Awesome callback, but so sad!
I thought my heart was going to burst from joy. (Maybe a bit of an exaggeration, but not much.)"The Impossible Box" lifted the Romulan-secret-names-for-loved-ones thing from Diane Duane's Rihannsu novels.
I nerdgasimed over that as well — having just finished my re-read of Duane’s TOS output a couple days ago."The Impossible Box" lifted the Romulan-secret-names-for-loved-ones thing from Diane Duane's Rihannsu novels.
I just figure they weren’t all that far away from Borg space, so the Collective just naturally happened upon them as they expanded. I think by this point we can assume all the races Voyager encountered early on have been assimilated.![]()
Yeah, I was like, "Oh that's a call back, but I can't remember the ep for some reason..." It was really bugging me, and I did a quick google during a Geico commercial and was all "Whoa!""The Impossible Box" lifted the Romulan-secret-names-for-loved-ones thing from Diane Duane's Rihannsu novels.
Although the actual quote from Hugh in the episode is, "The Borg acquired the technology after assimilating the Sikarians." Which seems to imply pretty much the entire race (and, presumably, their homeworld too).The Borg had encountered the Kazon at some point prior to Seven joining the crew, so we know the Borg had been in the area before.
Just because the Borg have assimilated Sikarians does not necessarily mean that they have assimilated Sikaria proper. Sure, the trajector tech got assimilated, but that doesn’t mean that it happened on their homeworld - they have starships, after all, and the Borg could have offset the issues Voyager had with integrating the tech - after all, when B’Elanna and the others were working it, they were actively trying to do it quickly and within the bounds of the tech itself because they were ordered not to take the Sikarians up on the shady deal. The Borg would have no such compunctions.
Although I think the actual quote from Hugh in the episode is, "The Borg acquired the technology after assimilating the Sikarians." Which seems to imply pretty much the entire race (and, presumably, their homeworld too).
The captions and dialogue I remember are "The Borg acquired the technology after assimilating Sikarians."
I could be wrong, but the name Kzinti isn't directly owned by anyone. They can say the name in the show, but they can't directly make parallels with his creation, use the idea of it.So this means...what for CBC-Viacom relations with Larry Niven now?
The novels are not canon, so the producers are under no obligation to follow the novels, which is why Picard does not even never mention Beverly as his wife or ex wife or ex anythingI'm pretty sure Thad and Kestra Riker's existence contradicts the Novelverse. I'm pretty sure Thad would have to have been born earlier than Tasha in the books, and Kestra would probably need to have already been born long before the last few apperances of Riker, Troi, and Tasha.
Thad Riker was born the exact same year as Natasha Riker in the novels (2381), which means that the first four Star Trek: Titan books can still fit into the new TV-canon for now, but had he been born just one year earlier (2380), there'd be several truly-irreconcilable differences.I'm pretty sure Thad and Kestra Riker's existence contradicts the Novelverse. I'm pretty sure Thad would have to have been born earlier than Tasha in the books, and Kestra would probably need to have already been born long before the last few apperances of Riker, Troi, and Tasha.
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