That rule was never a thing. CBS debunked it a week after the rumour started.
Yet somehow it still persists several years later. Twitter is particularly bad for it.
That rule was never a thing. CBS debunked it a week after the rumour started.
I do get the confusion about which universe the show takes place in. The visuals, not to mention the Protostar's nacelles, look very Kelvin timeline. But the tech in the 23rd century KT exists because there was influence from the 24th century Prime timeline. So I don't see a problem.
The producers gave an interview recently explaining that the new technology is a direct result of all of the future tech and game changing faster-than-light tech and data that VOY brought back from the Delta Quadrant like quantum slipstream, coaxial warp, Borg transwarp, etc., which allowed them to traverse 70,000 light years in only seven years. “Endgame” changed everything by ensuring Voyager came back 14 years early. They’ve now had several years to study and implement the tech and designs, thus accelerating Starfleet’s development.
Every time I hear about Trek's Yor I keep wondering if it was an intentional reference to THIS Yor.
I have real problems with Prodigy being in the Prime timeline (unless you take the theory that Prime is not the same os the original canon Trek timeline). The Protostar is WAY too advanced for the supposed origin point of the early 2380s. It looks more like what one would expect from STO's early 25th century time period.
Well, it wouldn't be the first time they frakked up the continuity, I suppose. Are they still bound by the 25% different rule?
The producers gave an interview recently explaining that the new technology is a direct result of all of the future tech and game changing faster-than-light tech and data that VOY brought back from the Delta Quadrant like quantum slipstream, coaxial warp, Borg transwarp, etc., which allowed them to traverse 70,000 light years in only seven years. “Endgame” changed everything by ensuring Voyager came back 14 years early. They’ve now had several years to study and implement the tech and designs, thus accelerating Starfleet’s development.
If anything, it would have been bad continuity to completely ignore “Endgame” and pretend that Voyager didn’t happen.
That's an excellent point. For all we know the Protostar could be the origin of some of the warp drive tech the Kelvin timeline Enterprise was using – hence the look of the nacelles, and warp travel itself looking more hyperspace-tunnell-y than we're normally used to.
There's indications elsewhere that Starfleet's technological progress has been accelerating anyway. As a general rule of thumb, starship speeds increase by a fairly predictable, pedestrian factor of four every century; the NX-01 tops out at ~125c, the 1701 at ~512c, the 1701-D at ~1909c (yes, I know in each case the exceptional engineering skills of the crew and the fact that every hero ship was built when the shipyards were having "a very good day" means that under certain circumstances they each exceeded these speeds).
But suddenly we go from the Galaxy-class in the 2360s topping at at about 2000c to the Intrepid-class in the 2370s topping out at over double that with a canonical top speed warp 9.975, and the Prometheus-class and Sovereign-class being able to reach three times that by the 2380s if some sources are to be believed.
As to those "sources", all novels, guides, manuels, comics, games etc. are not canon despite being an official part of the overall ST franchise, only the shows and movies are.
Says you. The only thing definitely not canon here is your spelling of "manual"![]()
https://trekmovie.com/2007/07/22/dc-fontana-on-tas-canon-and-sybok/“Canon” in the sense that I use it is a very important tool. It only gets muddled when people try to incorporate licensed products into “canon”—and I know a lot of the fans really like to do that. Sorry, guys—not trying to rain on your parade. There’s a lot of bickering about it among fans, but in its purest sense, it’s really pretty simple: Canon is Star Trek continuity as presented on TV and Movie screens. Licensed products like books and comics aren’t part of that continuity, so they aren’t canon. And that’s that. Part of my job in licensing is to keep track of TV and Movie continuity, so I can help direct licensees in their creation of licensed products. It gets a little tricky because it’s constantly evolving, and over the years, Star Trek’s various producers and scriptwriters haven’t always kept track of/remembered/cared about what’s come before.
The database also has mistakes.
As to those "sources", all novels, guides,manuelsmanuals, comics, games etc. are not canon despite being an official part of the overall ST franchise, only the shows and movies are.
in your opinion.
I'm really getting a little weary of this need to affirm which pretend universe the shows take place in because some people have their knickers in a twist about continuity details.
in your opinion.
No, actually, it's a fact. It's literally what 'canon' means.
Don't confuse canon for quality. "Spock's Brain" is canon. The amazing novel "Prime Directive" is not.in your opinion.
Modern Trek has been happy to mine non-canon sources for details like no Trek before (Andorian names, Vulcan lore, planetary co-ordinates etc), which is a lot of fun.
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