Its limits are so vast, however, that it's actually more accurate to describe it as "anything that's on the menu."Uh, in TOS maybe. Not in any of the other series, where it has regularly been used to create just about anything within its limits
Its limits are so vast, however, that it's actually more accurate to describe it as "anything that's on the menu."Uh, in TOS maybe. Not in any of the other series, where it has regularly been used to create just about anything within its limits
....
Not long enough, given the existence of "neutronic fuel carriers" like the infamous Kobayashi Maru.
No, that's your gross misunderstanding of the technology.No, the basic fundamental principle of the technology is the matter transporter, which is the breaking down of an object into an energy pattern and then reassembling that pattern in another location.
...a menu that can be changed and altered pretty much at will by those with the technical skills to do so. There's been several episodes showing precisely that, as well as pretty much unlimited duplicates of those new creations being replicated.Its limits are so vast, however, that it's actually more accurate to describe it as "anything that's on the menu."
When neelix asks tuvok if the replicator could make him a uniform, he says "no, it cannot". considering the ability of replicators to make just about anything, including weapons, your understanding that its a security feature, rather than a technical feature that prevents uniforms or phasers from being replicated at will. At least one TNG episode mentions either disabling or reprogramming a replicator to prevent the creation of unauthorized weapons.Also, no, the limitations are very limited, and exist for two primary reasons: 1.) because the writers need there to be limits to the technology or else very little of the show makes sense, and 2.) practical, sensible, legal, in-world reasons like not allowing it to create poisons or counterfeit uniforms. In the case of #2, it's not that the replicator can't do it, it's that it won't without some form of hacking those security features. (In which case, according to you, someone would have already spent the time 'uploading' every poison known to man into it aboard every starship, space station, colony, and world that has one.)
That might be the perceived fundamental principle of the replicator to the audience, but in practise (in the episodes) it mostly just serves as a fancy food slot.
I guess that memo didn't reach the writers of NextGen then, as we see in the episode Evolution:Uh, in TOS maybe. Not in any of the other series, where it has regularly been used to create just about anything within its limits, and has been talked about and shown to recycle goods as well.
Yep, it's a food slot alright. According to the TNG Tech Manual, the actual replicator nodes are somewhat larger and there's only a few around the entire ship. What the crew commonly refer to as "replicators" would more properly referred to as "dispensing slots". However, casual speech mannerisms tend to persist among humans, even in the 24th century...Beverly goes over to the sound of running liquid. In the replicator, a glass is overflowing by being continually filled via a materialisation visual effect
CRUSHER: Computer, fix the food slot.
COMPUTER: The food slot is functioning properly.
CRUSHER: Well, check again.
COMPUTER: The food slot is functioning properly.
CRUSHER: Computer, deactivate food slot.
I think that was the Voyager episode Counterpoint:At least one TNG episode mentions either disabling or reprogramming a replicator to prevent the creation of unauthorized weapons.
KASHYK: Captain, why don't you join me? I've been looking forward to trying your replicator. Well, I'm sure that I can come up with something to toast the evening. We've accomplished quite a bit today.
JANEWAY: I'm afraid that won't be possible. I had your replicator taken offline.
KASHYK: In case I decided to replicate a weapon.
JANEWAY: A safety precaution. You understand.
^yes well, writers change their minds over time. DS9 and Voyager certainly suggest that each replicator unit is essentially self-contained. Early TNG wasn't sure what to do with combadges or replicators. And I could have sworn there was a similar mention somewhere in TNG, not the same dialog by any means but the same concept. Oh well....
Deuterium isn't actually that abundant. It would take quite some time for a starship to collect it any quantity from the interstellar medium on its own. It can be extracted more readily from large volumes of water, though, which is probably where the fuel carriers are going to tank off from. We saw one such refinery in Enterprise "Marauders," for example.I find it strange to transport over long spacial distances a substance that is present in abundance in every star system.
From the TNG technical manual:No, that's your gross misunderstanding of the technology.
Not from a replicator, no. He has about 4500 items to potentially choose from and MOST of them will be stored in memory. The computer is smart enough to mix and match different items in its memory bank, but at the end of the day it can only make what it's programmed to make.Hell, even laymen can just ask the computer to create something new.
In a universe where a hostile alien can hack a starship's central computer by tapping three buttons on a light panel, where you can override the ship's security by rearranging a couple of isolinear chips, where a random civilian can hop a turbolift to the bridge in the middle of a yellow alert without anyone noticing, you REALLY think the security systems on replicators are the problem?In the case of #2, it's not that the replicator can't do it, it's that it won't without some form of hacking those security features.
No, you're just not understanding what you're reading. (Not that tech manuals are in any way, shape, or form canon. But that's neither here nor there.)From the TNG technical manual:
"The heart of the food replication system is a pair of molecular matrix matter replicators located on Decks 12 and 34. These devices dematerialize a measured quantity of raw material in a manner similar to that of a standard transporter. Unlike a standard transporter, however, no molecular imaging scanners are used to derive analog pattern data of the original material. Instead, a sophisticated quantum geometry transformational matrix field is used to modify the matter stream to conform to a digitally stored molecular pattern matrix."
It goes on to say:
"As with all transporter-based replication systems, the food replicators operate at molecular resolution..."
So no, it's not a "misunderstanding" of the technology. It's the fundamental principle of how the technology works.
Yes, from a replicator. We've seen it done on-screen before, where a character describes very precise parameters for something brand new, and the computer then creates it via a replicator.Not from a replicator, no.
No? And I'm not sure how you think what I said was a 'problem.' It was a FEATURE of replicators. A FEATURE that we KNOW isn't impossible to get around, because it's been gotten around (or at least mentioned) on more than a few occasions. That doesn't make it any less of a feature, or why it has such limits.In a universe where a hostile alien can hack a starship's central computer by tapping three buttons on a light panel, where you can override the ship's security by rearranging a couple of isolinear chips, where a random civilian can hop a turbolift to the bridge in the middle of a yellow alert without anyone noticing, you REALLY think the security systems on replicators are the problem?
Deuterium isn't actually that abundant. It would take quite some time for a starship to collect it any quantity from the interstellar medium on its own. It can be extracted more readily from large volumes of water, though, which is probably where the fuel carriers are going to tank off from. We saw one such refinery in Enterprise "Marauders," for example.
Actually it can do NEITHER of those things because matter cannot be created nor destroyed. Matter can be rearranged and reorganized to a limited degree, and replicators have demonstrated a fairly limited capacity to do this. It has to do with the fact that the "raw material" used in the replicator system is a type of substance that is already chemically similar to the thing being replicated; lots of basic carbohydrates, proteins, amino acids, lipids, collagens, polymers, polysacharrides, etc.Yes, it can destroy things just as easily as it can create it. In NO WAY WHATSOEVER does it ONLY create what it has previously destroyed
Of approximately the same material, which is mainly because the replicators are based on transporter technology. The same raw material that is used for making plates and knives is not being used to make ice cream and whiskey. They're not the same molecules; they're not even the same ELEMENTS.You can use a replicator to get rid of a plate of food, a lump of coal, or a tattered Starfleet uniform. That matter can then be replicated into -anything else- the replicator is capable of creating...
That's not what it says.It even specifically says that it doesn't remember what it destroyed in the very thing you quoted, for fuck's sake.
Which is a distinct concept from saying "Computer, create something new."Yes, from a replicator. We've seen it done on-screen before, where a character describes very precise parameters for something brand new...
Obviously it isn't, or else the HACKING of replicators to produce such mayhem would be a fairly common occurrence.No? And I'm not sure how you think what I said was a 'problem.' It was a FEATURE of replicators.
Which, basically, is where you're going to find the most profitable deuterium refineries and fueling stations. OTOH, a planet whose aquifers contain a larger than normal abundance of heavy water provides opportunities for a deuterium refinery on the cheap (the settlers in "Marauders").Water OR hydrogen, any gas giant like Jupiter for example must contain large quantities of deuterium.
*just rubs his temples and moves on to another thread*Actually it can do NEITHER of those things because matter cannot be created nor destroyed.
but with all that helium everyone would sound funnyWhich, basically, is where you're going to find the most profitable deuterium refineries and fueling stations. OTOH, a planet whose aquifers contain a larger than normal abundance of heavy water provides opportunities for a deuterium refinery on the cheap (the settlers in "Marauders").
The REAL question is "Why the hell are starships using a deuterium fuel cycle?" Deuterium-Deuterium fusion is favored in modern reactors because it's easier to control and because tritium is even harder to find than deuterium; in the mean time it produces a lot of secondary radiation (neutrons, mostly) that is bad for both the reactor and anything/anyone monitoring the reaction. Proton-proton fusion -- requiring only normal hydrogen -- produces a lot more energy, is a lot cleaner, and produces only helium as a byproduct. For the Federation, which has the capacity to manufacture and control antimatter, proton-proton fusion should be a piece of cake. This is a real headscratcher to me.
I always figured it was along the lines of a boxed cake mix vs a cake made completely from scratch. Both are good, the scratch cake is a tiny bit better, but you probably wouldn't notice the difference in a blind taste testI wonder what pork vindaloo would taste like replicated against the same dish hand made?
There are some brands of cake mix which have a distinctive tasteI always figured it was along the lines of a boxed cake mix vs a cake made completely from scratch. Both are good, the scratch cake is a tiny bit better, but you probably wouldn't notice the difference in a blind taste test
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