Just how much processing does feedstock need before you can put it in a fabber or a maker and start turning it in to durable goods? Can you pour iron-rich ore, water, and charcoal into a dissembler and immediately (or within a couple of hours) start cranking out simple hand tools and components? Or are their intermediate steps that need to take place to process and refine ores, synthesize various chemicals, and then turn it all in to a format that you can pipe in to a fabber?
If there is a detailed explanation of this I haven't found it yet in the EP books. The passing references to it certainly make it sound like you can drop random junk in to a kitchen dissassembler and immediately start producing something from a connected fabber.
Contrast, say, the Diamond Age, where from what I can remember there was a complex infrastructure devoted to leaching specific elements out of ocean water and other sources then feeding them through a very complex and expensive durable infrastructure to the various nanoscale printers that were employed in the story.
Basically - How much infrastructure support is needed to make feedstock, or can you literally shovel dirt in to a disassembler and let it fish for useful elements?
I'm asking because mining is constantly mentioned as an important economic process and I'm not clear exactly what mining entails. Is a mining machine a big disassembler with a drill on the front that eats ore and poops out ingots and slag? Are ores and raw hydrocarbons processed in to usable form on site or do they need to be freighted to distant processing facilities to be turned into useable form? If I crack open the cargo containers on a transport moving from the belt to mars, or a railcar going from a mining installation to a city, what am I going to actually find in there? If my mining team discovers a rich uranium deposit in an asteroid what do you do to turn that in to fuel rods? Are you mining the raw (apparently very low yield) ore and shipping that to a processing facility or do you have a fabber of some kind turning it into plates of uranium metal right there?
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What is boils down to is that "Killer Robots exterminate humanity and escape to the stars" is one of the *good futures*.