Yeah, I agree that the Borg would just fly on by, the Fed's technology being too primitive to warrant interest. I don't think they would have been a juicy target before, say 2325 or so.
Just my opinion.
--Alex
So what you're talking about is retconning. TNG made it pretty clear that the Federation and Starfleet had zero knowledge of the Borg prior to the encounter in TNG's "Q, Who?"I'm speaking more from an in universe angle: not 'what if the 60s show had thought up and introduced the Borg' but 'what if the TOS era of the Star Trek Universe had run into the Borg'. While you're free to discuss the former, I intended the latter.
No, I'm talking about a "what if".So what you're talking about is retconning. TNG made it pretty clear that the Federation and Starfleet had zero knowledge of the Borg prior to the encounter in TNG's "Q, Who?"
Also, if actually concocted by the original production team, the Borg would likely have looked far different from the CenoByte inspired "hardware piercing human flesh" motif of the late 80s, early 90s. I actually started a thread posing this question and got some intriguing feedback.
http://www.trekbbs.com/showthread.php?t=147168
Sincerely,
Bill
So would these be 1960's era Borg? Complete with black pants and the prolific black turtleneck with windshield wiper tubing taped all over them. Along with the obligatory white face makeup and blinky lights on their chests.
It's already been answered by more than one poster. Kirk and crew were adept at thinking "outside the box." Once they see the Borg can't be bested by conventional means they find an unconventional way to do it. They had already had plenty of practice so no real biggee. They might even be better at it than the TNG crew. Indeed in "Q, Who?" Picard acknowledges being screwed and pleads with Q to save their asses. It isn't until the Borg are hovering over Earth that Data gets the clue from Picard/Locutus. The way Picard and crew were often written it seemed to take them a long time to figure things out. The way Kirk and crew were written they were more adept at finding the chink in an enemy's defences.No, I'm talking about a "what if".So what you're talking about is retconning. TNG made it pretty clear that the Federation and Starfleet had zero knowledge of the Borg prior to the encounter in TNG's "Q, Who?"
And again, as I said, I'm not talking about production or out-of-universe. I'm speaking in-universe.
If you're Medieval level tech or something, then the Borg fly on through. If you're of any great technological advancement, though, the Borg will assimilate you. The UFP even of TNG is more primitive compared to the Borg (it was mentioned that someday, if the UFP advanced enough, the Borg would respect them. But for now, they were just fodder to be assimilated).
How can you be so sure assimilation is slower than innovation? That would depend on who is being assimilated. The Borg could assimilate some Race with 1000s of years more advanced technology than the Federation, in just one act of assimlation that takes them 1 week. As has been pointed out, the Federation didn't save themselves from the Borg with superior technology, they did it by thinking outside the box. SuperAdvancedTechnoRace Number 1296 may not be able to stave off the assimilation for whatever reasonHumans innovate, the Borg assimilate. Therefore the advance of technological progress is faster for the Federation. Projecting forward, if the Federation manages to avoid assimilation, they will eventually gain the means to defeat the Borg outright. However, extrapolating backward the slower progress of the Borg means that at the time of TOS the technological advantage would be theirs to an even greater degree than it was at the time of TNG. To put it simply, a century of human progress yields more result than a century of Borg progress.
If, on the other hand, you're talking about the prospect of the Borg having been introduced in, say, a hypothetical fourth season of TOS and written to be a threat comparable to their status in TNG, it would have made for some great storytelling, since as has been pointed out above, the elements were there for it. Here would be one scenario: Have Trelane return and fufill the role of "Q", whipping the Enterprise across space and thereby introducing the Borg, and having "Best of both Worlds" as the first feature film.
Didn't say 1000 years more advanced then the Borg, I said 1000 years more advanced then the Federation. But, there is no guarantee they could fight them off, they may have one big weakness that might be right up the Borg's alley. I'm just saying that is perfectly plausible that the Borg could make incredible advances in a very short amount of time, depending upon who they assimilate. Maybe that really advanced race is overly sensitive to light, and they live in almost complete darkness, and the Borg light up the place when they come to assimilate leaving them cowering in the light, or maybe they are vulnerable to Telepathy and the Borg force a Telepath Race to help them with a promise not to assimilate the telepathic Race (though of course they wouldn't keep that promise, unless the Telepath Race had nothing the Borg wanted)A race a thousand years advanced over the Borg would be capable of fighting them off, hence no assimilation.
Does bring to mind an interesting fact: Virtually all of the races encountered in all the various Star Trek incarnations fell into one of three catagories: Primitive (anybody from stone age to 21st century level of developement), Counterparts (anybody in rough technological parity), and Demi-gods (Metrons, Organians, ect.)
Unless I'm not thinking of somebody.
That kind of approach.SPOCK
"We do not know the extent of its powers"
KIRK
"Nor it ours"
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