I would not recommend watching it then. I love JAG.Shows like JAG make me want to punch the TV.
I would not recommend watching it then. I love JAG.Shows like JAG make me want to punch the TV.
You might like JAG in Space by Jack Campbell. It has space lawyering without subversion of protocol.Shows like JAG make me want to punch the TV.
I'll have to check it out.You might like JAG in Space by Jack Campbell. It has space lawyering without subversion of protocol.
If you end up liking it I also recommend the Stark's War series, which is quite short and complete, and The Lost Fleet, which can be a bit repetitive but really interesting. It's all the same author using nom do plume.I'll have to check it out.
I didn't really like Stark's War but it might be worth a revisit after finishing the other series.If you end up liking it I also recommend the Stark's War series, which is quite short and complete, and The Lost Fleet, which can be a bit repetitive but really interesting. It's all the same author using nom do plume.
I think this point needs to be understood well. 24th century tech is not infailable, and would make for the most boringIf this were all real? It should theoretically be damned near impossible. Everything on a starship is under computer control. Without command codes you shouldn't be able to do anything. But it's not real, it's fiction, and an un-stealable starship would make for boring stories sometimes.
Now, above I used the word theoretically. How that word is relevant, is this: look at any computer operating system we have today, any piece of security software. What one person can make can be broken somehow by another person; there are always security holes, undetected bugs that allow exploits, and so on. I know there must be IT professionals and computer science graduates here, so you of all people know what I say is true. Why should 24th century Starfleet computers be any less exploitable? You'd hope they'd be more secure, but I wouldn't be so sure about that.
Just my $0.02 worth.
I think this point needs to be understood well. 24th century tech is not infailable, and would make for the most boringstories this side reading of IRS tax code in the original Klingon.
Because those workings are adequately protected?
Believing so would appear natural enough. We don't have food tasters today, even though poisoning us through food should be simpler than ever. There's simply a general level of overall security that makes it foolish to undertake special security measures that would make life hell, on the off chance that they might help prolong it. And even if we do fear assassins in specific, we don't hire tasters or sniffers: we hire trusted food producers. Which in practice only ever means hiring producers who aren't known for their untrustworthiness. (This going for the military, too.)
Really, if Hollywood gets something (deliberately) wrong, it's the absurdly complicated security measures the villains or the marks have in place...
Timo Saloniemi
The Binars have binary decision thinking (yes or no), so, even if they calculated that the Federation had a 1% chance to say no, then to them, it was no. They needed to pursue a course of action were the outcome is 100% yes.Two, to the Binars themselves, did you bother ASKING? If they did enough study to know the ship well enough to steal it they would also know the Federation LOVES to help people.
The Binars have binary decision thinking (yes or no), so, even if they calculated that the Federation had a 1% chance to say no, then to them, it was no. They needed to pursue a course of action were the outcome is 100% yes.
And we don't live in Game of Thrones.
I think if you look in the world of paranoid world leaders the profession is not as rare as you think.
My point being is why were they even employing the Binars?
Two, to the Binars themselves, did you bother ASKING?
Good security has the dual quality of being sufficient to the task and not onerous for the user.
Anything with the fire power to level a planet, needs to be very hard to steal even if that means the rightful crew really has to work at it.
The analogy that seems the most readily available would seem to be could a modern-day naval warship be boarded and taken control of by hostile force, the crew imprisoned and the ship sailed away, weapons used etc.
One of my favorites that he has done!Just remember to make sure you lock up all the crew including the cook.
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