In 2019? People would riot.It is but also can they even hire a straight actor to play a gay character anymore?

In 2019? People would riot.It is but also can they even hire a straight actor to play a gay character anymore?
LoL! the show isn't even PG-13.![]()
I got it backwards though oopsIn 2019? People would riot.![]()
And the monks in the monastery reminded me of the wraith from SGA lolAs I mentioned control in this episode reminded me of the replicators from SG1
I wonder if we will see him play Prime Lorca? A joke to all the people who went on the Cruise.Kenneth Mitchell played Son Of None, huh? I love that he's basically the go-to guy for this stuff
What I don't understand is why even in the 21st century sci-fi writers still treat data as something tangible, like liquid in a jar - data can be copied and not affect the original source - it's always like 'omg they downloaded 29% of the database... we lost almost a third of our data' as if no one knows how to use 'copy-paste' anymore - same with the resolution of the episode 'oh we can't delete the data, blow the ship!' as if there isn't a central computer core they couldn't just eject and then let an EMP off to blow the rest of the data out of any other devices it may 'hide' in - and then reinstall a new core later - it's like 'oh that laptop has to be shredded, it had sensitive data'. and then some smartie pants goes and just removes the hard drive... 'there - data gone' and chuck the hard drive in a shredder or just take a hammer to it.
I should have anticipated that joke, but I didn't.This is a PG-13 board.
Got to the end. Didn't see that twist coming the way it did.
I think this episode is the best one since "If Memory Serves" but doesn't quite match it, even though it has a lot of suspense and Boreth was a treat. I'm calling it a 9.
This was a great episode for Pike. And for L'Rell and Tyler, the former of whom now accepts and sees Tyler as Tyler instead of Voq.
Maybe the Discovery phasers Pre-date the vaporization option.
What I don't understand is why even in the 21st century sci-fi writers still treat data as something tangible, like liquid in a jar - data can be copied and not affect the original source - it's always like 'omg they downloaded 29% of the database... we lost almost a third of our data' as if no one knows how to use 'copy-paste' anymore - same with the resolution of the episode 'oh we can't delete the data, blow the ship!' as if there isn't a central computer core they couldn't just eject and then let an EMP off to blow the rest of the data out of any other devices it may 'hide' in - and then reinstall a new core later - it's like 'oh that laptop has to be shredded, it had sensitive data'. and then some smartie pants goes and just removes the hard drive... 'there - data gone' and chuck the hard drive in a shredder or just take a hammer to it.
Data was able to isolate the main computer of the Enterprise with a fractal encryption code to protect it from the Borg very easily. Something they have so much trouble doing in Discovery was literally done by Data in a few seconds in First Contact.I find it odd that people look at current technology for their solutions with computer systems 200 years in the future.
What makes you think Starships in the 23rd century just have one computer core? That isn't even 21st century thinking. That's 1960s thinking. They probably have decentralized computer systems the equivalent size of our entire planetary internet on each ship to ensure one lucky hit, or a single accident doesn't disable the ship and kill everyone on board. Good luck ejecting the entire internet from planet Earth.
Data was able to isolate the main computer of the Enterprise with a fractal encryption code to protect it from the Borg very easily. Something they have so much trouble doing in Discovery was literally done by Data in a few seconds in First Contact.
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