Exactly.They aren't really a part of the Charter, rather they use an interpretation of the thirty-first section of the Charter to justify their actions and existence.
Exactly.They aren't really a part of the Charter, rather they use an interpretation of the thirty-first section of the Charter to justify their actions and existence.
Now I can't get the image of some poor redshirt falling up and down, and up and down, and up and down a staircase out of my head.I don't think stairs are a very good idea. I can just see the ship running into a "sub-space vortex" or whatever and some poor redshirt repeatedly falling up and down a staircase as the ship spins out of control.
I don’t want to get into specific names as yet, but I used crewmembers from a lot of different works, including as established in DSC. Not all of them, of course — but one of things I did was work up a timeline of who would have replaced whom and when, for all accounts to be correct.
This reminds me of an old Steven Wright joke: "I slipped on an escalator one day. I fell down the steps for forty-five minutes."Now I can't get the image of some poor redshirt falling up and down, and up and down, and up and down a staircase out of my head.
I'm pretty sure this was mentioned in the first episode of season 2 by Burnham, the explanation not being in the ship/out of the ship but rather how many transporter pads are involved affecting the amount of energy used and the ease of doing it; Transporter Pad to Transporter Pad is the easiest, Transporter Pad to somewhere else (or vice versa) a bit more difficult/uses more energy and then site to site is the most dangerous/energy consumingI suspect in-ship transporting is done, when it’s done, for the dramatic reveal and to speed action along, more than any in-universe reason. Or economics: the turbolifts require sets that may or may not be standing, depending on the production.
I might be wrong but when they are beaming off the planet where they find Jett Reno and her crew and are running to the Hiawatha's transporter room Jett asks why they need to go there if they are using the Discovery's transporter and Michael says it's easier pad to pad.It wasn't mentioned in the first episode, as far as I recall. I think I read that the intraship beaming was in the second episode.
I might be wrong but when they are beaming off the planet where they find Jett Reno and her crew and are running to the Hiawatha's transporter room Jett asks why they need to go there if they are using the Discovery's transporter and Michael says it's easier pad to pad.
Yep, though I'll admit, I typically see it done the other way around. The e-book goes up for pre-order before the physical book does.UK amazon seems to only have paperback and audiobook pre-orders (no-kindle) is it normal for kindle preorders to come online at a different time?
If you noticed some new names and faces aboard U.S.S. Enterprise in tonight's Discovery episode, you may be interested to know that they're all in THE ENTERPRISE WAR. Glad to finally see them on screen after all these months!
I was actually about to come on here to ask that, so I'm glad you posted this.If you noticed some new names and faces aboard U.S.S. Enterprise in tonight's Discovery episode, you may be interested to know that they're all in THE ENTERPRISE WAR. Glad to finally see them on screen after all these months!
Love it!
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