Well tech!It 's fiction. Something teched the tech and now they are teched.
Well tech!It 's fiction. Something teched the tech and now they are teched.
i don't think calypso is ''canon''
Everything from the creators is canon unless they declare otherwise.
Either Discovery goes back to the 23rd Century for some reason and then hides out in that nebula for 1,000 years (presumably where it can't be detected)...A couple of odds and ends and observations...
On "Calypso": when it takes place is a little fuzzy, isn't it? When Craft asks Kora how long she's been waiting for the crew to return she says almost 1000 years. So is that almost 1000 years after Discovery arrives in the 32nd century, or almost 1000 years for the 23rd century?
Also, in "Perpetual Infinity," one of the mission log entries that Micheal watches shows Dr. Gabrielle Burnham traveling 950 years into the future and saying that there's no life anywhere due to what she believes was an anti-matter detonation throughout the galaxy, and believing that Control was responsible for it.
So, 950 years into the future and Dr. Burnham says everything is gone and there's no life. And Micheal arrives 930 years into the future and finds that there's still life, but there's been something called "The Burn."
Great trailer!
Do my eyes doth deceive me, or was that Tim Roth with long hair?
![]()
Pretty sure that's Jake weber from 'medium' its definitely not tim roth
I was thinking the former. Discovery goes back to the 23rd to, among other things, bring Georgiou back for S31 and is programmed to hide in the nebula until the crew can reclaim it. I do like the send it back in time for the AI to learn angle, but that could also be a side effect. I.e. leave an AI alone for 1000 years and it will become sentient.Either Discovery goes back to the 23rd Century for some reason and then hides out in that nebula for 1,000 years (presumably where it can't be detected)...
... or there's a second time-jump from the 32nd Century to the 42nd Century (give or take)...
... or Discovery ends up in a time-bubble where 1,000 years pass inside it, but next-to-no time passes outside of it. Zora needs 1,000 years to develop but they don't have 1,000 years, hence the time-bubble.
Those are the three possibilities I see.
Everything from the creators is canon regardless of what they say.
Says who?
And what do you accept when two canon factoids clash?
When Roddenberry was Keeper of the Flame, he declared "parts of Star Trek V" as "apocryphal", and he did say, through Richard Arnold, that even his own novelization of "The Motion Picture" was not "canon". Of course, when GR passed, everyone was happy to ignore his decrees. The novel "Voyager: Mosaic" was considered canon by Jeri Taylor until she left - she encouraged the writers to use her material - but the book started getting overwritten. The Braga/Berman era of "Voyager" suggested that they would consider "Threshold" non canonical.
In any case, I don't get tied up in knots about it. I look forward to the new and the brave stuff still to come.
Nope.Didn't Daniels imply that the Federation evolved into something different by the 31st century? I suppose this is an alternate future and not the "actual" one.
Nope.
Also Discovery is in the 32nd Century, so at least 100 years after the time Daniels came from.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.