NX-01 was doing warp 4.5 at the start of the trip and presumably aiming at warp 5.
And had access to Vulcan star charts. Without them the trip probably is about a year!
NX-01 was doing warp 4.5 at the start of the trip and presumably aiming at warp 5.
Oddly enough, this very point -- the distance from Earth to Qo'noS -- came up on a mailing list devoted to Larry Niven a few days ago. If you take "Broken Bow" at face value, then Qo'noS must orbit Sol's unseen brown dwarf companion. Which would explain why it's always so dark and gloomy there, I guess.I don't think Final Reflection fits at all with current continuity. In TFR, it takes months to get from Earth to the Klingon homeworld. In Broken Bow, it was said to take five days.
For instance, "The Battle," which introduced the Picard Maneuver, indicates that the speed of light is significantly slower in the Star Trek universe than it is in our universe.
Thus my caveat about adapting or reinterpreting, especially in regard to technical issues. Neither of those conflicts are central to the novel. The travel time issue could be ignored entirely, and workarounds can be made for the serreptitious use of the Klingons' transporter in the third part of the book.I don't think Final Reflection fits at all with current continuity. In TFR, it takes months to get from Earth to the Klingon homeworld. In Broken Bow, it was said to take five days. The stage of transporter technology also conflicts to a huge degree.
That's one of the things that would need to be reinterperted in light of ENT's pushing first contact with the Klingons several decades earler than previously thought.Diplomatic dealings between humans and Klingons are only 20 years old in TFR, and Earth's paranoia about Klingons reflects that. During that period of the Enterprise timeline, the two societies wouldn't be chummy, but Klingons wouldn't be considered unknown bogeymen, either
Point taken. "invalidated" was not technically accurate, although given Pocket Books' directive to authors to use the Okudachron dates makes its "ripple effects" among secondary sources larger than most.Other than the Okudachron's saying so, I don't see anything canonical going against the idea that Spock is older than McCoy...
True. We know McCoy's birthdate of 2227 from TNG "Encounter at Farpoint". We don't know Spock's, other than from a couple of clues.
Can you elaborate? By my reckoning the "yelling" is for a late 2220's visit for Fencer's mission to Earth and an early 2230's date for the Dissolution Babel part:If we want our Leonard H. McCoy to be in his diapers when Spock is nine, then we probably want Spock to be born at least seven years before McCoy. "Yesteryear" factoids could easily be stretched to allow for a 2220 birthdate for Spock, but that would place Krenn's first visit to Earth at the late 2220s while other context just yells for a mid- to late 2230s visit.
Just as easily we can call Spock's appearance a literary anachronism of the in-universe novel.However, as said, we can easily sidestep all this by saying that the young Leonard whose diapers needed changing was some completely different descendant of Tom McCoy's. Odds are his last name wasn't even McCoy, what with him being two generations removed.
Well, the span is 79 years in the Spaceflight Chronology timeline vs. ~84 years in the standard timeline, so I think a little "stretching" is in order rather than a blanket "just add 52", but that's getting into subjective nitpicking territory. The dates of the Devisor/Sentry encounter and Flying Fortress highjacking might need some tweaking, depending on if you use the adapted dates for the D/S encounter (marking the start of hostilities with the Klingons) or 2218 date marking the onset of hostilities given in the Okudachron. But uncertain sourcing and ENT's rewriting the first encounter date leave plenty of room for handwaving there.Absolutely! Here's a gauntlet to pick up!
Hmm... Just slap an extra 52 years on each date after the Romulan War and you're fine with almost everything else besides the transporter development timeline (perhaps a crucially improved model was invented when the book says the first transporter was) and the Klingon first contact (perhaps that was just a particularly nasty contact in 2209, not a first one).
That date is ok, but the conditions are so radically different from those portrayed or implied by ENT. There's a lot that wouldn't "port over" nearly as neatly. Some things could be adapted, but it's something better done on a case-by-case basis.And pre-Romulan War events could be used basically without altering the dates. say, "(United Earth) Starfleet is founded in 2089" ain't too bad.
AgreedThe years surrounding the Romulan War would be the ones that need finer tuning to be compatible with ENT. But that's not an insurmountable problem at all.
For TFR, Agreed. For SFC, the key word is adaptability. It works for some periods, others need some folding, spindling, and mutilating to work them together, and it doesn't work at all for others. Same goes for individual items in the book, maybe doubly so.Summa summarum, I'd still say TFR takes relatively little work to become compatible with onscreen stuff, which is what one can say about basically any Star Trek novel. SFC would take a bit more work and perhaps not be worth the hassle, but it could be a fun exercise.
Can you elaborate? By my reckoning the "yelling" is for a late 2220's visit for Fencer's mission to Earth and an early 2230's date for the Dissolution Babel part
..2218 date marking the onset of hostilities given in the Okudachron.
But how long did Picard manage to create a "ghost" image of the 'gazer by outrunning its photons, Christopher?Only if you take the visual effects shots literally, which is always a bad idea.For instance, "The Battle," which introduced the Picard Maneuver, indicates that the speed of light is significantly slower in the Star Trek universe than it is in our universe.
Oddly enough, this very point -- the distance from Earth to Qo'noS -- came up on a mailing list devoted to Larry Niven a few days ago. If you take "Broken Bow" at face value, then Qo'noS must orbit Sol's unseen brown dwarf companion. Which would explain why it's always so dark and gloomy there, I guess.I don't think Final Reflection fits at all with current continuity. In TFR, it takes months to get from Earth to the Klingon homeworld. In Broken Bow, it was said to take five days.
The thing is, distances and speeds in Star Trek are what the narrative requires, not what physics requires. For instance, "The Battle," which introduced the Picard Maneuver, indicates that the speed of light is significantly slower in the Star Trek universe than it is in our universe. The science of Star Trek is malleable.
That wouldn't affect future reprints of The Final Reflection or How Much For Just the Planet. Still, it's interesting.John M. Ford (1957-2006) is still fondly remembered, but his non-fan family would rather we didn't. Rumours of awkwardness have been circulating for some time, and NESFA's Instant Message 825 reports that a hoped paperback reissue of their Ford collection is unlikely: '... it does not appear that the Estate will license any further printings. This appears to be the policy for all of Ford's works, not just the Nesfa Press book, so that only those works under contract can be reprinted.'
Something of note I found in the latest Ansible:
Harlen Ellison turned down his home town's Cleveland Arts Prize for life achievement, after discovering that not only was he expected to pay all travel and accommodation expenses but he would be allowed only a three-minute acceptance speech and, by the way, did he know any Clevelanders who could help with event sponsorship by buying an ad in the souvenir book? (Cleveland.com 'The Plain Dealer', 8 May)
Something of note I found in the latest Ansible:
[snip]
That wouldn't affect future reprints of The Final Reflection or How Much For Just the Planet.
Now wait just a Comerica Park minute here.
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