Crew is extra...
In the TOS episode All Our Yesterdays, the Enterprise arrives at a planet that's going be destroyed in hours. Exactly what were they going to accomplish? Setting aside the prime directive, were they going too just worn them of the imminate destruction of their world and then leave?
Observe and report.In the TOS episode All Our Yesterdays, the Enterprise arrives at a planet that's going be destroyed in hours. Exactly what were they going to accomplish? Setting aside the prime directive, were they going too just worn them of the imminate destruction of their world and then leave?
Picard literally just gives one to Scotty, a retired ship's engineer, who's never even actually been in one of their models before. Just "Here. Fly away in this"If Voyager is any indication, shuttlecraft are pretty easy to produce. Captain Janeway couldn't always replicate a cup of Joe, but popping out another shuttle was easy enough. They were like clowns in a mini-car.
I am thinking that perhaps each of the disks represented a time period of X, with volunteers spaced out to record each lifetime. By the time one set dies, another comes in….and records to the disk…to leave it. The last man to leave made sure copies were made, and probably went back far enough to launch a library, perhaps going through another such doorway later.I believe they were just there to record the cataclysm for posterity, since the event was too big for any known civilization to avert. And they didn't need to warn the populace, who were already all too aware of the disaster awaiting them.
But a flag officer still gets a (presumably-crewed) flagship, and it sounds pretty reasonable he'd get to pick which one. He may not be authorized to go off on some spurious adventure to invade the Neutral Zone, but he could. And then he'd get called on the carpet afterward (and censured, reprimanded or busted), which WOULD'VE happened to Riker if that timeline had come true.Pretty sure that if an US Navy admiral decided he needed an aircraft carrier to go off on a some personal quest, the answer would be hearty laughter. Even if the quest was to defend democracy against a hidden foreign threat that only he has evidence of, such action must first be presented to and approved by congress.
Not to mention the crew of any ship so requested. 400 crew are probably not just sitting around with the ship fully fueled, armed and prepped for action, just waiting for some officer to go on a spurious adventure.
Not sure what that has to do with my post, but I agree with you.
You may be right. On-screen evidence shows the external view through the library doorway to be a hilly terrain with some trees; no signs of any man-made structures, etc. Odd because this library would need to used by the entire population to escape, so, I'd expect it to be located in the largest city or at least near a populated center.So help me…but there was a part of me that thought the repository was the only structure.
Time machines are a paradox.![]()
In regards to Voyager's shuttle & torpedo thing, in the Season 7 ep Nightingale we see the ship landed on an uninhabited planet undergoing repairs.
My head canon is they did that every six months/year maybe, they just take a week or so to "tidy up" and make repairs, build new shutles etc. Using the planet's rescources to fully fuel up, and the whole crew chips in, even non-engineering crew would have basic knowledge to help out.
Hence why the ship is always fine and looks it, despite never going to a starbase. They don't need to, they can just do it themselves. Only in UFP space it's just easier and more time effeciant for ships to go to starbases and have someone else do it.
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