To which do you refer to? Spock Prime obtaining the transwarp formula from Scotty at some point in the 24th century is heavily implied in Trek XI itself. The dialogue exchange is something I made up.Was that from a licensed work????![]()
To which do you refer to? Spock Prime obtaining the transwarp formula from Scotty at some point in the 24th century is heavily implied in Trek XI itself. The dialogue exchange is something I made up.Was that from a licensed work????![]()
That or "Living Witness"
Where, come to think of it, they probably have embraced all of Trek's tech - we see Daniels die at least twice, but he returns each time. He seems to go anywhere he wants and can beam anyone (and even the entire Enterprise one time) through space and time.If we want to be accurate, the furthest point in the future that we ever saw in the franchise is when Archer ends up in the time of Daniels.
Where, come to think of it, they probably have embraced all of Trek's tech - we see Daniels die at least twice, but he returns each time. He seems to go anywhere he wants and can beam anyone (and even the entire Enterprise one time) through space and time.
Only took them 700 years to figure it out![]()
Living Witness is in the 31st century, with its final scene a couple hundred years later, IIRC. As for why those forehead aliens of the week hadn't made contact with Earth yet, maybe the Prime Directive was re-written so that the Federation does not make contact with a race until they have learned to embrace the true meaning of mutating into a warp 10 salamander?I think "Living Witness" was a bit earlier plus they still had no contact with Earth which I find surprising. One would think that by then we would have established our presence in the entire galaxy and even in the neighboring galaxies.
Isn't Star Trek: Online supposed to be in the 25th century??![]()
Which is only about 20 years after NemesisEarly 25th. It starts in 2409.
If they were going to do some kind of a reunion mini-series, I would rather take things a step further and do a big TNG/DS9/Voy crossover, maybe they could even find a way to work in some Ent flashbacks. Maybe some big threat first discovered by Enterprise characters 2163 (real time 11 jump from Demons and Terra Prime) suddenly reappears in 2393 (real time 14 year jump from Nemesis).Post Nemesis Trek should be a mini-series on DS9, letting us see what Captain Kira and the crew are up to during some momentous occasion for Bajor and/or the Alpha Quadrant.
Living Witness is in the 31st century, with its final scene a couple hundred years later, IIRC. As for why those forehead aliens of the week hadn't made contact with Earth yet, maybe the Prime Directive was re-written so that the Federation does not make contact with a race until they have learned to embrace the true meaning of mutating into a warp 10 salamander?
I think "Living Witness" was a bit earlier plus they still had no contact with Earth which I find surprising. One would think that by then we would have established our presence in the entire galaxy and even in the neighboring galaxies.
They were both 31st century. As for your other point, yeah, that's part of the reason why I consider the episode non-canon.
To which do you refer to? Spock Prime obtaining the transwarp formula from Scotty at some point in the 24th century is heavily implied in Trek XI itself. The dialogue exchange is something I made up.
Or humans really are the prodigies of the Galaxy. Nog on DS9 even says so himself when he is marveling at how fast human economy has evolved from a bartering system to where it is and yet he is a ferengi.The advancement has to plateau in order for Star Trek to work. Otherwise, let's be honest, Earth is a Johnny-Come-Lately. Yet, within 100 years, it's at the top of The United Federation of Planets, and the UFP has technology similar or equivalent enough to keep any neighboring powers at bay.
The Dominion was 2,000 years old versus the Federation's 200 in DS9. Even without the wormhole or reinforcements, Starfleet shouldn't have been a match for the Dominion. At all.
So, clearly, all the other alien races have reached a certain level of technology, anyone in the interstellar community is on the same page because they've seen and are aware of what's out there, and anyone who isn't is either way above and ignoring everyone underneath or they're not a major player in the interstellar community and have second-fiddle technology.
This isn't even remotely realistic but, within the parameters set up in Star Trek, it doesn't look out of place for the technology to become that difference because it seems like innovation is either dead or becomes forgotten very quickly.
The rest of the galaxy is made to look bad to make Earth look good.
maybe the Prime Directive was re-written so that the Federation does not make contact with a race until they have learned to embrace the true meaning of mutating into a warp 10 salamander?
There aren't many ideas circulating in Hollywood or the backwoods of writers through with Gene's vision of scale-sci fi now is all dystopia and basically doom and gloom untalented female leads and dictatorship and tyranny and durr durr evil. By the time Trek reaches the natural end of its life-sci fi will be dead as a genre.I tend to agree with most of what Rahul has said on this thread. The uncomfortable truth is that all sci-fi storytelling has its limits by the very nature of the genre. If you make predictions about the future, they will rapidly turn out to be false. If you try to revisit an in-world time period several decades later in the real world you'll have to choose between contradicting canon or making everything look ridiculous and indulging in overwrought explanations of things like forehead ridges on Klingons. And so on.
The bottom line is, it's all about what theatrical types call "willing suspension of disbelief". It's subjective of course, but personally I can suspend my disbelief about the use of record tapes in computers and short skirts on female crewmembers in TOS better than I can suspend it over Enterprise looking more modern than TOS or everything in the JJ-verse films.
There are going to be conceptual limitations to any new version of Star Trek set anywhere or anywhen, and we'll all have our own personal preferences which will inform what kind of new TV show or film we would accept as authentic Trek and willingly suspend our disbelief for. But for me, personally, the hundred-year jump into the future is the best option. It's enough of a blank canvas without divorcing the franchise from its pre-existing canon. That's why it worked for TNG. For me, re-boots and prequels made 40/50 years after the original might as well be completely different sci-fi franchises altogether. They may be good in their own right, but they just don't "boldly go" enough to feel like genuine Star Trek.
Ultimately, I suspect Trek will eventually reach the natural end of its life. Too much of the real-world future will have become apparent, making established canon seem less relevant, and there won't be anywhere left for Trek to go without ceasing to be Trek. But we're not there yet, and when we are the answer is not to re-boot (ie- create a poor pastiche of the original), the answer is just to let a new sci-fi franchise come along.
For the shear fun of it?The novels have created quite an extensive Extended Universe. I don't see what good it does to cancel all of that out.
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