Oh yes, Zathras! I caught the mention alright, I just decided not to bring it up because I'm fairly certain I wont be seeing Zathras at all in the future.![]()
Actually he may see Zathras, but he'll not see Zathras... though Zathras is a possibility. Maybe.No, you won't see Zathras. Now Zathras, on the other hand, you will see.
I think he meant that "Matters of Honour" references the events of "Confessions and Lamentations"; the Shadow ship was destroyed at the Markab system's jumpgate. Sheridan points out that this jumpgate is expendable because the Markabs aren't using it anymore, having been excused from intergalactic trade and travel for reasons of being extinct.
I think he meant that "Matters of Honour" references the events of "Confessions and Lamentations"; the Shadow ship was destroyed at the Markab system's jumpgate. Sheridan points out that this jumpgate is expendable because the Markabs aren't using it anymore, having been excused from intergalactic trade and travel for reasons of being extinct.
I love his grave robber speech. "There's nothing more I hate than economic efficiency, nothing more I love than abandoning trillions of dollars worth of property to the dustbin of the universe! Salvage operations make me want to puke! Raagh!"
I think he meant that "Matters of Honour" references the events of "Confessions and Lamentations"; the Shadow ship was destroyed at the Markab system's jumpgate. Sheridan points out that this jumpgate is expendable because the Markabs aren't using it anymore, having been excused from intergalactic trade and travel for reasons of being extinct.
I love his grave robber speech. "There's nothing more I hate than economic efficiency, nothing more I love than abandoning trillions of dollars worth of property to the dustbin of the universe! Salvage operations make me want to puke! Raagh!"
Well, in fairness, do you want people robbing your grave? The implications are understandably distasteful. Your grandmother's clothes might be secondhand now but the corpse doesn't really need them, and hey, a lot of life left in those teeth.
Though the opportunity to visit Markab as a rather important historical and cultural site has also been severed or at any rate made more difficult.
Actually he may see Zathras, but he'll not see Zathras... though Zathras is a possibility. Maybe.No, you won't see Zathras. Now Zathras, on the other hand, you will see.
(because I can't be arsed with tags, I'll keep this vague)Though that spare Markab world woulda been handy during the whole Byron debacle.
Though in destroying the jumpgate, he didn't block the homeworld from a more legitimate operation-- like an archaeological group or valid salvage team. They would have the resources to go in with a jump-capable ship. All he blocked were small ships that were gate-reliant... and thus more likely to be the shadier side of "salvage".
Going to new systems without a gate and figuring out where to construct them was the purpose of the Explorer ships in the Earth Alliance (this was mentioned in "A Distant Star"). Those ships had jump engines. Likely the other races had something similar.How did anyone get to Markab to build a gate in the first place, if you can't find Markab without the gate and its beacon?
All via sublight travel? Or did jump-capable ships somehow fly in to build them?
Of course you can get there without a beacon. Navigation in hyperspace is difficult, but more advanced races should not have a problem doing it.
Actually he may see Zathras, but he'll not see Zathras... though Zathras is a possibility. Maybe.No, you won't see Zathras. Now Zathras, on the other hand, you will see.
Don't forget about Zathras.
I liken it to aircraft navigation today. Older aircraft used ground-based VORs (VHF Omnidirectional Range), flying along Victor Airways connecting two VORs. (This is assuming instrument flight rules---if you're flying visual, you can of course go wherever.) Off-airway navigation was difficult at best, although you could always fly direct to the nearest VOR without trouble.
I get the impression that hyperspace beacons aren't even that good. They're probably more akin to the even older NDBs (Nondirectional Beacons), which don't give you radial or distance information, only a direction to the station.
Newer aircraft can just use GPS, which makes things a lot easier.
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