"Welcome to military bureaucracy. They want results, but not considerations." Dr. Shortle shook his head. "I swear, if they like it so much, they should develop it themselves instead of burdening us with impossible dreams and creating unreasonable deadlines."
Neville listened to this exchange carefully, even as his thoughts raced ahead.
He knew that, thanks to his knowledge of the original timeline, neural sync tube piloting would indeed become the norm within three years. The technology would prove reliable, and the benefits would outweigh the concerns.
But there would be consequences, too.
That was the significant reduction in omega and female beta participation in frontline military service.
The full neural sync placed different demands on different body types, and the future standard wouldn't favor everyone equally.
Still, that was the talk for the future, and he couldn't say anything about it.
