if you touch something metallic, it is released.
              Electronics are very easiely destroeyed by this. In the real world, you unload before working with electronics. In the setting's World, there could be so much static energy that it is not possible to unload enough to let electronics survive.
              Vaccuum tube electrics are much more resistant to this.



              So you can have any Tech that will not be destroyed by electric energy, but no transistors, no CPUs and so on.



              While the moon landing was computed with the equivalent of a 386, it would be hard to impossible to do this without integrated circuits.



              This should prevent nearly everything from your list, but with atomic bombs I do not see why they should not work - on a 1945-1955 level. You could still have drop-down-bombs, but no ICBMs, no cruise-missile.






              share|improve this answer

















              • 1




                Ehm... Michael Faraday would like to exchange a few words with you.
                – NofP
                1 hour ago















              up vote
              0
              down vote













              How about high static energy? So the electric energy does not come from the People or the World itself, but exists in the athmosphere.. if you walk, you are loaded with a little energy and if you touch something metallic, it is released.
              Electronics are very easiely destroeyed by this. In the real world, you unload before working with electronics. In the setting's World, there could be so much static energy that it is not possible to unload enough to let electronics survive.
              Vaccuum tube electrics are much more resistant to this.



              So you can have any Tech that will not be destroyed by electric energy, but no transistors, no CPUs and so on.



              While the moon landing was computed with the equivalent of a 386, it would be hard to impossible to do this without integrated circuits.



              This should prevent nearly everything from your list, but with atomic bombs I do not see why they should not work - on a 1945-1955 level. You could still have drop-down-bombs, but no ICBMs, no cruise-missile.






              share|improve this answer

















              • 1




                Ehm... Michael Faraday would like to exchange a few words with you.
                – NofP
                1 hour ago













              up vote
              0
              down vote










              up vote
              0
              down vote









              How about high static energy? So the electric energy does not come from the People or the World itself, but exists in the athmosphere.. if you walk, you are loaded with a little energy and if you touch something metallic, it is released.
              Electronics are very easiely destroeyed by this. In the real world, you unload before working with electronics. In the setting's World, there could be so much static energy that it is not possible to unload enough to let electronics survive.
              Vaccuum tube electrics are much more resistant to this.



              So you can have any Tech that will not be destroyed by electric energy, but no transistors, no CPUs and so on.



              While the moon landing was computed with the equivalent of a 386, it would be hard to impossible to do this without integrated circuits.



              This should prevent nearly everything from your list, but with atomic bombs I do not see why they should not work - on a 1945-1955 level. You could still have drop-down-bombs, but no ICBMs, no cruise-missile.






              share|improve this answer












              How about high static energy? So the electric energy does not come from the People or the World itself, but exists in the athmosphere.. if you walk, you are loaded with a little energy and if you touch something metallic, it is released.
              Electronics are very easiely destroeyed by this. In the real world, you unload before working with electronics. In the setting's World, there could be so much static energy that it is not possible to unload enough to let electronics survive.
              Vaccuum tube electrics are much more resistant to this.



              So you can have any Tech that will not be destroyed by electric energy, but no transistors, no CPUs and so on.



              While the moon landing was computed with the equivalent of a 386, it would be hard to impossible to do this without integrated circuits.



              This should prevent nearly everything from your list, but with atomic bombs I do not see why they should not work - on a 1945-1955 level. You could still have drop-down-bombs, but no ICBMs, no cruise-missile.







              share|improve this answer












              share|improve this answer



              share|improve this answer










              answered 4 hours ago









              Julian Egner

              49528




              49528








              • 1




                Ehm... Michael Faraday would like to exchange a few words with you.
                – NofP
                1 hour ago














              • 1




                Ehm... Michael Faraday would like to exchange a few words with you.
                – NofP
                1 hour ago








              1




              1




              Ehm... Michael Faraday would like to exchange a few words with you.
              – NofP
              1 hour ago




              Ehm... Michael Faraday would like to exchange a few words with you.
              – NofP
              1 hour ago










              up vote
              0
              down vote













              You say magic exists in this world. This gives you great license to pretty much do whatever you like.



              First of all, the fact that magic even exists could have the knock on effect of making electronics a lot less interesting and less in demand. Many of the "nerds" who would have been researching electronics are a lot more interested in magic and so things like transistors and furthermore electronics are left unexplored. There is no great push for this kind of thing because magic can do many of the jobs that early electronics could do.



              Colossus, for example, would never have been invented if someone could magically decode the enigma messages in WWII (and Enigma might never have been used if the Germans magically encoded their transmissions in a way that was beyond the capability of any computer, or found a way of magically delivering messages that couldn't be intercepted).



              Alternatively, perhaps magic itself emits a sort of EMP or maybe some sort of electromagnetic pollution that renders transistors or other electronic components useless. If this were the case, it would have been very difficult to even invent them, if we assume that people wouldn't know about the pollution until the electronics stopped working around spells, if they never worked in the first place, they'd have no reason to suspect magic as the cause or even that electronics could have worked.






              share|improve this answer

























                up vote
                0
                down vote













                You say magic exists in this world. This gives you great license to pretty much do whatever you like.



                First of all, the fact that magic even exists could have the knock on effect of making electronics a lot less interesting and less in demand. Many of the "nerds" who would have been researching electronics are a lot more interested in magic and so things like transistors and furthermore electronics are left unexplored. There is no great push for this kind of thing because magic can do many of the jobs that early electronics could do.



                Colossus, for example, would never have been invented if someone could magically decode the enigma messages in WWII (and Enigma might never have been used if the Germans magically encoded their transmissions in a way that was beyond the capability of any computer, or found a way of magically delivering messages that couldn't be intercepted).



                Alternatively, perhaps magic itself emits a sort of EMP or maybe some sort of electromagnetic pollution that renders transistors or other electronic components useless. If this were the case, it would have been very difficult to even invent them, if we assume that people wouldn't know about the pollution until the electronics stopped working around spells, if they never worked in the first place, they'd have no reason to suspect magic as the cause or even that electronics could have worked.






                share|improve this answer























                  up vote
                  0
                  down vote










                  up vote
                  0
                  down vote









                  You say magic exists in this world. This gives you great license to pretty much do whatever you like.



                  First of all, the fact that magic even exists could have the knock on effect of making electronics a lot less interesting and less in demand. Many of the "nerds" who would have been researching electronics are a lot more interested in magic and so things like transistors and furthermore electronics are left unexplored. There is no great push for this kind of thing because magic can do many of the jobs that early electronics could do.



                  Colossus, for example, would never have been invented if someone could magically decode the enigma messages in WWII (and Enigma might never have been used if the Germans magically encoded their transmissions in a way that was beyond the capability of any computer, or found a way of magically delivering messages that couldn't be intercepted).



                  Alternatively, perhaps magic itself emits a sort of EMP or maybe some sort of electromagnetic pollution that renders transistors or other electronic components useless. If this were the case, it would have been very difficult to even invent them, if we assume that people wouldn't know about the pollution until the electronics stopped working around spells, if they never worked in the first place, they'd have no reason to suspect magic as the cause or even that electronics could have worked.






                  share|improve this answer












                  You say magic exists in this world. This gives you great license to pretty much do whatever you like.



                  First of all, the fact that magic even exists could have the knock on effect of making electronics a lot less interesting and less in demand. Many of the "nerds" who would have been researching electronics are a lot more interested in magic and so things like transistors and furthermore electronics are left unexplored. There is no great push for this kind of thing because magic can do many of the jobs that early electronics could do.



                  Colossus, for example, would never have been invented if someone could magically decode the enigma messages in WWII (and Enigma might never have been used if the Germans magically encoded their transmissions in a way that was beyond the capability of any computer, or found a way of magically delivering messages that couldn't be intercepted).



                  Alternatively, perhaps magic itself emits a sort of EMP or maybe some sort of electromagnetic pollution that renders transistors or other electronic components useless. If this were the case, it would have been very difficult to even invent them, if we assume that people wouldn't know about the pollution until the electronics stopped working around spells, if they never worked in the first place, they'd have no reason to suspect magic as the cause or even that electronics could have worked.







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered 3 hours ago









                  colmde

                  6,0731029




                  6,0731029






















                      arlilo is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.










                      draft saved

                      draft discarded


















                      arlilo is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.













                      arlilo is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.












                      arlilo is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
















                      Thanks for contributing an answer to Worldbuilding Stack Exchange!


                      • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

                      But avoid



                      • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

                      • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.


                      Use MathJax to format equations. MathJax reference.


                      To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.





                      Some of your past answers have not been well-received, and you're in danger of being blocked from answering.


                      Please pay close attention to the following guidance:


                      • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

                      But avoid



                      • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

                      • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.


                      To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




                      draft saved


                      draft discarded














                      StackExchange.ready(
                      function () {
                      StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fworldbuilding.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f132670%2fhow-to-prevent-electronic-advancement-beyond-the-early-cold-war-era%23new-answer', 'question_page');
                      }
                      );

                      Post as a guest















                      Required, but never shown





















































                      Required, but never shown














                      Required, but never shown












                      Required, but never shown







                      Required, but never shown

































                      Required, but never shown














                      Required, but never shown












                      Required, but never shown







                      Required, but never shown







                      Popular posts from this blog

                      Trompette piccolo

                      Slow SSRS Report in dynamic grouping and multiple parameters

                      Simon Yates (cyclisme)