SOT, but has there been any 2d or 3d images of the Jazari generation ship?
Una has *way* more gravitas than me, really. Like a neutron star, she is...
Could someone please answer my questions.
Is there something about the Remans in the novel and did starfleet evacuate them and the other romulan subject people too?
James Swallow said it was!A question I wonder if anyone knows the answer to. I'm in the midst of reading the novel now and I noticed a reference to the Robinson (along with the Enterprise, Titan and Lionheart possibly sneaking supplies to Romulan refugee worlds). Is that an Easter egg reference to the same Robinson from the DS9 novels under Captain Sisko? Just curious.
James Swallow said it was!
he noted some early Titan missions from the relaunches (i.e. the early Romulan diplomatic missions)
also the Titan is still a Luna class vessel (I'm not sure if that was from a canon reference or just from the novels--I don't recall Nemesis mentioning the class of ship)
There is one thing that bothered me about Picard overall, and it's a significant part of the novel. I always had a hard time buying the Romulan's visceral hatred for artificial intelligence/synthetic life/androids. I mean, you could certainly argue it doesn't necessarily conflict with prior portrayals of the Romulans. But something about it just didn't 'feel' quite right. There have been examples of androids in Star Trek in the past, most notably, of course, Data and the other Soong-androids. And the Romulans never seemed to make any attempt to destroy those androids. And they had encountered Data in TNG and then in Nemesis and there were never any issues. They never seemed bothered or put off by Data.
That actually comes from Nemesis, which established at the end that Riker's first mission as captain was a diplomatic mission to Romulus. So that's not specifically a novel nod.
Well, it's not "the Romulans," just the Zhat Vash. But yes, it is problematical that they never tried to destroy Data. My guess would be that they were less influential then, that they gained power in the chaos surrounding the evacuation and the supernova.
Could be, though it was noted in the novel that all Romulans had suspicions and misgivings about artificial life.
I can certainly believe that fear of AIs became more widespread in Romulan society after the (Zhat Vash-engineered) synth "uprising" on Mars, because that event shut down the Starfleet evacuation efforts and cost countless Romulan lives
The Luna class was created for the novels, but was made canon with Lower Decks.also the Titan is still a Luna class vessel (I'm not sure if that was from a canon reference or just from the novels--I don't recall Nemesis mentioning the class of ship)
There is one thing that bothered me about Picard overall, and it's a significant part of the novel. I always had a hard time buying the Romulan's visceral hatred for artificial intelligence/synthetic life/androids. I mean, you could certainly argue it doesn't necessarily conflict with prior portrayals of the Romulans. But something about it just didn't 'feel' quite right. There have been examples of androids in Star Trek in the past, most notably, of course, Data and the other Soong-androids. And the Romulans never seemed to make any attempt to destroy those androids. And they had encountered Data in TNG and then in Nemesis and there were never any issues. They never seemed bothered or put off by Data.
I think It's interesting to posit that there might have been secret Zhat Vash 'hit squads' out there all along, quietly killing off AI researchers or terminating android life before it could develop too far. The Star Trek universe has always been a place where artificial life is a rarity, rather than commonplace (like, say, in the Star Wars universe), and maybe the Zhat Vash are part of the reason why...
After all, in ST: Picard, Laris says that they've been around for thousands of years, so who knows?
That's a very clever and plausible idea -- except it doesn't explain why the Romulans never specifically targeted Data when they had the opportunity, as in "Unification."
That part was problematical, since the Romulans only left Vulcan about 2000 years before TNG, but the Zhat Vash didn't begin until they found the 8-star system. I suspect they may have exaggerated their ancientness, or claimed to be part of the same lineage as some previous group in that region of space.
You're conflating the Zhat Vash faction's intentions with the Romulans as a whole.
As for dealing with Data in that episode, this is easily explained away. One could argue that the Zhat Vash might have intended to act covertly and neutralize him after Sela captures him; or possibly they might not have even been aware of Data's presence or able to do something about it at the time.
Watching ST: Picard, I never got the sense that the Zhat Vash are some all-seeing, all-knowing power, more like a small cabal of dedicated believers... When writing The Dark Veil, I thought of them as the antithesis of the Fellowship of AIs from Jeff Lang's Immortal Coil.
Great comments, Damian, thanks!
This is a good point, but consider that when you say "the Romulans never seemed to make any attempt to destroy those androids" you could add "that we know of."
I think It's interesting to posit that there might have been secret Zhat Vash 'hit squads' out there all along, quietly killing off AI researchers or terminating android life before it could develop too far. The Star Trek universe has always been a place where artificial life is a rarity, rather than commonplace (like, say, in the Star Wars universe), and maybe the Zhat Vash are part of the reason why... After all, in ST: Picard, Laris says that they've been around for thousands of years, so who knows?
As for an ingrained Romulan cultural hatred for artificial life - that's something I hinted at and I wished I could have developed a bit more. My idea was that in their mythology, there were terrible tales of dangerous intelligent machines that had left a "race memory" which had eventually become an inherent cultural prejudice. I would have liked to explore that a bit more, but there wasn't a good place for it.
Sure, but Data was a well-known figure that the Zhat Vash should surely have known about, and there were multiple times when the Enterprise came up against the Romulans. You'd think they would've had several opportunities to go after Data, especially given that Commodore Oh already seemed to have infiltrated Starfleet sometime before 2385 (IIRC)
For instance, in "Metamorphosis" we were led to believe Cochrane was from Alpha Centauri, but then FC establishes he's from Earth (though that was pretty easy to explain away as you can simply say he retired to Alpha Centauri, but when Kirk says "Zefram Cochrane.....of Alpha Centauri" it'd be reasonable to assume the intent was that he was originally from there).
That's a misconception that comes from taking that one line out of context. If you consider all the evidence, "Metamorphosis" clearly portrays Cochrane as an Earth human throughout. McCoy scans him and confirms he's entirely human, and he's referred to throughout as human. The planetoid's conditions are specifically said to be identical to Earth's, and we know the Companion maintained them for Cochrane's benefit. He said "Not Earth, but it's livable," indicating that Earth was what he thought of as an ideal or a default.
The intent was that Cochrane was "of Alpha Centauri" in the sense that T.E. Lawrence was "of Arabia" or Helen was "of Troy" -- he was famous for going there, not being from there. The original outline clarified that Cochrane was famous as the leader of the first expedition to Alpha Centauri. That got modulated into "the discoverer of the space warp" in the script, but the Alpha Centauri reference got left over.
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