I bet Jenny would know...

If memory serves (note I'm not advocating this, just pointing it out) GR actually joked that the machine planet was the Borg homeworld...which doesn't necessarily mean Voyager would have encountered the Borg as we know them. Perhaps, if one wants to go down this road, Voyager encountered the Borg shortly before they formed a collective. Hell, Voyager could have even been responsible for the formation of the collective in some way, shape or form.
Again, not advocating.
Except, we know from Voyager (the series) that the Borg Collective has been around for over a thousand years.
I think Roddenberry himself made a joke once that the machine planet Voyager found could have been the Borg home planet.
The Trek universe is a big place, folks. There's plenty of room for multiple races with a few similarities to show up.
and Species 8675309What's the interdimensional calling code for fluidic space?
I bet Jenny would know...![]()
If the Borg are what happens to somebody like humankind when they reach technological singularity, then perhaps V'Ger is what the Borg tend to have for singularity...
Timo Saloniemi
If that were the case, wouldn't the Borg occupy much more of the Delta Quadrant than they seem to? Considering VOY and looking at Star Charts, the volume of space they control isn't terribly large which is strange as few DQ species have the tech levels to effectively combat their expansion. They're space zombies, spreading like a virus that in a thousand years should have swept through not just the DQ, but the entire galaxy. To me, it's more plausible they have been around only a few hundred years at best.If memory serves (note I'm not advocating this, just pointing it out) GR actually joked that the machine planet was the Borg homeworld...which doesn't necessarily mean Voyager would have encountered the Borg as we know them. Perhaps, if one wants to go down this road, Voyager encountered the Borg shortly before they formed a collective. Hell, Voyager could have even been responsible for the formation of the collective in some way, shape or form.
Again, not advocating.
Except, we know from Voyager (the series) that the Borg Collective has been around for over a thousand years.
Recall Q's comment on them:The Borg's idea of perfection is about fusing the organic and the technological -- "the best of both worlds." V'Ger is pure technology, without a trace of anything organic, without any interest in anything organic. So V'Ger is nothing like the Borg's idea of perfection.
That's the initial take on the Borg, when they had no interest in assimilating other species. By that light, the Machine Planet, arguably the ultimate expression of technology, would be irresistible to the Borg. Even considering the change in the premise driving them to the blending of biology and technology, the Machine Planet could represent their Holy Grail, the key to achieving the perfection they seek. In either case, assimilating it would be a vital goal for the Borg, assuming they know about it. Of course, cubes trying to assimilate the Machine Planet would be swatted like flies so perhaps that futile quest is what's keeping the Borg population down."The Borg are the ultimate user. They're unlike any threat your Federation has ever faced. They're not interested in political conquest, wealth, or power as you know it. They're simply interested in your ship, its technology. They've identified it as something they can consume."
If that were the case, wouldn't the Borg occupy much more of the Delta Quadrant than they seem to? Considering VOY and looking at Star Charts, the volume of space they control isn't terribly large which is strange as few DQ species have the tech levels to effectively combat their expansion. They're space zombies, spreading like a virus that in a thousand years should have swept through not just the DQ, but the entire galaxy. To me, it's more plausible they have been around only a few hundred years at best.
Recall Q's comment on them:
That's the initial take on the Borg, when they had no interest in assimilating other species. By that light, the Machine Planet, arguably the ultimate expression of technology, would be irresistible to the Borg. Even considering the change in the premise driving them to the blending of biology and technology, the Machine Planet could represent their Holy Grail, the key to achieving the perfection they seek. In either case, assimilating it would be a vital goal for the Borg, assuming they know about it. Of course, cubes trying to assimilate the Machine Planet would be swatted like flies so perhaps that futile quest is what's keeping the Borg population down."The Borg are the ultimate user. They're unlike any threat your Federation has ever faced. They're not interested in political conquest, wealth, or power as you know it. They're simply interested in your ship, its technology. They've identified it as something they can consume."
If that were the case, wouldn't the Borg occupy much more of the Delta Quadrant than they seem to? Considering VOY and looking at Star Charts, the volume of space they control isn't terribly large which is strange as few DQ species have the tech levels to effectively combat their expansion. They're space zombies, spreading like a virus that in a thousand years should have swept through not just the DQ, but the entire galaxy.Except, we know from Voyager (the series) that the Borg Collective has been around for over a thousand years.
Recall Q's comment on them:
That's the initial take on the Borg, when they had no interest in assimilating other species."The Borg are the ultimate user. They're unlike any threat your Federation has ever faced. They're not interested in political conquest, wealth, or power as you know it. They're simply interested in your ship, its technology. They've identified it as something they can consume."
By that light, the Machine Planet, arguably the ultimate expression of technology, would be irresistible to the Borg.
If that were the case, wouldn't the Borg occupy much more of the Delta Quadrant than they seem to? Considering VOY and looking at Star Charts, the volume of space they control isn't terribly large which is strange as few DQ species have the tech levels to effectively combat their expansion. They're space zombies, spreading like a virus that in a thousand years should have swept through not just the DQ, but the entire galaxy.Except, we know from Voyager (the series) that the Borg Collective has been around for over a thousand years.
You're underestimating just how immense the galaxy is. Look at the galaxy map on pp. 12-13 of Star Charts. The Federation is so tiny that it only appears as a dot. That little sphere labelled "Local Space" encompasses the UFP and all its neighbors with room to spare; it corresponds to the inset map on the second foldout in back. In several centuries, the Federation and its neighbors haven't incorporated enough territory even to be visible on the scale of the full-galaxy map. Borg territory is immense in comparison. I estimate that the Borg territory shown in Star Charts is anywhere from 500 to 1000 times bigger in volume than the territory held by the Federation and all its neighbors combined. And that's not even a comprehensive representation of Borg territory; it only covers the major concentrations of Borg presence in the Delta and Beta Quadrants. The transwarp network map in "Endgame" suggested that the Borg had at least enclaves in all four quadrants.
The galaxy contains several hundred billion star systems. It's far vaster than the human mind can begin to comprehend. Even if the Borg have only conquered 5% of the galactic disk, that's still a mind-bogglingly gigantic empire, orders of magnitude bigger than any other astropolitical entity we've ever seen in Trek.
The Borg had warp then transwarp drive meaning if they have been around for hundreds of thousands of years or longer, they should spread through the galaxy in a tiny fraction of the five million year figure cited above thoroughly enough to eliminate any civilizations inferior to them. Without question, they control the largest area of space in the galaxy; my point is it should be bigger. True, the Borg do have a presence throughout the galaxy it is possible they have left many less-developed civilizations alone in order to allow them to evolve until deemed ready for assimilation though we've never seen the patience required displayed by the Borg.Assuming a typical colony spacing of 10 light-years, a ship speed of 10 percent that of light, and a period of 400 years between the foundation of a colony and its sending out colonies of its own, the colonization wave front will expand at an average speed of 0.02 light-year a year. As the galaxy is 100,000 light-years across, it takes no more than about five million years to colonize it completely. Though a long time in human terms, this is only 0.05 percent of the age of the galaxy. Compared with the other relevant astronomical and biological timescales, it is essentially instantaneous. The greatest uncertainty is the time required for a colony to establish itself and spawn new settlements. A reasonable upper limit might be 5,000 years, the time it has taken human civilization to develop from the earliest cities to spaceflight. In that case, full galactic colonization would take about 50 million years.
I did not suggest at any point the Machine Planet had a hand in creating the Borg nor have I ever supported that theory. The vast difference in their technological capabilities is obvious and difficult, if not impossible, to plausibly reconcile. And I dislike the notion that everything is connected to everything else in the Trek universe. On that point we agree. What I disputed, perhaps not clearly enough, was your dismissal of any Borg interest in the Machine Planet's purely technological civilization--Beside the point. It's not about species, it's about organic vs. technological. Even the "Q Who" Borg were a fusion of the technological and the biological. V'Ger didn't even know what biological organisms were, nor did it particularly care.Recall Q's comment on them:
That's the initial take on the Borg, when they had no interest in assimilating other species. That's the initial take on the Borg, when they had no interest in assimilating other species."The Borg are the ultimate user. They're unlike any threat your Federation has ever faced. They're not interested in political conquest, wealth, or power as you know it. They're simply interested in your ship, its technology. They've identified it as something they can consume."Maybe, hypothetically, if they knew about it. However, that does not even remotely demonstrate that either the Borg created V'Ger or that V'Ger created the Borg. Either way, a "family" relationship between the two is a ludicrous proposition, and unsupported hypotheticals about what interest the Borg might have in the Machine Planet don't change that.By that light, the Machine Planet, arguably the ultimate expression of technology, would be irresistible to the Borg.
-- hence my citation of Q above supporting their potential interest in the Machine Planet.Originally Posted by Christopher
The Borg's idea of perfection is about fusing the organic and the technological -- "the best of both worlds." V'Ger is pure technology, without a trace of anything organic, without any interest in anything organic. So V'Ger is nothing like the Borg's idea of perfection.
Which raises the possibility that the Borg have encountered the Machine Planet and seeing it as a perfect example of an ordered society of living machines, left it in peace, something to aspire to, not assimilate.Originally posted by Timo
Also, the Borg seek perfection. But what they find may not be what they intended to find. Quite possibly, one approach to finding perfection resulted in the creation of a machine planet that wants to assimilate cute little space probes and turn them into emissaries, while another resulted in noncorporeal existence, even when the bulk of Borgdom stayed at the unenlightened cyborg state. That's the very nature of singularities as postulated in Vernor Vinge's fiction and nonfiction: you never know what lurks behind the corner, because all assumptions break down on the threshold to divinity.
Isn't a relationship suggested in the latest Nero comic book? The Narada equipped with Borg technology is called by V'Ger in the Delta Quadrant.
Q also said that the Borg had been "evolving with their machinery for thousands of centuries." Unless one intends to take the David Croenenberg view--that all technology, from stone knives to iPods, represent a kind of cyborgization, in which case we've been evolving with our machinery for at least a thousand centuries ourselves--the Borg seem rather stagnant. Indeed, I'd say such a species would more resemble Giger's Alien than the steam punkish beings we saw on TNG (though the Borg do look more Gigerish from FC on).
The Borg had warp then transwarp drive meaning if they have been around for hundreds of thousands of years or longer, they should spread through the galaxy in a tiny fraction of the five million year figure cited above thoroughly enough to eliminate any civilizations inferior to them.
What I disputed, perhaps not clearly enough, was your dismissal of any Borg interest in the Machine Planet's purely technological civilization--
-- hence my citation of Q above supporting their potential interest in the Machine Planet.Originally Posted by Christopher
The Borg's idea of perfection is about fusing the organic and the technological -- "the best of both worlds." V'Ger is pure technology, without a trace of anything organic, without any interest in anything organic. So V'Ger is nothing like the Borg's idea of perfection.
Q also said that the Borg had been "evolving with their machinery for thousands of centuries." Unless one intends to take the David Croenenberg view--that all technology, from stone knives to iPods, represent a kind of cyborgization, in which case we've been evolving with our machinery for at least a thousand centuries ourselves--the Borg seem rather stagnant. Indeed, I'd say such a species would more resemble Giger's Alien than the steam punkish beings we saw on TNG (though the Borg do look more Gigerish from FC on).
"Stagnant" is a culturally biased value judgment. Our society has been undergoing rapid technological and social change for a few centuries now, and that leads us to assume that such swift progress is the natural order of things and that there must be something wrong with any society that isn't advancing at a comparable pace. But that's not true. If you look at the whole sweep of history worldwide, our current rate of progress is an exception to the norm.
Evolution, whether biological, social, or technological, is not a process of constant change, but one of punctuated equilibrium. A species or society spends most of its time in a stable configuration that is adapted to its needs and its environment. When its conditions change, it undergoes rapid change to adapt, and when a new equilibrium is reached, the rate of change slows greatly. That's not stagnation, just stability.
Of course, the Borg don't really evolve at all. They claim they're all about assimilating new things and improving themselves, but as a rule, they suppress or discard anything that doesn't fit their preconceived notions of what's "relevant." However, we have seen punctuated equilibrium applying to the Borg as well. They changed considerably between TNG and VGR -- most likely as a consequence of their war with Species 8472, which forced them to change the way they did a number of things (like the way the totally decentralized Borg cubes of TNG gave way to a more centralized technology with distinct transwarp coils and vinculums and so on -- perhaps as a way of isolating systems to prevent the spread of 8472 biomatter infection).
The Borg's idea of perfection is about fusing the organic and the technological -- "the best of both worlds." V'Ger is pure technology, without a trace of anything organic, without any interest in anything organic. So V'Ger is nothing like the Borg's idea of perfection.
This theory annoys me. Just leave V'Ger alone! It was unique and beyond explanation!
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