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How did the Borg actually take note of humanity?

One question, has anyone seen any elderly that have been assimilated? I haven't seen a single old timer who has been assimilated. Do the Borg simple discount and overlook the old people during assimilation?

I mean other than playing shuffle board, assimilated old people would be to frail to assimilate, wouldn't they?

Or do the Borg inject probes into their cells that makes them young again?
 
One question, has anyone seen any elderly that have been assimilated? I haven't seen a single old timer who has been assimilated. Do the Borg simple discount and overlook the old people during assimilation?

I mean other than playing shuffle board, assimilated old people would be to frail to assimilate, wouldn't they?

Or do the Borg inject probes into their cells that makes them young again?

Picard was 61 when he was assimilated. I personally believe that Star Trek's future doesn't push back senescence like many others do, just that it provides nteenth degree of medical care to aide in longevity (no sign of de-aging outside of transporter mishaps). A 24th century 61-year-old is the same as a 21st century 61-year-old with a wealthy person's medical plan and organ-regenerating drugs. So I would count Picard as elderly, albeit very fit for his age (as befits a former marathon runner).

Tuvok was 112 when he was assimilated, although he was probably close to Vulcan middle age (a decade older than Sarek in Journey to Babel, however).

We also know from Enterprise that people can be injected with a virus that turns them into super-strong augments, almost instantly. So, presumably all the Borg drones get something akin to that.

It's also possible that the Borg infants seen in TNG and Voyager were just extremely old Drayans. Sure, why not?
 
Picard at 61 was close to middle age in a universe where humans can live to 137 or 140, so he was not elderly as we define the term, where most folks live to 80 something, so I can see the Borg assimilating his age group and ignoring Dr. McCoy
 
Picard at 61 was close to middle age in a universe where humans can live to 137 or 140, so he was not elderly as we define the term, where most folks live to 80 something, so I can see the Borg assimilating his age group and ignoring Dr. McCoy

How much "repair" can assimilation nanites perform?

They might be able to fix you right up, no matter how old you are.

Of course, then you're a drone...
 
Picard at 61 was close to middle age in a universe where humans can live to 137 or 140, so he was not elderly as we define the term, where most folks live to 80 something, so I can see the Borg assimilating his age group and ignoring Dr. McCoy

Picard likes to think of time as a friend who's here to remind you that getting old... sucks.
 
How much "repair" can assimilation nanites perform?

They might be able to fix you right up, no matter how old you are.

Of course, then you're a drone...

They can seemingly repair you fairly easily and bring you back from 18 hours of being dead... but yes, the downside is that you end up a drone under conventional circumstances.
But, if you modify the nanoprobes, you COULD technically just perform all the medical procedures you need on the person and de-age them (except of course the Federation can already do that without nanoprobes) WITHOUT assimilating them (which is exactly what Voyager crew did).
 
Didn't they cure death itself in Voyager and resurrect Neelix?

Indeed, as long as you have nanoprobes swimming in your blood you are virtually immortal. They also have that in the gamma quadrant moon (DS9, Battle Lines) except that they use them as punishment. The people there don't even seem to realize that these nanites could be used for positive purposes.
 
Indeed, as long as you have nanoprobes swimming in your blood you are virtually immortal. They also have that in the gamma quadrant moon (DS9, Battle Lines) except that they use them as punishment. The people there don't even seem to realize that these nanites could be used for positive purposes.
Plus, they can't actually leave that moon, if they did the nanites cease functioning and they die immediately.
 
Plus, they can't actually leave that moon, if they did the nanites cease functioning and they die immediately.
Yes, because the nanites have been programmed that way. BUt with nanites programmed for good (instead of for evil) you could have people remain young and healthy for many years, centuries, and even millennia... IE virtual immortality.
 
Perhaps the reason nanites are categorically considered evil by our Trek heroes is that they absolutely need swarm intelligence to operate? It's all good and well to fear AI that operates something akin to a human: an android body, a big clumsy robot, a starship... But one should be absolutely terrified by an AI that operates something totally inhuman, and even in the best of circumstances would have to struggle mightily to understand the human viewpoint.

Nanites and the Collective would go nicely together, though. I wonder which of them was the chicken and which was the egg.

But yeah, human assimilees back in 2362 already. And nothing to preclude there having been some in AD 1358 or 23,234 BC, too.

Timo Saloniemi
 
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