Tuvok's dad, but yeah. And, FWIW, the Stargazer was originally going to be a Constitution class ship herself for 'The Battle' even though the study model for the ready room had already been built to represent that ship.
Ah, I remember that. They had to overdub Geordi's line, iirc. That's why the chose the name "Constellation."
During the war, I always wanted to see some reactivated Constitutions used as really large photon torpedoes.
I always suggested he ended up a deck jockey afterward, one way or the other. Personally, I say he didn't last much longer before retiring. Given Starfleet's propensity towards crazy Admirals, he may well have been promoted. Perhaps he was only a career test captain anyway? I wouldn't want to serve on his ship.
I would. His mustache had authority.
Thinking about it, Admiral Styles would have been a fun addition to TFF or TUC.
Me too, but the same kind of crap has happened and still happens with the real-world military.
Well, I suppose that's the case. An acquaintance of mine formerly of the USN has a sad story about the Osprey.
Entirely possible! Or, since the Ambassador was launched in, what, 2315, maybe it was to coincide with that new design?
A palpable possibility.
Here's something that gets me about the new warp scale though is that it isn't consistent with the old one. Now we can likely assume that "warp factor" is, as depicted in the TNGTM, a power threshold, the most efficient points on the scale, and not really a speed. If it's a function of warp itself, should they not have realized that certain non-integer warps were more efficient than what their mathematical models had predicted? Perhaps it's a materials difference in the warp coils, not a fundamental property of warp itself.
I thnk that's a valid interpretation as well, and a rather interesting one. Not being a warp physicist, do I really have any authority to assert my view over anyone elses. (I don't want you to think I'm trampling your turf or anything.)
Well, it seems like they fear crashing into things despite being at warp (hence the navigational deflector, hence trying to avoid Gothos when Trelane keeps putting it in their way), which means that it's not totally outside the universe and may interact with objects in our universe. Even if the infinite velocity = collapsing the universe idea is dismissed as speculative, unless there's some property we don't know about that diminishes the interactivity of the object (which is possible, given what we know about interphasic stuff, but that might be different), true warp 10 would plow the mass of the vessel through innumerable solid objects.
I just think that having it, in essence, being a disguised jump drive, makes more sense, if we are to take 'Threshold' and the definition of warp ten into account, which I do because I don't like the slippery slope of picking and choosing episodes to ignore. (
Moments, perhaps,
elements, perhaps, but episodes no.) If not, the field is clear.
Threshold is hard to ignore. Take that for what you will.

Perhaps Tom merely innocently misrepresented the capabilities of his new warp drive?
Oh, agreed. I think naturally as ships become better able to achieve high warp speeds in the Trekverse, it would be logical to have more charted 'steps' between 9 and infinity. Not the old system literally, of course, but something more like it.
After the Delta Flyer's successful flight (technically it was successful

), a new scale is needed.
