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inappropriatecontent, in The Leif Ericson Class Incident

If the Leif Ericson class didn’t exist, how could it be in the handbook??!

Wooster,
@Wooster@startrek.website avatar

Asking the deep questions here.

T’Lyn thinks it may be the result of a temporal wake, while Boimler thinks this should be brought to the attention of the Department of Temporal Investigations.

jaelisp, in A question about ST: Picard - is season 2 completely ret-conned?

Not retconed per se, they just can’t make their mind up on what the series is and keep radically changing direction and dumping prior development and characters. Changes are often for the better and don’t directly contradict but there’s certainly a lack of any common thought in the story they’re trying to tell.

LibraryLass, in The Klingon Augment Virus is the real reason for the ban on genetic engineering (includes spoilers from SNW 2.2)

It’s important to remember that Earth has an outsize influence on the Federation. The capital is, and always has been, there, and will continue to be until such time as it secedes entirely from the Federation after the Burn. The Academy is there. Starfleet is headquartered there, and grew out of United Earth’s space service. Most of Starfleet is human, most Federation colonies are human. Azetbur was mistaken to call itself a “Homo sapiens-only club” but the fact is that from the beginning, as the only planet with friendly relations with Vulcan, Andoria, and Tellar Prime, as the very reason the Federation exists… Earth found itself with a power dynamic that highly favored it.

As such, I don’t think it’s too surprising that a specifically Earthican problem could weigh heavily on the Federation, even as it grew larger and more cosmopolitan.

JWBananas, in How did Sisko and company play a baseball game in one of Quark's holosuites?
@JWBananas@startrek.website avatar

From Prodigy 1x17 Ghost in the Machine (go to 06:15):

Gwyn: “If we’re all stuck in one room, how is Zero all the way over there?”

Rok-Tahk: “Motion floor tracking, visual horizon manipulation. The Holodeck tricks the mind to create any scenario!”

Could have sworn there was a visual in the episode as well, but I can’t find it.

edgemaster72, in Raktajino... has liquor in it?
@edgemaster72@lemmy.world avatar

Only when O’Brien makes it

Corgana, in Repetitive Epics
@Corgana@startrek.website avatar

I love this question. My first thought was not a book, but Béla Tarr’s The Turin Horse which depicts the repetitive life of a Hungarian farmer and his daughter. Each day is essentially the same, with similar but ever-changing frustrations, and no hope for change in sight. The audience really feels their frustrations, but the characters also appear to have fully accepted the situation. The title is a reference to the horse-whipping that allegedly drove Nietzsche insane.

Not quite an “epic” in the usual sense, but absolutely repetitive and a surrender to economic powers beyond one’s control.

charonn0, in Repetitive Epics
@charonn0@startrek.website avatar

The closest I can think of–at least as far as multi-generation epics–would be Wilbur Smith novels.

Zorque, in Vulcan Sex Workers

They have meditations they can do with a group of fellow Vulcan's to help suppress the urge in the case of not being able to procreate with their mate. It comes up in Voyager.

Kolanaki, (edited ) in Where Are All The Bicycles??
@Kolanaki@yiffit.net avatar

Neelix had a bicycle… On the holodeck… While being brainwashed into believing he was a French resistance fighter in WW2…

But I mean… Why would you use a bicycle when you can just instantly teleport to your destination in cities that are also incredibly walkable?

porthos,

Because bicycling is pleasant af, why walk when you can glide? Yeah, you can just teleport everywhere but that is kind of something you can say about everything in star trek.

anonionfinelyminced, in Where Are All The Bicycles??
@anonionfinelyminced@kbin.social avatar
Zorque,

We love hoverbikes!

T156, in Does anyone in Starfleet wear sunglasses?

Seems like if you’re on an away mission to, say, a desert planet, sunglasses might be useful.

To a degree. Not all species need them, and it might not be considered necessary. Particularly since it adds the risk of you losing them, and inadvertently causing a violation of the Prime Directive.

Species like Vulcans have innate defences that are just as good, if not better than 21st century sunglasses, and they may rely on those instead.

HobbesHK, in Annotations for *Star Trek: Lower Decks* 4x10: “OId Friends, New Planets” (SPOILERS)

I was wondering if the “Previously” bit at the start was maybe Eugene Roddenberry, channeling his mum?

CCMan1701A, in Annotations for *Star Trek: Lower Decks* 4x10: “OId Friends, New Planets” (SPOILERS)

Great work. Just watched today, they could have done better with the music, but overall great episode. Makes me wish they were 45 minutes to get a little bit more content in, feels rushed at times.

JWBananas, in Wild theory about the Mysterious Ship
@JWBananas@startrek.website avatar

With that stated. When the mysterious ship reorients itself to attack position, I can’t help but feel like it looks kinda like a face. But humans are hard coded to see faces in things, so didnt think much of it.

Take another look, upside down.

Wooster,
@Wooster@startrek.website avatar

Hmm… looks vaguely like the chin of a Blue Whale.

Not sure what to make of this, since I still strongly feel like the Bynar ship looks like something ripped from an action figure, but a robo whale probably wouldn’t have use for some legs.

Well, still a shot in the dark.

Wooster, in Episode Analysis | Star Trek: Lower Decks | 4x01 "Twovix" and 4x02 "I Have No Bones Yet I Must Flee"
@Wooster@startrek.website avatar

I guess I’ll bite the bullet and kick off the Tuvix debate.

Tuvix isn’t the first Trek episode to involve transporter hybrids, and it wasn’t the last; but it stands out amongst the Trek fandom and cemented Janeway as a ruthless executioner.

I maintain that the only reason it’s controversial is because Tuvix was more loved than the sum of his parts.

I personally like Neelix, but it’s undeniable that he’s a contender for one of the least popular main characters in the franchise, and certainly the least favorite on Voyager.

Tim Russ is an amazing actor, but Tuvok is a very subtle character. If you pay attention to him, he’s funny and insightful. But if you don’t focus on him, you can forget he exists.

So, by replacing a despised character and a forgettable character with an outstanding character, you’re left with an audience who has no attachment to the status quo.

If, instead, “Tuvix” was built with popular characters, like Janeway, the EMH, or Seven, the audience would have no qualms about a return to the status quo—or at least not nearly to the degree we’ve seen over the years.

Skip ahead to Twovix

The transporter meat blob was dismissed as non-sentient by Tendi, but it clearly had all the intact personalities of its components. Without further analysis can we be certain of that assessment? Why not send it to The Farm™️?

If we come to the ethical conclusion that the transporter meat blob’s very existence was suffering, why restore the transporter patterns to their components rather than their Tuvix’d counterparts? The simplest answer is that they’re more trouble than they’re worth.

No one cares about the meat blob.

No one cares about T’Ilups and co.

Everyone cares about Tuvix.

We let our attachments dictate our ethics then use logic and evidence to justify them.

williams_482,
@williams_482@startrek.website avatar

why restore the transporter patterns to their components rather than their Tuvix’d counterparts?

Counterpoint: why would you restore the transporter merges? The Tuvix’d contingent occupies the exact same state as the original individuals: “dead”, destroyed in the process of recreating another, larger being. Reverting to those obviously unstable and dangerous merged beings instead of the individuals who had been merged to create them would be absurd.

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