THIS IS A READ-ONLY ARCHIVE FROM THE SORABJI.COM MESSAGE BOARDS (1995-2016). |
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maybe we should take note of the Liberian 'BDU' |
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i can't think of anything other than night time artic warfare or deep sea warfare. |
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(I am currently on hold with Travelocity's customer service, as I am so dumb as to buy airline tickets for flights leaving on the wrong days. What an idiot I am. Instead of Muzak, I get to listen to Billie Holiday sing about what is this thing called love, and now I'm listening to Sting's "Mad About You," which is nice, because I haven't heard it in years and years. "A stone's throw from Jerusalem...") |
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Ok, back to the BDUs. What about black? Well, anyway, I'm sure the military's fashion designers did their research. |
hurray! i see it in army stores but i always thought it was a made-up one, like that ugly 'cyber-flage' that's like regular green camo but pixelated. Or that girly camoflage with pink that shows up sometimes in malls. Or the pants i have which have been mocked as "slaughterhouse camoflage", made of black white and red. I never know what to make of it. anyway, the blue camo is real! yay! |
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I think that the "urban BDU" looks like its made for european/northern urban areas. I mean, look at that photo again, then think of the primary color of Middle Eastern cities. They'd stick out like sore thumbs. If it were for American cities, they would need spray painted tags on them. |
(its real name is "American digital disruptive camouflage pattern") |
I love it. I am having trouble keeping my laughter down. I was looking at the flowered over-alls.. but I imagine those poor souls grab what they can. DAMMIT. |
I cannot understand that. It must be a night thing. |
oh, the things you learn on the internet! --- "WASHINGTON — They might be the few and the proud, but the U.S. Marine Corps isn’t alone in its trailblazing effort to make a distinctively flashy fashion statement. The Canadian army was there first. The Marine Corps just started field-testing the computer-generated, digitally dappled "cammies," or camouflage uniforms, while the Canadian forces began field-testing them in 1995. In fact, the Canadian army has been researching the feasibility of digitally designed uniforms and collecting data since 1988, said Canadian Lt. Col. Jacques Levesque, project manager for the Clothe solider program. "We’re at the leading edge of this," he said. Both the Corps’ pixilated uniform and the "new Canadian disruptive pattern," or CADPAT, are designed to blend better with surroundings, while standing out among other services’ uniforms. Canadian research proves the pixilated uniforms hide soldiers better, he said. For example, between two soldiers standing side-by-side, one clad in the digitally designed uniform and the other in the traditional battle dress uniform, there is a 40 percent less chance of being detected from 200 meters away in the improved version, he said. And there’s an entire science behind the production of the uniforms. Different fabrics absorb dyes differently, and the Canadian army has spent five years working with companies to perfect the mix to render the best pattern. The Canadian government holds the copyright to the digital pattern and the Danish company DADCON owns the algorithms and digital analysis that make up the patterns." ---- |
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Then i'll fix ya some Limeaide. |
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Which parts of Canada are French speaking? I took 4 years of French and my mom had set up a job for me somewhere in Canada with her company to be a translator... of course then I started dating my husband and I fell in love and of course turned down the job. But I was kind of hoping to maybe try again... |
I saw the new USMC "digital camo" BDUS when I was at Camp Pendleton earlier this year, and I was wondering about it. I wonder when they will hit the surplus stores, I need some new BDU trousers. The ones I am wearing now are developing serious holes in the side pockets. You can't beat BDUs for summer field clothing. |
Normally speaking, french people live in Quebec and New Brunswick, and half of Ottawa. |
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i merely try to steer you away from the cyber-flage. It's in abundance at our surplus stores. "Look at me! I'm a badly rendered PlayStation 2 enemy!" |
--Elijah |
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