The subtitles can have mistakes, though. They also say "calvary" when Pike says "cavalry."You are correct, Pike calls her ”Noona“. That‘s what it says in the subtitles.
Kor
The subtitles can have mistakes, though. They also say "calvary" when Pike says "cavalry."You are correct, Pike calls her ”Noona“. That‘s what it says in the subtitles.
We can pretend it was setting up "this person who looks human may actually be a robot" as a plot element.
I have a strong, visceral dislike of any version of the "one ship stranded away from everyone they've ever known" story.
But, I always said the biggest problem with Voyager was terrible casting (there's only so much you can do to course correct when half the cast can't act), and I often think Discovery's greatest strength is perfect casting, so that's one thing helping me maintain my qualified optimism.
Nah, Kurtzman brought it up during his post finale interview. It’s still happeningUnless the alleged Section 31 show is a red herring.
Am I right in thinking that Number One was called “Noona”?
What occurred to me about that was:
Number One
No. One
Noone
So now either Discovery is 51,000 ly away or in the 32nd century. So season 3 will either be a Voyager rehash or about a crew and ship 930 years behind the times trying to assimilate into a future so distant even English should be gibberish to them. Both ideas sound uninteresting to me.
From one device to another, a move is a copy then delete. Depending on how good their shredding software is, deleted might be recoverable. Even so, Trek has a long history of treating computer data like a physical file to be moved around (the EMH is the worst example) so Discovery is hardly unique. But when your key plot is about computer data, it might be worth thinking about.Well, if she 'moved' the file instead of 'copying' it, what is the result on our computers?
Oh is that where he said it? I just thought he slurred "number one". If they were intending to reveal her name, could have been more obvious about it!Nah, Kurtzman brought it up during his post finale interview. It’s still happening
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They’re 950 years in the future according to Kurtzman.
So around the year 3207, the 33rd Century
On our computers, the file is still easily retrievable from the drive that the file was supposedly deleted or moved from, because the data isn't actually destroyed unless extra steps were taken to overwrite the sectors where the file was originally stored (conceptualized as "shredding" the file). And even then, forensic methods might still be able to retrieve it.Well, if she 'moved' the file instead of 'copying' it, what is the result on our computers?
From one device to another, a move is a copy then delete. Depending on how good their shredding software is, deleted might be recoverable. Even so, Trek has a long history of treating computer data like a physical file to be moved around (the EMH is the worst example) so Discovery is hardly unique. But when your key plot is about computer data, it might be worth thinking about.
They’re 950 years in the future according to Kurtzman.
So around the year 3207, the 33rd Century
You don't think they are going to pull the trigger on the fan-fictiony "Fallen Federation" storyline, do you? The one, like Andromeda, where our heroes have to put the Federation back together after it has fallen due to corruption, war or what have you.
My problem with VOY (at least one of them) was that I like the setting and universe of Star Trek. I like Starfleet, the Federation, Klingons, Romulans, whatever. You go to the Delta Quadrant...it's just another generic sci-fi show, and not a very compelling one at that.
I fear the same for DSC S3. But, I actually fear the impact even more because I loved the TOS tie-ins etc, so those will also be a loss. A huge one from my POV.
930 years according to Burnham which puts it around 3189-ish. Still 32nd century. It's ok, not the first time producers didn't know what's going on in their own show.
Well...let me see....You don't think they are going to pull the trigger on the fan-fictiony "Fallen Federation" storyline, do you? The one, like Andromeda, where our heroes have to put the Federation back together after it has fallen due to corruption, war or what have you.
In my opinion, he says Una. The 'N' is just the end of conn. He does not (to my ears) says two Ns. "conn, Una." rather than "conn, Noona."![]()
Plus, look at how attached to researching existing lore they are. Why would they go with Noona?
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