You don't get it. The Borg still took the Federation by surprise when they appeared. The best they could do was scramble forty starships at Wolf 359.
They surprised them as much as they couldn't see them coming right away and that an attack was imminent. But still a couple days passed in the instance of BoBW. That's hardly what I would call instant, which is what my original claim was.
Uh, no it doesn't. That's the whole idea behind a logical fallacy. You present only two options, either we get a deus ex machina, or we get a long drawn out story. There are other possibilities.
By George, I think he's got it. It doesn't matter. It's all about getting our heroes where they need to be in the story. Travel times and distances are only important if it pertains to the story, and even then 100% accuracy is not required.
Yeah, I think we're saying the same thing here, just in different ways. I just prefer an approach using more detail.
Yes, you did. You said:
"Don't let the Borg or any enemy have the kind of technology that lets them instantaneously get to the heart of the Federation's defenses." = weaker
And I've already said it was never instantaneous, at least until "Endgame", which is a piece of shit on so many levels that I'm content to ignore it. The writers of BoBW and FC knew not to make it happen so quick, and they were consistent with each other in terms of how the Borg invaded.
"If you make an enemy too strong or mismatched, that will create this kind of situation. Instead, create a limitation on their technology so that the Enterprise can get there." = slower
I just proposed exactly what the writers did.
But the situation in the story was that the Enterprise was at the Neutral Zone and had to rush back to Earth because it was needed there.
Ok, I wasn't going to assume that you surely meant First Contact, but now that you have, there are a lot of issues.
The whole RNZ thing was to establish that the Federation didn't trust Picard, which didn't really serve a purpose for the overall story except for maybe to make an undertone that he might want to go back to the collective. Let's never mind that the Federation's idea makes no sense for so many reasons and get on to the distances.
It doesn't matter if the RNZ is an hour away, or if you put them somewhere else (like defending Alpha Centauri, Vulcan, etc), as long as you are consistent in saying that those places are only an hour away. You can't later have a story that says that same place would be a day away.
Because the spreadsheet doesn't matter as it will be tossed out the window at the first opportunity.
Only by people who don't want to pay attention to detail, and take the easy way out. Again, this is a theoretical, "What if they weren't lazy in this regard?"
If our heroes are hundreds of light-years way "out there", and something very urgent is taking place back home, there's no way our heroes can make it back to save the day in a feasible amount of time unless you either change the velocities or change the distances (make it a smaller galaxy). The alternative is to keep our heroes close to home at all times or not specify where they are at any given time.
I'd rather have that alternative where the heroes are close to home when necessary. Perhaps missions could move outward and then back in, and repeat.
And they aren't mutually inclusive either.
Sorry, but do you know what mutually exclusive means? It either is exclusive or it inclusive, it can't be both. In this case, it is almost always able to be inclusive.
If by smart fans, you mean nitpickers, well they're going to be pulled out the story anyway (they usually are).
No, I just mean people with a different standard of what's sensible. For instance, in this movie, Spock seeing Vulcan in the sky pulled me out of the story for a moment. That isn't just some nit to be picked, and a ton of people recognized it. If someone isn't smart enough to recognize why this might be a problem, then they are just fine.
What you consider irrational, others may consider sensible.
The only people who consider a deus ex machina sensible are people who really just don't care about anything. They just wanna see some pretty moving pictures. If anyone considers "a wizard did it" as a sensible solution for any problem, then they should be relegated to a show that meets their intelligence and standards. And even still, I'm sure they have some sort of standard. Like ships not just appearing out of nowhere and things contradicting already established plot points.
And not everyone is an aspiring writer or game creator.
No doubt, but even someone who isn't can still appreciate intricacy.
Um, all of Trek requires a "needless" suspension of disbelief.
Not really. The things you do need to accept are the things you already laid out. As long as the writers define their show in a certain way, they should follow it. The needless part comes when things blatantly contradict science, logic, reason, and any of the aforementioned established rules.