Course: Oblivion made me cry. 

*SLAP* My God man, get ahold of yourself!!!!The Borg Queen said:
Course: Oblivion made me cry.![]()
Jack Bauer said:
At least it spawned one of my favorite episodes of the show Course: Oblivion so it wasn't a total loss.
One; it made the VOY crew look like fools from the get-go. They're stranded in the Delta Quadrant and they know they are starting to run low on fuel, and yet they wait until they're almost out before turning off the lights and closing down the holodeck? That's like waiting until you're in the middle of nowhere, running on fumes before starting to look like a gas station.
Two; the characterization was off for me. After 4 years, Harry suddenly decides to become assertive? That's fine and dandy, and it's good to see the writers want to change him, but unfortunately it wasn't done in a very convincing way for me. Also, Tuvok came across as a complete jerk towards Neelix. I know he doesn't like the guy, but I thought he was an arrogant ass.
Three; As already said, what gives with the spacesuit business?
..how come the shuttlecraft doors were left open and the furnite inside was fine?
Who knows how long it was before Chakotay's team found Tom and Harry, but they should've been toast.
Apparently a magical-never-before-heard-of-even-though-there-have-been-circumstances-where-we-have-needed-it-backup-life-support-system also has protective qualities against the 12K atmosphere. Why not just start with that air supply since it seems to have been invincible to the climate?
Of course, this isn't the writer's fault. Andre Bormanis, who wrote the episode, was the show's science advisor, and he knows what deuterium is. He actually intended the precious substance on the planet to be dilithium. I think it was Braga who changed it to deuterium because he liked the gag about the ship "running out of gas." But unfortunately, nothing else about the episode was changed in order to make sense of that change.
Magnus H: We have to keep moving. If we take the replicators offline and run environmental systems at half power, we can go another twenty light years before refuelling.
Erin H: We should refuel now. The nearest dilithium is in an asteroid field just ten days from here.
Yeah, timo always has some great thought provoking replies.david g said:
Timo, thanks for the thoughtful post. Good to hear some justice being served this bewilderingly maligned episode!
I'm still convinced the spacesuit was a screw up when they dropped the frozen in 12K pool that grabbed them.
But the idea that Voyager should have loaded up on deuterium is just wrong. It's like saying that a car crossing a desert should load up on oxygen.
Of course, if deuterium is anything like the real-world deuterium, any planet and a good number of moons should have enough deuterium to keep them going indefinitely. They'd have saved a lot of trouble if the ship had run out of dilithium, since that doesn't have any actual physical properties we can count against it.Timo said:
Not necessarily. Space isn't full of deuterium the way Earth's deserts are full of oxygen. And starships would seem to consume ginormous amounts of it, if they operate by annihilating the stuff (with antideuterium they have first created with energy obtained from deuterium-deuterium fusion). The only plausible means of obtaining deuterium for a ship short of the fuel could well be sucking it up pre-enriched.
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