What do you mean "finally?" This question's been asked every six months or so ever since Trek XI's release
Sorry, I meant, I want to ask it but I don't want to since no doubt it was asked already. ^_^
No, there is no mention of Borg technology in Trek XI. That comes from the Countdown comic, which is itself non-canon.
Ah, thank you for the clarification. Funny, I didn't read the comics, I don't even know what's in there, yet I was under the understanding Nero's ship was outfitted with Borg tech. My memory must be playing games with me, what I remember, this piece of information was mentioned in the cinema release.
If not, then I guess I must have picked up the information somewhere else, but definitely not from the comics, hehe

(Hmm... on second thought, I might have picked it up from STO instead.)
Regardless, the point is, whatever was mentioned in ST11 is canon, and the old Spock and Nero's company, were from the canon-primeverse that we've watched in the past, and the litverse cannot avoid.
I sincerely doubt it. Besides, even if such a story were going to happen in 2016 (and again, I sincerely doubt it) it wouldn't already be done. In fact, there's a good chance it wouldn't even be started.
Granted. But it doesn't mean it cannot be mentioned in passing. That particular point in time can be skipped altogether in litverse both real-world time and in-universe time. Though that doesn't mean it never happened.
If this point in time was skipped in litverse, say, we're at 2410 already in-universe, Romulus still blew up due to a supernova, old Spock died (relatively speaking). On-screen canon is "king" in Star Trek's setup.
Which of course will affect the Typhon Pack. The Romulan Empire, having lost their capital world, the unification movement. The future is very much "free-for-all" if you will. Anything can happen after that point.
And I for one would love to see new conflicts. Not just on a galactic scale (which Destiny, Typhon Pact, and The Fall series were mostly about) but internal, local scale, similar to the Andorian crisis.
We're at litverse's "golden age". I agree, some slowdown is in order. But moving time forward shouldn't be slowed just because we're too fast. Stories can be told for a specific point in time. In-universe chronological order shouldn't be tied-in to publication year.
Atonement could be one good example, if my hunch is correct. A story or in-universe "event" still set before the Assassination but the novel published after The Fall.
So, we may be reading 2410 novels already, but we're still seeing novels being released for stories in 2386. Doesn't make it any different than the Enterprise series.
