Cheaper.
I’m pretty sure they had the money.
Cheaper.
IF the attacking ships were sending out the proper Star Fleet Codes, it may have been such a surprise when they attacked that it caught everyone off guard.So Star Trek BSG now! LOL
Also, when the hell it the Federation ever going to learn to have a defense fleet in sector 001? This goes back to the Xindi weapon days. Somehow though, in Voyager Endgame, they had a bunch ships converge on the transwarp aperture near earth. Looks like back to old no fleet around days now.
To be fare though, we don't now what the resistance to the Synth ships was (if any), guess we will find out soon!
We're 38 pages into this thread and there's *still* a discussion about the ships...
True! We've even got Data on this show, albeit seemingly in dreams, but still counts![]()
Time is also a factor. So cheaper and time effective.I’m pretty sure they had the money.
We're 38 pages into this thread and there's *still* a discussion about the ships...
Also, when the hell it the Federation ever going to learn to have a defense fleet in sector 001?
We're 38 pages into this thread and there's *still* a discussion about the ships...
Their parents worked on Mars, hence the more literal aspect of the title. And they were definitely viewing the attack as a distant thing. It looked like the whole planet was being bombarded.Being in San Francisco, no, not at all. First of all, if it were in San Francisco, these girls wouldn't be the titular Children of Mars, would they? And when they are outside boarding the school bus shuttle, the sky has a red tint to it, which would heavily imply it should be Mars. And finally, I don't see why an attack on the Utopia Planitia shipyards would trigger an emergency alert at a school on Earth. Mars though, hell yeah.
Being in San Francisco, no, not at all. First of all, if it were in San Francisco, these girls wouldn't be the titular Children of Mars, would they? And when they are outside boarding the school bus shuttle, the sky has a red tint to it, which would heavily imply it should be Mars. And finally, I don't see why an attack on the Utopia Planitia shipyards would trigger an emergency alert at a school on Earth. Mars though, hell yeah.
When that happened in TNG era shows there was plenty of other era establishing elements and the previous episodes of the show were not set in the TOS movie era. If you wouldn't know from outside sources that this Short Trek episode was supposed to be happening in the 24th century, you would think that before Picard appears in the very end. Visual ques and the previous episodes all lead the viewer believing that it's happening in the Disco era.Yup. Was super confused whenever an Excelsior ship or Bird of Prey showed up as to what era.
If you wouldn't know from outside sources that this Short Trek episode was supposed to be happening in the 24th century, you would think that before Picard appears in the very end. Visual ques and the previous episodes all lead the viewer believing that it's happening in the Disco era.
The girls were definitely in San Francisco...Their parents worked on Mars, hence the more literal aspect of the title. And they were definitely viewing the attack as a distant thing. It looked like the whole planet was being bombarded.
Ships are a Star Trek thing, and they were in the short. So what is the problem discussing the ships?
Would have helped immensely if one of the two shipyard workers had just mentioned that they were refurbishing old ships and that's why they couldn't come home.Yup. Was super confused whenever an Excelsior ship or Bird of Prey showed up as to what era.
I think the complaint is more about the ship talk dominating the discussion, when the story wasn't really about the tech and hardware.
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