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Something that really doesn't make sense in Voyager

Frankly if Janeway wanted to deal with psychological issues, she should have just appointed a new ship's councilor

She did. He was called Neelix. (Well, technically he was morale officer but whatever)

Fine, how about Janeway giving that job to someone who is somewhat qualified at this and isn't the most annoying person on the ship. There had to be an ensign with a minor in psychology or something, that would be better then getting psychological help from a fry cook/garbage man.
 
Frankly if Janeway wanted to deal with psychological issues, she should have just appointed a new ship's councilor

She did. He was called Neelix. (Well, technically he was morale officer but whatever)

Fine, how about Janeway giving that job to someone who is somewhat qualified at this and isn't the most annoying person on the ship. There had to be an ensign with a minor in psychology or something, that would be better then getting psychological help from a fry cook/garbage man.

I thought Chakotay was considered the unofficial counselor (before Dr. House took over in the books.) Neelix was just there to make food and throw parties.

Also, I much prefer to believe someone has to scrub the holodecks after they're used. It just seems like a great way to haze some poor crewman.
 
Look, if you wanted NuBSG that was never going to happen. NuBSG required them to be totally alone in the Universe except for the Cylons, and for them to be the sole survivors of their civilization with no hope of ever going home again.

VOY is in a Universe that's totally loaded with lifeforms that can and would help them, wormholes or super-aliens who can easily send them home, and a home to return to as well.

Plus the Maquis and Fleeters didn't have serious issues to work through in the first place.

Because nuBSG is the only show with drama and tension amongst its cast of characters? No, it's not. Just because someone wants something more out of Voyager does not mean instant comparisons to nuBSG. I swear, if someone complains that there wasn't enough coffee on Voyager to make Janeway happy, somehow someway it's nuBSG's fault.

As for the Maquis and Starfleet not having serious issues to work through, I'd like to remind you that Voyager was hunting a group Starfleet had deemed as criminals and terrorists, and that much of the first episode was about addressing those issues. If that's not major, then what's the point of bringing in two different crews together in the first place? If the tension wasn't intended to cause some sort of conflict, why were we reminded of the Maquis (Chakotay's training, B'lanna's caught in the war, etc etc) every few episodes or so?
 
These days, whenever someone says VOY wasn't any good they always use NuBSG as a comparison. They also forget the unavoidable, fundamental differences between the two.

And no, when you get to the bottom of it there AREN'T enough differences between the Fleeters and Maquis for realistic conflict: The shows never bothered establishing just what the "Maquis Way" was, how they really differed from the Feds, or anything beyond them being non-Feds who were fighting the Cardassians (NOT the Federation).

The worst thing is, they didn't even HAVE to go to the trouble of creating the Maquis to begin with; they had a perfect opposing force to go along with the Fleeters in the form of the Romulans. All they had to do was rewrite the plot so it's the Neutral Zone they're exploring after hearing a distress call and they get sucked to the Caretaker where they escape with the help of a Romulan ship that also got pulled there.

THEN you'd have a show about real enemies with REAL differences.
 
These days, whenever someone says VOY wasn't any good they always use NuBSG as a comparison. They also forget the unavoidable, fundamental differences between the two.

And no, when you get to the bottom of it there AREN'T enough differences between the Fleeters and Maquis for realistic conflict: The shows never bothered establishing just what the "Maquis Way" was, how they really differed from the Feds, or anything beyond them being non-Feds who were fighting the Cardassians (NOT the Federation).

The worst thing is, they didn't even HAVE to go to the trouble of creating the Maquis to begin with; they had a perfect opposing force to go along with the Fleeters in the form of the Romulans. All they had to do was rewrite the plot so it's the Neutral Zone they're exploring after hearing a distress call and they get sucked to the Caretaker where they escape with the help of a Romulan ship that also got pulled there.

THEN you'd have a show about real enemies with REAL differences.

I think there is a middle ground between making Voyager into BSG and making it into a poor man's TNG, which is what it was for the first couple of seasons. The fact that Voyager wasn't BSG wasn't the problem, the fact that it didn't stick to its original premise was.
 
So if the holodeck can replicate real food, food that exists when taken off the holodeck and the holodeck has plenty of power reserves because of its isolated and incompatible power system, then why was food ever a concern to the point where they had to set up a kitchen and implement replicator rations? Why didn't they just replicate all the food they needed on the holodeck?
 
That's a bloody good point. They could have just set up the mess hall in there...

Let’s assume the reason that didn’t happen is not “Duh, we never thought of that.” So I figure holographic food must be made of holo-matter. In that case, I guess they still could set up a mess hall in there, but at an awful price...


Replicators would be a way higher priority then the Holodeck, the Holodeck is kinda useless when you are starving to death.
Interesting thought. If you take a holographic object off the holodeck, it disappears.

What happens if you eat holographic food, stay around on the holodeck long enough to digest it, and then leave the holodeck?

If you stay on the holodeck for a number of years with a steady diet of holographic food, you could end up with a body consisting almost entirely of holo-matter. Then you’d be stuck on the holodeck, but if you stay there and have real-matter food brought to you from outside the holodeck, eventually the holo-matter in your body will be replaced by real matter and you can leave.

We may have just stumbled on how they could have gotten Moriarty and his squeeze off the holodeck.

That’s assuming holomatter and common matter can interact chemically, but if they can’t, that food won’t taste like much.
 
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^ Like I said, holodeck food is NOT holomatter. It's replicated, just like from a replicator.

And since replication takes a lot of energy, they couldn't keep asking the holodeck for food. Why do you think they had replicator rations?
 
^ Like I said, holodeck food is NOT holomatter. It's replicated, just like from a replicator.

And since replication takes a lot of energy, they couldn't keep asking the holodeck for food. Why do you think they had replicator rations?

Let’s see if I grok where we’re going with this. That practically unlimited but untappable holodeck power supply is used for creating and manipulating holomatter. The holodeck can also replicate common matter, but when it replicates common matter it uses a replicator system that uses main ship power, instead of the holodeck’s power.
 
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I’m still left with the question of whether holomatter and common matter can chemically bond.

And the question of just how much of a hopeless geek I am that I would even think of that question let alone give a damn.

And the question of how geeky you all are that I actually expect to get intelligent answers.
 
Because nuBSG is the only show with drama and tension amongst its cast of characters? No, it's not. Just because someone wants something more out of Voyager does not mean instant comparisons to nuBSG. I swear, if someone complains that there wasn't enough coffee on Voyager to make Janeway happy, somehow someway it's nuBSG's fault.

Adama would have been able to get more coffee! :devil:
 
You don't fully understand what being cohesive implies.
It implies making a statement that signs an agreement with any discipline in the field your studying- in this case the holo-decks. They must be first at hand and next to anybody on the ship. The holo-decks include technology, along with the replicators, that is far more advanced than most of the ship.
If different batteries are required for the holo-system-and not the replicators- that means they might be dedicated to your own intimate systems.
 
Maybe it's me but doesn't tapping into the holodecks power affect the EMH?
Isn't that what happened in "Basics" when they created the fake Talaxian fleet and the Doc's progran got caught up in it?
 
^ Like I said, holodeck food is NOT holomatter. It's replicated, just like from a replicator.

And since replication takes a lot of energy, they couldn't keep asking the holodeck for food. Why do you think they had replicator rations?

Let’s see if I grok where we’re going with this. That practically unlimited but untappable holodeck power supply is used for creating and manipulating holomatter. The holodeck can also replicate common matter, but when it replicates common matter it uses a replicator system that uses main ship power, instead of the holodeck’s power.

^ Pretty much, yeah.

You had all those engineers running around and someone couldn't figure out how to make he replicators run off of the holodeck power grid?

And why does the holodeck have a different power grid to begin with... it is one of the most inconsequential systems on an entire damn starship. Plus it seemingly violates what was laid down in Booby Trap, where Geordi had to request power to continue running holographic simulations.
 
^^I don't think it violates them considering the Enterprise & Intrepid are two completely different ships, designed in different eras. What it means is the Voyager has a design flaw compared to the Enterprise.
 
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