A space station on the frontier with the Klingon Empire a) doesn't need that info and b) isn't gonna have it. Why the Enterprise has it is somewhat of a plot hole.
Maybe it was still connected to Starfleet’s central database, at that point.
A space station on the frontier with the Klingon Empire a) doesn't need that info and b) isn't gonna have it. Why the Enterprise has it is somewhat of a plot hole.
Prior to that, Voyager crashed into the big space machine thing and, upon being rebuilt by said alien machine thing, wanted to know who built it and decided it wanted to make a visit so it did a reciprocal bearing on the direction Voyager came from. Relative orbital shift of our solar system prevailing, of course, but that would be fairly small, needing thousands of years to show a palpable change. (e.g. our moon travels away from Earth at 1 inch per year, give or take. Everything else is changing relative position as well. )
I bet it was Tan Ru’s fault!See, I didn’t even remember that Nomad crashed into something else.
In the midst of their emergency launch, they forgot to disconnect it?!Maybe it was still connected to Starfleet’s central database, at that point.
Yeah, but then it would know the carbon units weren’t an infestation. Unless it interpreted the plaque as a cry for help, with a picture of the “problem”?The name plaque includes a couple of graphics from the Golden Record that were certainly added to the mock-up to visually explain how V'Ger found Earth. On the left side for the name is the pulsar map to Sol and the diagram showing Voyager leaving the third planet and slingshotting out from the fifth, and on the right side is a figure demonstrating continental drift, showing what Earth's landmasses were millions of years ago, now, and millions of years in the future.
In the midst of their emergency launch, they forgot to disconnect it?!![]()
Yeah, but then it would know the carbon units weren’t an infestation. Unless it interpreted the plaque as a cry for help, with a picture of the “problem”?
I’m of two minds about Season 1. On the one hand, a lot of it is pretty crude, writing-wise. But on the other, the universe it implies is pretty great (no war in decades, people are generally evolved), and everything is wide open and hopeful and mostly pleasant — maybe that’s not great for drama, but I’d sure like to live there. Later seasons improved the writing but wiped away the qualities above.I don't find a lot of TNG Season 1 to be bad. Most fans consider it pretty cringe-worthy.
The first time Star Trek used the 20th century spaceprobe plotline it was a nice little twist.I didn’t know the reveal behind the origins of V’Ger was considered cringeworthy… even all these years later I still think it works as a nice little twist.
Yes, maybe the audience was moaning out of regret that we never got past Voyager 2.Voyager VI. NASA is far more promiscuous in the Star Trek timeline.
I never registered this, but you're totally correct, and obviously the filmmakers considered it so V'ger would be unaware of its origins, but it's a nice little touch that never really gets mentioned.The Voyager 6 plaque just had the symbols related the planet's location and geography
The first time Star Trek used the 20th century spaceprobe plotline it was a nice little twist.
Blown up into a feature film it was underwhelming.
I'd be willing to bet the majority of that audience never saw "The Changeling" or knew there were no Voyagers past the second, so I'm not entirely sure why either of those would be groan outloud cringeworthy.Yes, maybe the audience was moaning out of regret that we never got past Voyager 2.
I never registered this, but you're totally correct, and obviously the filmmakers considered it so V'ger would be unaware of its origins, but it's a nice little touch that never really gets mentioned.
I love Lwaxana.Troi's mom.
Same here. Especially after "Dark Page". It explains so much of the 'why' with her. (And is why I always thought of Neelix and her as spiritual siblings.)I love Lwaxana.
I consider "Dark Page" to be one of the top ten TNG episodes. Underneath the telepathic mystery box, it's Lwaxana facing the loss of her child, and bonding with Troi, dealing with life and its tragedies in a universal, non-sci fi way. Majel kills it.Same here. Especially after "Dark Page". It explains so much of the 'why' with her. (And is why I always thought of Neelix and her as spiritual siblings.)
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