Even if B-4 got a hardware upgrade, who is writing the upgrade software patch? I do not recall any evidence of Geordi being able to do so. I also do not recall Data doing that.
Even if B-4 got a hardware upgrade, who is writing the upgrade software patch? I do not recall any evidence of Geordi being able to do so. I also do not recall Data doing that.
This reminds me of when Bela Lugosi took over the role of Frankenstein from Boris Karloff. It was not a popular move! (Didn't help that it was a terrible, terrible movie, of course.)It would have been interesting if they had B-4 played by a different actor. That way the character could have continued on in other iterations of Trek (presumably post-Nemesis) without having seventy year old Brent Spiner playing an ageless android.
On reflection, it kinda reminds me of TWoK..."Remember..."
I've always liked to hope that he wouldn't just turn into Data.
Data did the memory transfer algorythm before he could've foreseen his ''jumping ship'' (literally). So the factor of Data being 'dead', but living on in B-4, obviously never entered his head.
In my view, through carefully watching the movie both the finished product and the deleted scenes, the context is that B-4 is a bit 'backwards', unable to grow and develop as Data (and Lore) did, and by performing the memory upgrade Data was hoping that it would ''kick start'' B-4's into developing into his own individual.
Nothing in the finished movie disputes this, and in fact it adds an added poignancy to the final scene: Picard knows Data is dead, and that B-4 may not even understand that, but when B-4 starts singing Blue Skies, Picard suddenly realises that Data may be gone, but B-4 has got his whole journey ahead of him. So while one person dies, another is born. A kind of circle of (positronic) life.
Nothing has disappointed me more than the way the post-Nemesis fiction writers have taken the 'lazy' approach of just saying, ''Y'know, Data's back, he erased B-4''. In my view it would've been so much better, and more appropriate, if thanks to the memory transfer B-4 starts his own journey to selfhood. Just like Data did before (buh-dum TISH!) him.![]()
Nothing has disappointed me more than the way the post-Nemesis fiction writers have taken the 'lazy' approach of just saying, ''Y'know, Data's back, he erased B-4''.
Don't know for sure if it is canon or not...
the "Countdown" comic that details events that lead into Star Trek (2009) addressed this and, yes, B4 does, in fact eventually become "Data", who is seen commanding the Enterprise (Picard became a Federation Ambassador).
Don't know for sure if it is canon or not but the "Countdown" comic that details events that lead into Star Trek (2009) addressed this and, yes, B4 does, in fact eventually become "Data", who is seen commanding the Enterprise (Picard became a Federation Ambassador).
The B-4 survives as well. See the "Star Trek Online" short stories.
I can't see either of those things coming to pass. Unless it happened through some sort of accidental override program Data would not erase B-4 willingly. Picard was never giving up that seat on the Enterprise.Don't know for sure if it is canon or not but the "Countdown" comic that details events that lead into Star Trek (2009) addressed this and, yes, B4 does, in fact eventually become "Data", who is seen commanding the Enterprise (Picard became a Federation Ambassador).
I can't see either of those things coming to pass. Unless it happened through some sort of accidental override program Data would not erase B-4 willingly. Picard was never giving up that seat on the Enterprise.Don't know for sure if it is canon or not but the "Countdown" comic that details events that lead into Star Trek (2009) addressed this and, yes, B4 does, in fact eventually become "Data", who is seen commanding the Enterprise (Picard became a Federation Ambassador).
Huh. I knew Data appeared in Countdown, but had assumed Picard was dead. I thought there was something poignant in Data serving Starfleet decades after his crewmates had died of old age.
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