Certainly but there is purpose behind the sadness.Sure, I get it if the message to the cadets is that their career is a dangerous job. But my initial thought was a bit of sadness for Sulu's and Uhura's ships and the fate of their captain and crew.
Certainly but there is purpose behind the sadness.Sure, I get it if the message to the cadets is that their career is a dangerous job. But my initial thought was a bit of sadness for Sulu's and Uhura's ships and the fate of their captain and crew.
Certainly but there is purpose behind the sadness.
Sadness =/= depression. There is a difference and pain is always a useful teacher in times of trouble. Otherwise, the Kobayashi Maru is a lesson in Starfleet sadism.That Picard is a depressing series? I hope not.
Sadness =/= depression. There is a difference and pain is always a useful teacher in times of trouble. Otherwise, the Kobayashi Maru is a lesson in Starfleet sadism.

Perhaps. Perhaps not. The nature of their loss would inform that more than just being sad.Sure sadness is one of the symptoms of depression and one is generally short term while the other is long term. Still doesn't change the idea that Sulu's and Uhura's fate were like the other ships. Then again, maybe they both pulled a Janeway and returned to tell the tale and were promoted to admirals.![]()
The plaque says Captain Sulu was in command of Excelsior from 2287 to 2320. Captain Lawrence H. Styles was apparently in command for two spacedock-bound years after STIII (sorry, DC comics universe!)
Only Enterprises get a letter in this century. So far.I wonder though, how come the new Stargazer we saw didn't have original insignia with the letter 'A' on it?
I wouldn't be surprised if Picard didn't want a honor guard and told Rios to not have one.Additional: As Picard boards the Stargazer, they used the 32nd-century Discovery virtual shuttlebay set behind him. I guess it's forgivable, but I'm still wondering why Rios didn't send an honor guard or something to greet a VIP. Seven volunteered?
Mark
Still doesn't change the idea that Sulu's and Uhura's fate were like the other ships. Then again, maybe they both pulled a Janeway and returned to tell the tale and were promoted to admirals.![]()
The info placard for Uhura's ship says she retired and the ship is now in a museum, and the one for the Excelsior says nothing about it being lost or destroyed. Voyager was retired in 2378.
https://twitter.com/DaveBlass/status/1501055817088335873/photo/3

They had to get it from Veridian before the neighbors invented telescopes![]()
True, but at least they didn't just destroy it from orbit.
Given that the saucer was designed for exactly this kind of emergency, I think Starfleet must have warp-capable recovery vehicles that can be sent out to bring the saucer to the nearest starbase.It's the only way to be sure.
I mean, short of tractoring the whole thing back into orbit and then rigging a warp tow to take it to wherever the Fleet Museum actually is. I wonder how they DID that. I'd say the simplest thing (short of a starship capable of towing a saucer that big) would be to make sure it was structurally sound, and then borrowing the stardrive section from another Galaxy-class ship for a while...
Mark
Given that the saucer was designed for exactly this kind of emergency, I think Starfleet must have warp-capable recovery vehicles that can be sent out to bring the saucer to the nearest starbase.
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