I always wondered what became of the outrageous okona.
I always wondered what was so outrageous about him.
I always wondered what became of the outrageous okona.
...Anything about Data's previous approx. thirty years before he came aboard the Enterprise D. Time in Starfleet, service on at least one other ship, yet he's still naïve in general and even still can't whistle. All we get some brief farts in the wind about it and in "The Most Toys" Geordi opens a box of award medals for various acts of valor (where are more of these during the time on the Enterprise D?). Serious, was Geordi his only friend? Can we learn how he got any of those medals?,,,
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RIKER: Yes. When the captain suggested you, I looked up your record.
DATA: Yes, sir. A wise procedure, sir, always.
RIKER: Then your rank of Lieutenant Commander is honorary?
DATA: No, sir. Starfleet class of '78. Honours in probability mechanics and exobiology.
RIKER: Your file says that you're an
DATA: Machine, Correct, sir. Does that trouble you?
LAFORGE: This once was rich farmland. I'd say something like twenty to thirty years ago.
DATA: I was discovered twenty six years ago.
DATA: But he had destroyed his own reputation by making what seemed wild promises about his positronic brain design, almost all of which failed.
LORE: Promises he later proved to be true. Which made you and me possible, brother. Our beloved father. Will I soon have a uniform like that, brother?
DATA: If you get one the way I did, Lore, it will mean four years at the Academy, another three as ensign, ten or twelve on varied space duty in the lieutenant grades.
DATA: Careful, Captain. The stun effect from the wormhole was relatively severe.
PICARD: Apparently so. How long were we unconscious?
DATA: Approximately thirty seconds. I have scanned the entire ship and detected no life-threatening injuries among the crew.
PICARD: You were not affected?
DATA: No, sir. My positronic system is immune to the effect. This is the third unstable wormhole I have passed through during my time with Starfleet. The first was aboard the USS Trieste
PICARD: Thank you, Mister Data. Well, where the hell are we?
I always wondered what became of the outrageous okona.
The wormhole in Clues wasn't a wormhole.The second unstable wormhole would be Barzan Wormhole in the third season episode "The Price".
LAFORGE: No indication of any space-time distortion whatsoever. The probe should at least be detecting some residual effect, even if the wormhole is inactive.
PICARD: That's because there is no a wormhole. There never was.
RIKER: Sir?
PICARD: It was a ruse, designed to throw us off the track. Look at the clues. Doctor Crusher's incubation experiment, the computer clock, the transporter trace. All indicate the existence of a missing day. Lieutenant Worf's broken wrist would seem to suggest that we were awake and aware for that day, possibly in a struggle for our lives.
The wormhole in Clues wasn't a wormhole.
The "Class of '78" line was because the show was operating on the Spaceflight Chronology timeline at that point.Therefore Data graduated and was commissioned in the year '78 of the Earth calendar in use at the time of "Encounter at Farpoint". Nobody knows how many digits were in the year number before 78, so the year could have been 78, 578, 1478, 46278, etc. And the year of "Encounter at Farpoint" would have been '78 plus X, X being the number of years since Data graduated Starfleet Academy. If X was 10 years, the year of "Datalore" would be '88, if X was 50 years, the year of "Datalore" would be '28 of the next century, etc.
How he ripped off Han Solo so blatantly and got away with it.I always wondered what was so outrageous about him.
Who was in the empty cryotube in "The Neutral Zone" and where did they go? hmmm
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