Did the female Romulan aid have an Irish accent?
One could surmise that Spock's plan involved the drop of Red Matter dissipating both the supernova and itself afterward.^^^
I guess my question would be: IF the Supernova that Spock was attempting to stop WAS the Star of the Romulan Home system - how in the hell would creating a massive Black hole in the vicinity of said star save Romulus. Not only would there be no star inn the system to continue to provide what the planet would need to remain habitable; there would be a massive black hole in it's place that I assume would eventually consume the planet regardless.
So yeah, the whole setup/explanation doesn't make sense unless the Super Nova was a different star; and SOMEHOW that Super Nova created some type of FTL/Subspace effect that Romulan/Federation scientists found would trigger other Stars (including the Romulan Home System star) in a few months/years/whatever; and that somehow, using Red Matter to create a Black Hole somewhere near (but still a 'safe' distance from the Romulan system) would stop that effect from occurring.
BTW in the intro poker game with Picard scene Data was holding five Queen of Hearts cards. Does this imply that there are five Dahj-type androids out there - two are known and three to be discovered later? I guess we'll soon find out...
Data likely sent Lore somewhere to be analyzed to see if his instabilities can ever be cured. Ironically, probably the Daystrom Institute (which was shown in this episode and didn't mention Lore).Where would he have ended up then?
Yes, and it'll turn out Riker, Troi and Chief O'Brien are the Final Three.
We went through this in 2009 threads when the movie came out. It is an absolutely bonkers, half baked idea. The supernova would take years to reach Romulus and tens of thousands of years to propagate through the galaxy. Alot of evacuation time. And the idea that you are going to suck back stellar matter from light years away is crazy town. If it were that powerful it would suck whole star systems and planets from light years away.^^^
I guess my question would be: IF the Supernova that Spock was attempting to stop WAS the Star of the Romulan Home system - how in the hell would creating a massive Black hole in the vicinity of said star save Romulus. Not only would there be no star inn the system to continue to provide what the planet would need to remain habitable; there would be a massive black hole in it's place that I assume would eventually consume the planet regardless.
So yeah, the whole setup/explanation doesn't make sense unless the Super Nova was a different star; and SOMEHOW that Super Nova created some type of FTL/Subspace effect that Romulan/Federation scientists found would trigger other Stars (including the Romulan Home System star) in a few months/years/whatever; and that somehow, using Red Matter to create a Black Hole somewhere near (but still a 'safe' distance from the Romulan system) would stop that effect from occurring.
Data likely sent Lore somewhere to be analyzed to see if his instabilities can ever be cured. Ironically, probably the Daystrom Institute (which was shown in this episode and didn't mention Lore).
I do have complaints that the rogue synths attacking without much explanation is too "Terminator". Evil AI is a cliche that so far is slightly far fetched, and it's sad Trek decided to use it. It's also repetitive as we just had evil AI in Discovery.
I think it's very likely the rogues were sabotaged and/or reprogrammed.
Why did Picard order a decaf Earl Grey? His artificial heart shouldn't be affected either way.
The burning question is, was it hot?
The burning question is, was it hot?
Why did Picard order a decaf Earl Grey? His artificial heart shouldn't be affected either way.
"Tea. Chamomile. Hot."Seems like he might be having trouble sleeping, so he doesn't need the caffeine.
There's a huge difference between the small rogue android groups Kirk fought and a full scale planetary AI uprising we're getting here (and Terminator exemplified). To the point we now have a robotics ban, something very much against the spirit of Star Trek.Trek was doing evil AI stuff long before Terminator and will likely be doing evil AI stuff long after. It's one of the franchise's main themes. Seriously, attaching new shows in the franchise to johnny come latelies is about as cliche as it gets in fandom.
Why did Picard order a decaf Earl Grey? His artificial heart shouldn't be affected either way.
I'm more surprised Picard, with as many enemies as he has (Daimon Bok, the Borg Queen, House of Duras, etc.) doesn't have a concealed carry phaser and Federation police on speed dial for his communicator...One of the choices they made here was very subtle, and really paid off, and that was showing Picard tired and out of breath as he and Dahl run from the assassins. It shows that Picard is not a superhero any longer, and he has vulnerabilities like any older human would have. It also was wise in terms of just quietly telling the audience "yes, ~20 years have gone by, and yes...we know and respect that."
I do have complaints that the rogue synths attacking without much explanation is too "Terminator". Evil AI is a cliche that so far is slightly far fetched, and it's sad Trek decided to use it. It's also repetitive as we just had evil AI in Discovery.
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