So the Spore jump drive is actually the myth warp 10?
Transwarp Fungus can only mean it is the veins of Yog-Sothoth and The Goat With A Thousand Young.
So the Spore jump drive is actually the myth warp 10?
Minor problem ...the spore drive chamber was built before they knew they needed a Tardigrade occupant, yet it is designed to perfectly accommodate said occupant. Why was that chamber even in Engineering from the perspective of the characters in the third episode? What purpose did it serve prior to the Tardigrade?
So this spore thingy needs a poor tortured creature to make it work.You just reconciled it. Congratulations.![]()
So this spore thingy needs a poor tortured creature to make it work.
Bravo future world of diversity. It's okay to be diverse as long as it's not some alien critter, they're fair game.
I hope so. I've never been a fan of these types of angles. If an alien is non-humanoid (the creatures from Voyager's Equinox, Species 8472 etc.) they're not respected. I would like Michael a whole lot more if she comes through for it.It's pretty clear that Burnham was very much against using the creature to operate the spore drive once she realised it was hurting the creature. The continued use of the creature is probably going to be a cause of conflict between Burnham and Lorca, In fact, having to use a living being to operate it is probably going to be why the Federation does not continue to use it.
I think it's pretty obvious she will, starting in the next episode. As will Tilly and even Saru eventually, if his remark about fitting in with Lorca's crew means what I think it does.I hope so. I've never been a fan of these types of angles. If an alien is non-humanoid (the creatures from Voyager's Equinox, Species 8472 etc.) they're not respected. I would like Michael a whole lot more if she comes through for it.
I hope so. I've never been a fan of these types of angles. If an alien is non-humanoid (the creatures from Voyager's Equinox, Species 8472 etc.) they're not respected. I would like Michael a whole lot more if she comes through for it.
Just a shot in the dark here but I would guess the reaction cube is in essence it's own reactor/drive sort of speak. Especially considering during the Black Alert the Warp Core was isolated and shielded during the event (potentially even fully disengaged). My guess would be the Tardigrade essentially works like the dilithium crystal of the M/AM reaction. You could in theory have a M/AM reactor without the crystal but it would be impossible to regulate the power output flows hence why it's considered so volatile and dangerous without the crystal. So some how the control panel controls how the spores interact with the ship at a quantum level using the network to essentially tunnel through the quantum realm but without a means of organizing the extremely complex numerical data into an accurate chart/reaction the equation was always 50/50 as per the usual rules of quantum spin. So the Tardigrade is able to organize that information and direct it seamlessly which allows for 100 percent quantum prediction rather than the standard spin 50/50 guess work. So think of the reaction cube as a Warp Core just missing it's own version of a dilithium crystal.Minor problem ...the spore drive chamber was built before they knew they needed a Tardigrade occupant, yet it is designed to perfectly accommodate said occupant. Why was that chamber even in Engineering from the perspective of the characters in the third episode? What purpose did it serve prior to the Tardigrade?
I don't know where I'm getting this distinction from but there are Federation values whatever they may be from this timeline and then there's the Prime Directive. Excuse my ignorance of the exact foundation but when did the Prime Directive take shape? Is Discovery the lead up to it? I know this critter is not a civilisation as such but using another species is wrong.I think one of the themes of this season is going to be about why Federation values need to be respected, protected and upheld even in the face of a ruthless enemy. It's a pretty topical theme considering the state of the world at the moment.
I don't know where I'm getting this distinction from but there are Federation values whatever they may be from this timeline and then there's the Prime Directive. Excuse my ignorance of the exact foundation but when did the Prime Directive take shape? Is Discovery the lead up to it? I know this critter is not a civilisation as such but using another species is wrong.
It looks like that chamber is where the spores are always injected. So since they have it on both ships it's where they put the creature. I don't think it's designed for it because of the creature has no room to move at all. The creature just happens to fit in it.Minor problem ...the spore drive chamber was built before they knew they needed a Tardigrade occupant, yet it is designed to perfectly accommodate said occupant. Why was that chamber even in Engineering from the perspective of the characters in the third episode? What purpose did it serve prior to the Tardigrade?
No, you're missing my point ... there's a clear reason to have that chamber there from a production standpoint, because that's where the giant water bear will go. So they put a big empty box on the set that fills with spores and doesn't do anything else until the tardigrade shows up. Now they did use it to give Burnham a grand tour, but the ship didn't move, so was the chamber just a separate, but related research product or did it have a specific purpose for the new drive system, too? From a production standpoint, that box is there to hold the tardigrade, but from an in-universe perspective it was just ... there. Why?It looks like that chamber is where the spores are always injected. So since they have it on both ships it's where they put the creature. I don't think it's designed for it because of the creature has no room to move at all. The creature just happens to fit in it.
If it was designed for it then that would only be the case on the Glenn. Since the Glenn was using the creature maybe they told Discovery to make their chamber bigger without telling them why in case they'd have to do the same actions there. In that case I don't think the Discovery designed it the creature knowingly.
'Cuddles' has already been named: 'Ripper', and they didn't find him, he found them. During a jump he wandered into their spore storage.The spore drive concept is stupid and unrealistic, because while wormholes and warp drives at least fleetingly touch base with reality (as in: Its theoretically possible in physics) the spore drive completely ignores that quantum effects don’t exist above the Planck scale.
Aside from that, the little Tardigrade fella, let’s call him Cuddles, apparently can communicate with the spores, and has a huge galaxy map in his memory, no?
So Cuddles can apparently traverse along the sub space spore corridors, and travel at will, looking for spores to eat.
That raises some questions: (Aside from, where the heck did they find him?!?)
If he can travel using shroomspores, why doesn’t he just get up and leave? The fancy cell the captain set up for Cuddles shouldn’t be a problem if he can just shroom away?
AFAIK This hasn’t been addressed, and I wonder if they have an explanation.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.