This appears to be from the Technical Manuals, however it bears strong consideration. If dilithium and latinum were replicatable then setting up replicator factory facilities linked to mega structure power facilities would be easy and sensible. Dilithium would lose its strategic importance before the development of dilithium regeneration.
Yet replication takes power first and foremost (when the tiny plastic trinkets in "The Child" pose a problem, it is one of power allocation, calling for the warp core to be dedicated to the task), and dilithium is supposed to be key to the production of power. "Let's build a giant oil-burning plant that creates coal" only works economically for a certain set of parameters, and dilithium probably just doesn't meet those. "Let's build a giant oil-burning plant that creates this ideal catalyst that turns all organic waste into oil" is probably both a more accurate analogy and a likelier approach to succeed, but again we can trivially assume that the numbers just won't crunch.
On the up side it would turn latinum into fiat currency rather than commodity currency.
Surely it must be that already? That is, a bar of GPL is not something you can peel little chips off for feeding your kids, but rather an abstract token for great wealth, essentially a very thick and heavy (and most importantly pretty) million-dollar bill.
It's just that it's not coded with something trivially forgeable such as patterns, but chemically (Quark can taste it for the lower units of currency). You can forge that with replicators, but two bars each bearing the same code are only worth one bar, and if you can hack into the system that governs the codes, you don't need to fool around with replicators.
Counterfeit bills are worthless as they lack the backing of the US government as tender and are a crime to produce and crime to use.
Nope - they are perfectly good tender as long as nobody tells the US government. Their value isn't affected by them being illegal, because nobody cares about the law,
unless one gets caught. And whether attempting to pass one on is worth the risk or not depends chiefly on the value of the bill.
In the case of the Star Trek replicators, they can produce perfect modern bills because the entire note is of a level which can be replicated.
And those would be worthwhile if they can be slipped to people who don't care about the one thing that establishes whether they have value - the serial number. With small bills, there's no point in caring: you can always dump them forward since nobody else cares, either. But the point of a million dollar bill is that it gets checked, not for imperfections, but for the abstraction of agreed-upon worth you quoted above - the one nobody really cares about because there
are no million dollar bills.
The major difference though is, replicated bills would cost more than those produced by modern factories because replication requires at least, if not more, an amount of energy equal to the mass of the note.
Nonsense. The mass
or substance of the bill is of interest to nobody, either in the scenario where dollars get replicated (because that doesn't involve replicators) or the one where Trek money gets replicated (because in terms or mass, it's free: if
and when you can
and do use the machine for your morning coffee, then replicating a fortune in, say, GPL will only cost you a week's worth of coffee.)
We do have the hard limits on drugs.
What hard limit? Some stuff is difficult to replicate in time and in sufficient quantity with the available resources (hytritium to purify the Beta Agni water supply), so field medics won't get it in time and thus won't rush to their replicators. They rush to existing stores instead.
Other stuff is illegal (biomimetic gel) so doctors won't rush to their replicators there, either; when villains do, they get caught somehow, much like the guy who replicated the rifle in "Field of Fire" was supposed to. Or then don't, if they are clever enough, much like the "Field of Fire" guy.
Given the medical replicator which made Worf's spine, drugs of all sorts should have been easy, yet we must assume even medical replicators lack the resolution to make certain complex chemicals.
Or just the patience. Worf's spine did get made, as did a bit of replacement brain in VOY "Emanations". It took time. When our heroes need drugs, they need them there and then.
If it were just a matter of power then we would have seen another instance of dedicating the ship's total power supply to the task.
...And waiting for X hours, X depending on the plot needs. Always assume X exceeds available time and you get clear of the contradiction that some stuff should be unreplicable when certain fantastically difficult things clearly are not.
Yes, certain randomness could endanger lives in replicated food, however there is a difference between random and impossible. I imagine the drugs which must be delivered have impossibly complex proteins or chemicals for then modern replicators. But, for foods, any dangerous random chemicals and such are just de-replicated for another shot. Since the chemical is not impossible to get right it will eventually get it right given enough tries.
Such a method should produce any molecule, given time - including all sorts of molecules no method
whatsoever could
ever produce. Just wait for the impossible to happen (it always eventually does) and then repeat on that.
You might as well claim people cannot see either.
Nobody can, in a blind test, which is what is relevant here.
We don't know the features or capabilities of industrial replicators. We might assume far greater output but it could easily be nothing more than greater size for larger single replications, or a built in replicator for automated delivery or assembly. There is no reason to assume greater ability to replicate complex chemicals than the other possibilities.
No reason to assume industrial replicators are the specific machines that achieve this greater ability. But no reason to assume there wouldn't be machines that do - after all, the existence of "special" replicators is well established, such as of the machine that gave Worf his new spine.
We do know there are competing methods of acquiring materials (they still mine and refine in TNG). We hear of no competing method of manufacture, though...
When have we seen regular alcohol from replicators?
"Up the Long Ladder". Unless Worf was lying, of course.
Synthehol is noted as having the same taste and flavor to mos individuals, Scotty's response is a distinct outlier among drinkers in Star Trek. Actually, Picard's brother agrees. This fits with developing a taste for things with greater exposure.
Or just a snobby attitude. But it's not a replicator-related issue in the slightest, but a simple synthehol vs. real stuff blind test competition here. Those two
are distinct products, potentially as distinct as today's champagne is of that produced in the 1700s (it's not as non-alcoholic beer today would fail to sell because it tastes completely different from alcoholic beer, or that there would be products striving to taste less different). Scotty got synthehol but wanted alcohol - both bottles were replicated for all we know. Or then neither was, but that would go against the concept of everybody everywhere (and especially on starships because you get fewer freaks there, or at least fewer
culinary freaks) replicating everything that goes into their mouths.
As I described, consistency is a selling point, therefore desirable. Games are not food, it is a false equivalence.
You can have consistency and you can have variety subtle and gross. There's nothing stopping you there as far as replicators are concerned; the games industry just goes to show how trivial it is to program an
arbitrary level of complexity into the product - in this case, food.
Sales support it, items stated as hand crafted sell for a premium. People buy these things and those companies survive despite equivilant goods of supposedly inferior, fully automated, quality.
The customer buys an impression. It doesn't follow the customer understands what he's buying - if the opposite product were marketed as superior, we don't know whether it would sell better or not, but we can surmise it would because marketing apparently seldom fails.
Everyone knows the product is straight from a machine and therefore inferior. Only the hand crafted "imperfection" counts as a sign of superiority due to greater personal labor and as a way to show the item as overtly unique and therefore more representative of one's individuality.
Yet all it takes to turn a machine imperfection to a hand crafted one is mislabeling of the product. It's certainly not a practice the Ferengi came up with. (See artificial flies in artificial amber for a vast industry based on the concept!)
Quark had a synthehol sale in "House of Quark." That would be pointless unless money is exchanging.
The fake Picard in "Allegiance" also offered free drinks to his crew. The words might have lost some of their significance on the way... Although none of their luster, as Picard's gesture raises a cheer. What Quark is doing may well be a gesture as well - after all, giving out free booze would boost his reputation, but giving out free booze at a very special price also helps him recoup! (This is they guy who sells used parts of himself for a profit, mind you.)
We just don't see the transactions.
Which is the odd thing, because while abstract, invisible money should probably otherwise be expected, Quark not only insists on cash in other connections (even at the risk of his life, such as when he's dragging crates of cash to safety) - he is also the type not to suffer a tab!
Certainly, testing a product out makes sense, but it still lacks the special characteristic, real or imagined, which the so called real thing possesses.
Hard to tell whether the latter would have been a factor on the root beer market.
Keep in mind that he and Guinan both keep the so called real thing behind the counter
The value of "real" is different from what you think, though - Guinan keeps hard drugs under the counter and soft ones above, but neither is indicated to be nonreplicated. It's just the synthehol vs. alcohol difference again.
I don't now about turning a replicator into a life form ready transporter, but we do know they can make rifles and phasers. However, they are also blocked from making phasers and rifles. I am not sure how wide ranging that block is.
And of course the one time it is plot-relevant, we see a resourceful villain who gets his gun anyway. Probably the best the system can do to enforce artificial (rather than performance-based) limits is to set up red flags when a villain gets his way with the machine.
If he is found out passing off replicated goods as so called genuine goods he will lose the trust of his customers. That would be a significant motivator for him. If he is upfront about the goods being replicated copies then he is safe.
Quark has soiled his reputation more often than he has his pants over the thought of losing his reputation. It's just caveat emptor - on a frontier outpost, he's ideally situated to swindle without fear of retribution.
How many times have we seen the same exact replicated food item?
The most trivial cases make for the best tests: they never manage to fill up Picard's teacup to the same exact level.
...It's the O'Brien family meals that offer us good glimpses on (non)identical portions.
Not knowing the chemical makeup as in not having it in digital form, not having a physical item to copy, and not knowing it off the top of one's head.
I don't quite understand the scenario. You ask the replicator to produce "Something, you know, stuff, I think it's called asphapha or bespephe or something, and it might be green"?
If this "stuff" exists at all, surely accessing its chemical formula should be trivial. If it doesn't exist or cannot be identified, the replicator will just draw a blank - but won't be uniquely handicapped there.
At three times more expensive there are notable differences, as long as the place is actually good and as long as you really like food. There are bad expensive places which are a waste of money; as they say, "all sizzle, no steak." Once you hit ten times I figure it is just for showing off to clients.
Plus you have to eat somewhere beforehand lest you starve.
I was looking online for a place to eat once and I saw a menu with crab bisque for $100 and I just "lol nope" at that, it is asinine. That wasn't even a whole meal, just an appetizer, and the place doesn't even have a Michelin star. It's like those $1000 dollar burgers, they're just for showing off how rich you are, or so you can tell people a curious story, it is not actually about eating good food.
I gather latinum jewelry might be similar: it's not especially pretty, you can't even peddle it for much, but it's
made of money!
Timo Saloniemi