Re: Is Picard responsible for the Borg's success against the Federatio
The ability of the elements of the Collective to speak with each other may be "realtime", but it's not "direct". Distance isn't the factor slowing down communications: firewalls and censoring is. Clearly, influences from one Drone or Cube are carefully filtered before they reach another, and so dangerous subversives and disease spots can be isolated in time, as with "Descent" et al.
Now, we never learn the details of this censorship, but we can tell it's not a split-second process, or else Hugh would have been cast out of the Collective on screen rather than off screen!
The transwarp network was not up yet at leat as far back as the 2150s
Which would be a bit odd. After all, the Borg are supposedly hundreds of millennia old. In that time, even sublight vessels could conquer the entire galaxy...
Do the Borg really evolve, or are they nearly stagnated as of the 24th century? There are plenty of ancient advanced civilizations whose every trick they could have learned by then. One was from the 29th century, sort of - what makes the Borg evolve in just half a millennium?
Speaking of evolution, the Borg were wounded by Starfleet starship phasers before adapting to those. But they never were vulnerable to Starfleet photon torpedoes, not even for a single impact. Are antimatter bombs "generic" weapons the Borg learned to defeat aeons ago and always come equipped against, while phasers and other death rays are always specific to a culture and incapable of being defeated by a single "generic" countermeasure? Note that Starfleet phasers
jkeep on confounding the Borg whenever used - the first few shots always work, even on the sixteenth encounter, or the forty-seventh...
Timo Saloniemi