The tech is unstable. I'm not inclined to let it have the opportunity to kill again. I trust tech less than I trust people using the tech.User error isn't the fault of the technology, it's the fault of the person using it.
The tech is unstable. I'm not inclined to let it have the opportunity to kill again. I trust tech less than I trust people using the tech.User error isn't the fault of the technology, it's the fault of the person using it.
User error isn't the fault of the technology, it's the fault of the person using it.
I always thought it odd that David shouldered the sole blame of protomatter in ST3. Either his mom was willingly complicit or she's so stupid that she doesn't even know what substances are used to solve key unfixable elements in her own project (how David justified using protomatter). Either way, doesn't look good for Carol Marcus. Probably runs in the family considering who her dad is (and short of Alexander Marcus having some kind of massive epiphany in the Prime Timeline, 99% chance he's still a jerk like his Kelvin counterpart as the divergence happened while he would've been in adulthood and his personality type more or less already developed)I'm not exactly sure what protomatter is, but I'm fairly sure that protomatter is exactly the same as building a skyscraper in a swamp.
Isn’t the technology they are going after kill someone as well?Genesis killed the person who activated it...twice.
I wouldn't call that "working." Much less perfectly.
Genesis as a device is best left alone in the warehouse with transwarp beaming, curing old age, beaming a person in to their past selves, going Warp 13, meeting Lucifer, the ability to breath underwater, mind transference.
Yes, part of it rests on Carol and a lot on Marcus. Admiral Marcus might have been a jerk, but I doubt to the degree as in the Kelvin Timeline because part of what drove him as it did was increasing paranoia and fear over a Romulan attack, and ended up almost destroying Earth.I always thought it odd that David shouldered the sole blame of protomatter in ST3. Either his mom was willingly complicit or she's so stupid that she doesn't even know what substances are used to solve key unfixable elements in her own project (how David justified using protomatter). Either way, doesn't look good for Carol Marcus. Probably runs in the family considering who her dad is (and short of Alexander Marcus having some kind of massive epiphany in the Prime Timeline, 99% chance he's still a jerk like his Kelvin counterpart as the divergence happened while he would've been in adulthood and his personality type more or less already developed)
Probably.Isn’t the technology they are going after kill someone as well?
They've also got the full support of the United Federation of Planets with all the specialists and experts they need to find the clues. Kovich even magically got the name of scientists, without which one of the clues would've been insoluble (so to speak given the clue was water). And, to top it off, they've got a magic ship that can take them anywhere in the galaxy instantly.BTW while typing I just realized why the announced "Indiana Jones feeling" won't come up for me:
Indiana Jones raids ancient temples, finds historic artifacts, that then lead him to other, more hidden ancient places.
The Discovery crew OTOH searches for clues that have been hidden by a bunch of (their) contemporary scientists.
It's less "ancient treasure hunt", and more "kids playing hide & seek".
Oddly, I really enjoyed the Whistlespeak episode greatly!! And, I'm in the camp of those who found this one somewhat dull. To each their own!Really don’t understand the people saying they were “bored” and “almost fell asleep” watching this episode. I can understand those who’d dislike the glacial pace of the previous episode. But I thought this was engaging, tense, fast paced and gripping. I’m at a point where I feel strangely out of sync with a large part of the fandom. I guess I have been for a while.
I like that maxim! Agree how it works for TOS. And this season of DIS, while I'm enjoying it more than the past several, does have a small universe, stagey feel to it.On maxim I've come to believe is true in fiction is the bigger the characters, the smaller the world.
The more you make it so that the protagonists can solve every issue (even those of epic scope), and repeatedly run into a recurring cast of characters, the more small and stagey the setting feels.
This is one reason (aside from being so unformed) the TOS universe felt so big and wild. Kirk almost never met the same characters twice, and was basically dealing with crises of the week on a single solar system or planet. It made it feel like there the rest of the dozen connies had room to have adventures just as wild that remained just beyond the camera's reach.
The tech was unstable in 2285.The tech is unstable. I'm not inclined to let it have the opportunity to kill again. I trust tech less than I trust people using the tech.
I thought that scene was particularly funny given Tilly's out right insane idea that Reno might have a copy, given she had left that business a hundred years before it was even written.The subplot involving a handwritten book in the 32nd century, lacking a digital backup except in a secret mobile base, strains credibility, though a scene with Reno does provide some relief.
Assumption.The tech was unstable in 2285.
By 2381 however they had stabilized it.
If Planet "Locarno" is still around in the 32nd Century, I'd argue that it worksAssumption.
We have no idea if actually works.
We do not speak of this,Even Trek's "believable" reasons for things happening aren't believable.![]()
Genesis killed the person who activated it...twice.
I wouldn't call that "working." Much less perfectly.
Genesis as a device is best left alone in the warehouse with transwarp beaming, curing old age, beaming a person in to their past selves, going Warp 13, meeting Lucifer, the ability to breath underwater, mind transference.
You DO know the books will still be there, right? They're not going to suddenly disappear.I know.
But still, finding out that all these books i've invested time & money in, is in fact a splinter timeline that's about to be nom'd into extinction on by trans-dimensional aliens kinda annoys me a bit.
But it is what it is, I suppose.
I'd definitely agree when it comes to the tech side of things. The tech serves the need of the plot. Buuuuut, when it comes to characters, their decisions, actions, etc., they should feel natural and, yes, believable.Even Trek's "believable" reasons for things happening aren't believable.![]()
Season 4 Episode 10 of Lower Decks shows us that it works and produces stable planets.Assumption.
We have no idea if actually works.
Planets plural?Season 4 Episode 10 of Lower Decks shows us that it works and produces stable planets.
So no, it is not an assumption.
I'd like evidence rather than assuming so.If Planet "Locarno" is still around in the 32nd Century, I'd argue that it works
Do you use an app that takes a screencap every so many seconds?
Or a castle in a swamp?I'm not exactly sure what protomatter is, but I'm fairly sure that protomatter is exactly the same as building a skyscraper in a swamp.
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