^^Well, as I said, I assumed it was more like 3 weeks for story purposes, since it's still necessary to cram the whole first season into 2364. But aside from that, I sure wouldn't have a problem with 4 months.
Yeah, I'm just going with something slightly more realistic. Although I have noticed that 3-4 months is standard to get somewhere which is on the borders of known space, but I can't think of any specific examples at this moment in time.^^Well, as I said, I assumed it was more like 3 weeks for story purposes, since it's still necessary to cram the whole first season into 2364. But aside from that, I sure wouldn't have a problem with 4 months.
Regarding my original post, if I said 4 months travel time from Earth to Alpha Cygni, that wouldn't be stretching the imagination too far would it?
...since it's still necessary to cram the whole first season into 2364.
At this point, unfortunately, the Chronology's assumptions are probably too entrenched in the fiction for anything to be done about them.
Picard could have taken command in late '63. Since we did not see the ship launch from Utopia Planitia we do not have a definitive launch date and I personally think that we should discount All Good Things... as being apocryphal as it was an alternative timeline.At this point, unfortunately, the Chronology's assumptions are probably too entrenched in the fiction for anything to be done about them.
Yep. It's pretty much policy that Trek Lit authors are supposed to follow the Chronology's suggestions unless they've been contradicted by later canon. In The Buried Age, I would've been happy to put the scenes of Picard taking command of the E-D in late 2363 sometime, but that probably wouldn't have been accepted.
Picard could have taken command in late '63. Since we did not see the ship launch from Utopia Planitia we do not have a definitive launch date and I personally think that we should discount All Good Things... as being apocryphal as it was an alternative timeline.
According to Memory Alpha, the E-D was commissioned in 2363 and presumably launched for its shakedown cruise then, after commissioning. I would have thought that there would be a media presence this is the new flagship and the first Enterprise for twenty years. I cannot believe that after its commissioning it then spent almost two months doing nothing before its first mission as AGT... would have us believe.
Since the timeliners have been busy, I would think that Voyages of Imagination would be more up to date that the Chronology and a better resource for writers.
I've not read "Meet with Triumph and Disaster" and so cannot comment on that, but could the statement in "The Drumhead" be interpreted as the stardate when the E-D actually finished final shakedowns and headed out toward Deneb on its first mission with Picard in command, when he fully assumed command of the ship, rather than when he officially took command before the shakedowns?
I think that commissioning date is non-canonical, coming from the Tech Manual rather than an episode. (snip)
Long is a relative term.there's still the fact that in the very first scene of TNG, the teaser of "Farpoint," Picard said in the log that he was still "becoming better acquainted" with his new command. The implication was that he hadn't been aboard her for long.
There's no sense in this, what does the travel time of a starship from Sol to Deneb have anything to do with the location of starships already in the field? Fun speculations aside, the episode said Deneb was the frontier, the episode showed the Hood at Deneb, ergo the Hood was at the frontier. Nothing is said about where Riker, Geordi and the Crushers were prior to that or how long it took them to get there.See, that's another point. It doesn't track that it would take three or four months to get out to Deneb, because it wasn't just the E-D that was there; the Hood was also there on what seemed to be a routine crew transfer,
This also confuses me, though that isn't saying much, for I'm easily confused. Reach is also relative, the closer you move toward something the easier it is to reach. Wherever you go, there you are.All that activity suggests that the Deneb system wasn't that far out of reach --
I'm not sure if I follow that logic. But I do agree with Cid's observation that if the Enterprise can make it back to the "neighborhood" in a little less than 3 months, then it's reasonable that it could easily travel quite in excess of the traditional TNG warpchart's speeds and go to further locale's in a shorter amount of time. I don't think that necessitates any of the three things you suggest, but it is a stronger argument against the idea of Enterprise taking that whole time of 4 mos or so to get there.The logical interpretation is either that Deneb is closer than we think-- that, regardless of its real-world distance, it was not prohibitively remote in terms of travel time. The logical interpretation is either that Deneb is closer than we think (which is possible, given the uncertainty in its parallax); that it's one of the other Denebs than Alpha Cygni (although that's not the interpretation I've gone with in my fiction); or that there's a high-speed warp lane leading to it.
Whatever the case, I just don't think a journey of several months to Deneb is consistent with the canonical evidence, regardless of how much more sensible it would be aside from that.
We might always argue that Sisko, of Bajor, is already thinking in terms of the Bajoran year. Which, we have reason to suspect, is not the same as the Earth year, as for example the supposedly annual Gratitude Festival doesn't fall on the same stardates in different years. And it's not as subtle as the wandering Easter here on Earth, but instead seems to be all over the place.Also: "Second Sight" occurs on the anniversary of "Best of Both Worlds", probably the strongest canonical evidence against the 365 days = 1000 stardates assumption.
Damningly, though, Admiral McCoy was also there, performing a (no doubt ceremonial) inspection of the vessel's "medical layout". It wouldn't make sense to drag the old cripple to the edges of the universe for such a nonsensical job, really.Fun speculations aside, the episode said Deneb was the frontier, the episode showed the Hood at Deneb, ergo the Hood was at the frontier.
For those curious, the stardate that Picard took command from "The Drumhead", 41124, would by that same convention be something like 10 days before "Encounter at Farpoint".
This would also be inconsistent with the SD from "All Good Things..." which placed Picard in command SD 41148, even closer, about 2 days before "...Farpoint" and signed curiously enough by Norah Satie herself.
There's no sense in this, what does the travel time of a starship from Sol to Deneb have anything to do with the location of starships already in the field?
This also confuses me, though that isn't saying much, for I'm easily confused. Reach is also relative, the closer you move toward something the easier it is to reach. Wherever you go, there you are.
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