They did give a name for Enterprise’s chief engineer
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I was disappointed it wasn't Chief Moves-With-Burning-Grace from the Early Voyages comics.

They did give a name for Enterprise’s chief engineer
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There would probably be issues with royalties when it comes to using a character created for the comics.
He’s in the novels as well
There's no canon info that he was responsible for the song in the Trek universe.Memory Alpha hasn’t made an article for David Bowie yet. They’re slacking!
There would probably be issues with royalties when it comes to using a character created for the comics.
Kor
They would have to be able to speak the language that another person was being translated into. I don't doubt that some of them speak more than one language, but their chances of matching up with someone in the room were low. Saru beat the odds by knowing so many.
They're all equipped with Babel fishes. And towels.Exactly, he was the only one who could keep up with the computer switching languages every few seconds. Typing the solution in manually being the only option. I'm sure many of them spoke more than one language, but it was the ear implants (I assume that's where they are) causing the issue.
But the point is, for that reason, we have no idea that "Federation Standard" even is English.
And the lingua franca aboard both Archer and Kirk's Enterprises was identified as English on multiple occasions.Pike described the colonists in New Eden as speaking Federation standard
You have correctly inferred the meaning, but misidentified the part of speech. It's a noun, not an adjective. You get half credit. (Sorry, I used to work as a tutor and teacher's assistant. Old habits...They said the word teleporter, based on the context they were referring to Number One. So are they using it as an adjective? “One who teleports”?
And the lingua franca aboard both Archer and Kirk's Enterprises was identified as English on multiple occasions.
I seem to remember first encountering the term "Federation Standard English" in the Okudas' Encyclopedia. That's probably where they picked it up. (Although I'm sure it could have been used in novels or somewhere else before that, and it wouldn't be that hard to come up with independently, either.)
The Colony scientist WAS told. What he does with that info is up to him.Isn’t what Saru said about the Prime Directive not counting because they’ve been lied to similar to those Earth chaps? I mean they think Earth was destroyed. Shouldn’t they be told it wasn’t?
The impression I got was that the Kelpians believed that if they let this process go on, it would end in madness and horrible painful death; so the custom was for them to kill themselves to avoid that. It's more likely it's part of their biological maturation (IE prior to 'adulthood they retain the 'fear reflex' to survive to 'adulthood' where the Ganglia fall off naturally - but they retain their other abilities and strength.)I think I missed a lot here. Sometimes the dialogue just flies. I feel like a bit of an idiot- but here it goes:
Why doesn't Saru have fear anymore? Were the ganglia literally causing the fear, and then the just fell off? That's weird.
Was Burnham cutting the ganglia going to kill him? Also odd.
The Enterprise malfunctioned because of holo-communicators?
That creature kidnapped Tilly to the spore network? Or the Upside Down? Huh?
Maybe I shouldn't be drinking my James T. Kirk bourbon during this show.
Wait, did I misunderstood something or did Reno say that somebody else was chief engineer, not Stamets?
That through me for a second, I think it's the first time I've heard them use teleport instead of transport in Trek.They said the word teleporter, based on the context they were referring to Number One. So are they using it as an adjective? “One who teleports”?
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Yeah, when this has come up over in the literature forum the authors have said they don't get any kind of money or control or anything.I think character credit royalties only apply when the character was written for TV, and if used again in TV that specific writer who created the character would be paid. I don't think the same applies to books or comics, since that is licensed out by the studio itself and whatever is created for those books and comics is already owned by the studio and not by the writers themselves. I could also very easily be wrong about this.
He's not, he's just in charge of the jump drive and the other stuff related to the Mycelial Network. He's a scientist, not an engineer.Wait, did I misunderstood something or did Reno say that somebody else was chief engineer, not Stamets?
The multiple theories on the layout of Engineering and the command hierarchy seem to be bit by bit confirmed; that there is an actual Chief Engineer that we've never seen and that the Spore-drive control room is an Engineering Lab (mentioned in like one line in first season) or also-known-ask Starboard(?) Engineering? I've seen this in other threads but don't recall which parts of dialogue it was mentioned.
The way I see it, I think General Order One might allow Saru telling his fellow Kelpiens the truth (not the truth about the Federation, but the truth about the Vaharai), but not simply because the Keliens have been lied to, but only because Saru is himself a Kelpien who came upon that truth himself, and not necessarily through knowledge given to him by the Federation.Isn’t what Saru said about the Prime Directive not counting because they’ve been lied to similar to those Earth chaps? I mean they think Earth was destroyed. Shouldn’t they be told it wasn’t?
Though I could have sworn Reno also said something about how she had to go through the spore lab to actually get to the warp drive, which is why it was a problem when the room got locked down.
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