Neither did Preemptive Strike or Renaissance Man.Oh well. I was just kinda distracted throughout this episode over how it doesn’t feel like it’s actually leading up to the end of the show.

(Yeah, I know.But it's mostly a joke.)
Neither did Preemptive Strike or Renaissance Man.Oh well. I was just kinda distracted throughout this episode over how it doesn’t feel like it’s actually leading up to the end of the show.
I think that's how we need to view the epilogue/extra scenes--it's a minor miracle given Paramount's situation.It is a small miracle that Paramount allowed this in light of their poor financial standing.
Paramount might be able to afford that series!I’d watch a series with Rayner in the chair
Since when is Duranium impervious to scans?
Ships were made of Duranium and Tritanium alloys in the 24th century (heck, VOY and the Delta Flyer were made from Duranium), and sensors at the time were easily able to scan through Duranium hulls (unless someone put up a dampening field to disrupt scans), but 32nd century tech CAN'T?
IIRC it was specifically described as a duranium alloy. Whatever the other metal is, it would presumably be responsible for blocking the sensors.
I must have been under the false impression that reshoots/add-ons were conducted throughout the season in order to give it a sense of finality. So, they only did that for the upcoming finale? That’s A LOT to pile on a season finale that wasn’t intended as the series finale. It makes me wish Paramount would have given Disco a special movie to serve as the ending if they didn’t want to spend money on a whole season. Oh well. I was just kinda distracted throughout this episode over how it doesn’t feel like it’s actually leading up to the end of the show.
I’d watch a series with Rayner in the chair
T'Rina (via Vulcan telepathic communication): Use the logic Saru. Let go, Saru.Saru is so gentle and loving............. Now go kill badguys!![]()
This was a passable episode for me.
I was really annoyed that the whole plot happened, basically, because the crew sat there oo-ing and awe-ing at the floating barrel instead of just putting it in the shuttlebay ASAP and getting out of there.
I found the Book-Burnham heart-to-heart really annoying. You're saying in all the time they were doing repairs, she didn't have a chance until RIGHT THEN to talk to him?
I did, conversely, love Rayner's line about touchy-feely encouragement. I've been missing seeing characters who were just confident in what they were doing and don't need constant reassurance. Like a whole ship full of Barclays.
This would have been a great moment to make mention of Adira being joined, and her past experiences giving her an advantage on hacking the Breen. But of course, they still don't ever mention it.
Great to see Saru back. Disappointed we still don't see him interacting with the rest of the crew.
Moll's character, and my enjoyment of her, has dipped dramatically.
I'm tired of Tilly and Stamets being sidelined so much.
So...is that Dreadnaught the only ship Ruhn had? Is it unique to Ruhn? It's hard to tell based on how the characters were talking about it.
Frakes does a great job directing, as usual. But you can only work with what you're given.
It will be over soon. Or now, if you're that frustrated.Hoping for a better finale but I am not real optimistic. Feels like Red Angel/Burn reveal time to me.
Who? I thought we didn't know anything about the Bridge crew?Owo would have had it.
Who? I thought we didn't know anything about the Bridge crew?![]()
Oh good.I see what you did there...
Given how close together the Black Hole's were, that is just one of a number of problems with that scene.A really big fucking complaint about the episode though:
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lagrange_point
The magic box was stored at Lagrange Point 1, in the middle between the two black holes.
Apart from being the most boring one - it's actually an unstable one!
If the mcguffin really should have stayed for 800 years - it should have been parked in Lagrange points 4 or 5 - which are much cooler anyway!
As of this episode. That's how it worksSince when is Duranium impervious to scans?
Ships were made of Duranium and Tritanium alloys in the 24th century (heck, VOY and the Delta Flyer were made from Duranium), and sensors at the time were easily able to scan through Duranium hulls (unless someone put up a dampening field to disrupt scans), but 32nd century tech CAN'T?
As of this episode. That's how it works
What ever they alloyed the Duranium with in the 32nd Century makes it impervious to scans,
I feel like the pandemic and COVID protocols is part of the reason behind this. If you add more extras or stunt folks to the testing pools, it'll slow production down.One funny observation:
Discovery seems to have entirely done away now with the trope of "redshirts". Since several season now, there haven't been some poor extras killed by monsters or bad guys to show the situation is serious. Which is good.
I swear I read that while Paramount told them they could do reshoots after cancelation, they declined to add anything.
There were some ships that Voyager couldn't scan through, depending on the alloy, there might be certain Duranium alloys that are designed to be strong and to block sensor signatures.Since when is Duranium impervious to scans?
Ships were made of Duranium and Tritanium alloys in the 24th century (heck, VOY and the Delta Flyer were made from Duranium), and sensors at the time were easily able to scan through Duranium hulls (unless someone put up a dampening field to disrupt scans), but 32nd century tech CAN'T?
It's only unstable if there were Stellar Objects of uneven size, but since the Black Holes appear to be similar, the Lagrange Point 1 that is shared by both of them might be stableA really big fucking complaint about the episode though:
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lagrange_point
The magic box was stored at Lagrange Point 1, in the middle between the two black holes.
Apart from being the most boring one - it's actually an unstable one!
If the mcguffin really should have stayed for 800 years - it should have been parked in Lagrange points 4 or 5 - which are much cooler anyway!
As of this episode. That's how it works
What ever they alloyed the Duranium with in the 32nd Century makes it impervious to scans,
There were some ships that Voyager couldn't scan through, depending on the alloy, there might be certain Duranium alloys that are designed to be strong and to block sensor signatures.
These were scientists who wanted to hide something, give them a bit of credit on coming up with good ways to hide things passively.
We have stealth coatings and materials that are designed to absorb/block/redirect EM signals IRL, you'd think that the scientists who want to hide such important knowledge would come up with good passive materials that would block the fundamentals of scanning tech.
Especially Long Range sensors.
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