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| Trek Tech Pass me the quantum flux regulator, will you? |
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#1 |
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Lieutenant Commander
Location: Lexington, KY
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"What we got back, didn't live long.....Fortunately."
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#2 |
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Commander
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Re: "What we got back, didn't live long.....Fortunately."
The TMP crew was among the most incompetent in Starfleet. I think it's kind of amusing that Kirk was in command of the Enterprise for not even one minute before the first two crewmembers died -- the transporter failed almost on cue.
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"You have been examined. Your ship must be destroyed. We make assumption you have a deity, or deities, or some such beliefs which comfort you. We therefore grant you ten Earth time periods known as minutes to make preparations." |
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#3 |
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Fleet Captain
Location: I'm a Romulan now. Romulans are cool
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Re: "What we got back, didn't live long.....Fortunately."
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I'm your Venus, I'm your fire, At your desire, Captain. - Mr Spock Hello to Jason Isaacs!
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#4 | ||
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Rear Admiral
Location: I'm in your ___, ___ing your ___
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Re: "What we got back, didn't live long.....Fortunately."
The realistic reason (as in "If Star Trek worked anything like the real world") is that pulling complicated-sounding technobabble out of your ass doesn't usually work. If you're trying to get a piece of complex machinery to do something new, you're going to spend at least three to five weeks either redesigning or reprogramming it and testing it first to make sure it really does what you think it's going to do without exploding or killing people. IOW, "dump them back into the buffer and rematerialzie them using the last good scan" is not a viable option unless there's a button on your console that makes your transporter do exactly that. If the pressing of the "reload original pattern" button doesn't work, you're boned.
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It appears to be powered by some form of electricity... |
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#5 | |
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Ensign
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Re: "What we got back, didn't live long.....Fortunately."
Concerning replicators and their relation to the transporter, the replicators do not create the matter with any degree of precision comparable to the transporter. That's why people often complain about the taste of replicated food. Obviously the limits of the replicator include not being able to replicate "living" matter. Now, it has been established that the transporters do store certain data about the transport that can be accessed later, but not the raw data of the position, velocity, and composition of all the particles in the person, something which, according to Lawrence Krauss, would take approximately 10 million yottabytes, or about 100 trillion times more information than the entire World Wide Web. Presumably this amount of information is not stored for long periods of time in the transporter system. And even if it were, you would have to resort to creating an imperfect copy. Presumably in Star Trek I, either the matter stream or data was corrupted. When this happens, it isn't like a computer, where a copy is stored somewhere that we can resort to. The data may be stored for a short time, but not the matter, and replicating a person doesn't work. That's why those people died. Last edited by Trekky0623; December 10 2012 at 06:32 AM. |
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#6 | ||
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Admiral
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Re: "What we got back, didn't live long.....Fortunately."
Presumably, the process would have gone without a hitch had Rand not activated the Enterprise machinery at all. Which may be why nobody bothered to tell her that her machinery was down for repairs. Although that's exaggerating quite a bit: the machinery wasn't really "down". Another piece of machinery somehow relating to it suddenly blew a fuse just seconds before the transport. At which point our heroes immediately informed the transporter room. A tad too late, of course, but c'est la vie. I don't really see the supposed incompetence here. Timo Saloniemi |
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#7 | |
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Commander
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Re: "What we got back, didn't live long.....Fortunately."
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#8 |
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Admiral
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Re: "What we got back, didn't live long.....Fortunately."
In light of that, it seems the stream was sent into the buffers or other innards of the Enterprise, rather than simply being sent into the middle of the transporter room and allowed to rematerialize there on its own. Which was a bad choice when the receiving machinery wasn't working properly, but might have been an advantageous idea otherwise, because from "Realm of Fear" we know that locking two transporters together (and essentially sharing their pattern buffer contents) gives better range and/or penetration in difficult circumstances. If what we're seeing is "Realm of Fear" type sharing, then the pattern might be in one of the machines, or partially in both, and moved like a hot potato - but since one machine was out of order, the pattern would be suffering whenever it was in the bowels of that broken machine. With two well-working machines, the two transporter operators could have played tennis with pattern basically forever... Timo Saloniemi |
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#9 |
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Commander
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Re: "What we got back, didn't live long.....Fortunately."
Decker EXITS. Kirk waits, collecting his composure as he watches him go. Then Kirk turns to glare at Scott. Interrupted by a flare as something shorts out at the mechanism where Scott and Decker had been working. Technician (Clearly) reacts, hits an inter- com button fast: TECHNICIAN (CLEARY) Transporter room, come in! Urgent! (to Scott) Redline on the transporters, Mister Scott! Scott whirls to a console fast, speaks urgently! SCOTT Transporter room, do not engage! Do not.... TECHNICIAN (CLEARY) (reacting to the reading; interruption) Too late; they're beaming now! Kirk is exiting on a run, followed by Scott. 76 INT. TRANSPORTER ROOM - INCLUDING TRANSPORTER CHAMBER 76 (O) An unusually defective looking TRANSPORTER EFFECT in progress, alternately flashing and glowing -- even the Transporter SOUND seems wrong, as if struggling to overcome some problem. At the console, CHIEF RAND and ASSISTANT are reacting in surprised, near-horror as they attempt vainly to save the situation. RAND (into intercom) Starfleet, override us! OVERRIDE...! Yank them back! Suddenly, from Rand's console,a VIOLENT GLARE -- a PROTESTING SOUND from the circuitry. And on the con- sole a red-warning light now begins flashing. STARFLEET VOICE Unable to retrieve their pattern, Enterprise....! Rand reacts in real horror now as human forms begin to FAINTLY MATERIALIZE, then FADE AWAY, then REAPPEAR IN FAINTLY MISSHAPEN FORM as she frantically works con- trols. Kirk ENTERS fast, steps to the console to assist Rand; Scott has also come in and moves to the console, brushes aside the Asst. Chief, and begins manipulating the additional controls himself. SCOTT We're losing the pattern...! KIRK (into intercom) Starfleet, boost your matter gain; we need more signal! RAND Oh, no! They're forming! 77 CLOSER ON THE TRANSPORTER CHAMBER (O) 77 with the human forms FLUTTERING INTO FULLER AND FULLER MATERIALIZATION, FRIGHTENINGLY, HORRIBLY MISSHAPEN. We RECOGNIZE one form as the Vulcan, Sonak -- the other a human WOMAN. They MATERIALIZE; we HEAR A MOAN form from the Vulcan -- the Woman's SCREAM OF PAIN. Then, all at once, the half-materialized bodies are gone; the transporter chamber is empty. KIRK Oh, my God...! 78 KIRK, SCOTT AND RAND 78 gazing, horrified, at the empty chamber. KIRK (into intercom) Starfleet, do you have them? A mutter of utter, vacant silence -- and Kirk and Scott look at each other again, their pained faces presaging the answer they already know: STARFLEET VOICE (shaken) Enterprise... what we got back didn't live long. Fortunately. |
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#10 | |
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Admiral
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Re: "What we got back, didn't live long.....Fortunately."
"Boosting of signal" is more or less appropriate jargon in this context, I guess: with a weak signal, the stream being sent might "fade", might fail to contain all the bits, just like a wireless datastream or analog audio signal or whatever today. Perhaps some separate "carrier wave" is required to keep the matter stream going from A to B even after it has left A? In that case, the signal (the phased matter stream) could be boosted by ramping up this "carrier wave" even if all of the signal has left A and much of it is already inside B. But with "Dramatis Personae" in mind, it sounds more likely that this boosting only happens when the stream is inside the machinery, as it survives on its own outside the machinery. In which case it seems some of the stream was inside the SF HQ machine and Kirk wanted all of it safely delivered to the Enterprise machine, until realizing this was never gonna happen and instead attempting the reverse, that is, pushing everything the Enterprise already had back to SF HQ. There'd be very little of the signal "in between" A and B, with just a split-second time delay between A and B even if we assume transporters to be limited to lightspeed. Timo Saloniemi |
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#11 |
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Fleet Captain
Location: West Hollywood, Calif., USA
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Re: "What we got back, didn't live long.....Fortunately."
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#12 |
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Admiral
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Re: "What we got back, didn't live long.....Fortunately."
And it appears somebody fucked up; the Admiral ought to know, either so that he can chop off the necessary heads, or so that he can go throw himself in his own sword. This is the right time to go on the record on issues of responsibility, lest it be dumped on the SF HQ transporter team exclusively. Timo Saloniemi |
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#13 |
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Fleet Captain
Location: Omaha, NE
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Re: "What we got back, didn't live long.....Fortunately."
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#14 |
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Commodore
Location: Calgary, Alberta
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Re: "What we got back, didn't live long.....Fortunately."
Mark
__________________
Mark Nguyen - Producer The 404s - Improv Comedy Group Oh, I like that Trek thing too... |
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#15 |
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Admiral
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Re: "What we got back, didn't live long.....Fortunately."
Timo Saloniemi |
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