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Some Other Guy posted:Hey if you can just take a dialysis pill, why not? I'm pretty sure that was a "repair (regrow?) your kidney" pill since the doctors were saying her kidney functions were restored. Also since I'm already debunking poo poo, the windows aren't forcefields. (they're transparent aluminum)
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# ? Dec 10, 2012 21:55 |
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# ? May 10, 2024 09:46 |
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sean10mm posted:Kind of like how taking off from the ground probably isn't a big deal when you can warp space-time to move at multiples of the speed of light. Except ships never inherit any of that, warp drive works by moving a 'bubble' of normal space (thus 'warp field') in which the ship is sitting/floating stationary the entire time.
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# ? Dec 10, 2012 21:57 |
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Yonic Symbolism posted:I think it's far more likely a suit will look at the most successful shows on TV and ask for a version of one to be set in space. Hence, I'm sure "game of thrones in space" is coming sooner or later. I dunno, shows in space tend to be more expensive. Any good exec would ask why the show had to be set in space. That said, I'd dearly love a well-executed live-action Legend of Galactic Heroes series. Hell, for the "GoT in SPACE" angle, it's got plenty of court intrigue and grisly fight scenes.
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# ? Dec 10, 2012 21:58 |
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mind the walrus posted:I can literally tune my nerd ears to the sperg frequency and hear some poor lord whining "COULD STILL BE KHAN COULD STILL BE KHAN" This is why nerds shouldn't be given what they want ever. Kahn isn't a particularily interesting villain once you take him away from the themes of Wrath, and the current crew is WAY too young to attempt anything like that right now.
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# ? Dec 10, 2012 21:58 |
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WarLocke posted:Except ships never inherit any of that, warp drive works by moving a 'bubble' of normal space (thus 'warp field') in which the ship is sitting/floating stationary the entire time.
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# ? Dec 10, 2012 22:03 |
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BulletRiddled posted:This is why nerds shouldn't be given what they want ever. Kahn isn't a particularily interesting villain once you take him away from the themes of Wrath, and the current crew is WAY too young to attempt anything like that right now. That's why Gary Mitchell would be the best possible compromise, in a marketing sense. It gives everything that's decent about Space Seed plus the angle of "one of their own" turning.
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# ? Dec 10, 2012 22:08 |
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MadScientistWorking posted:Except you are forgetting that if space is moving at the speed of light then there are rocks, pebbles, and pieces of dust which can ram right through your ship. Everything inside the warp bubble is at rest in relation to the ship at the center. Basically the ship isn't moving at all, the bubble of space that it's in is what is moving and the outside universe can't effect it (short of destabilizing the bubble outright which is a Bad Thing). At least that's what I remember from the last time I googled a spergy explanation of how the whole thing works.
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# ? Dec 10, 2012 22:11 |
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Farmer Crack-rear end posted:Replicators aren't direct energy-matter conversion, it's transporter trickery assembling molecules and poo poo from tanks full of matter and nobody knows how much energy a transporter takes. Goddamn Star Trek canon, always a step ahead
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# ? Dec 10, 2012 22:12 |
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mind the walrus posted:That's why Gary Mitchell would be the best possible compromise, in a marketing sense. It gives everything that's decent about Space Seed plus the angle of "one of their own" turning. I wonder if Kirk will just end up defeating Gary Mitchell with a pipe that's laying around in engineering like how he beat Kahn in Space Seed?
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# ? Dec 10, 2012 22:15 |
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I got annoyed when the Enterprise-E reversed propulsion and pulled itself out of the Scimitar. In space, nothing would "hold" the Scimitar in place; the E-E would pull both ships in that direction. Scuba-diving Enterprise doesn't bother me for some reason, though. TrekMovie says they have a name for the villian. Click the link to find out: http://trekmovie.com/2012/12/10/new-image-from-star-trek-into-darkness-features-cumberbatch-villain-w-kirk-spock/
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# ? Dec 10, 2012 22:17 |
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Siroc posted:I got annoyed when the Enterprise-E reversed propulsion and pulled itself out of the Scimitar. In space, nothing would "hold" the Scimitar in place; the E-E would pull both ships in that direction. Except for inertia. If the reverse thrust generated by the Enterprise-E could overwhelm the friction force holding the two ships together, they would separate. The Enterprise-E's engines still need to accelerate both its mass and that of the Scimitar.
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# ? Dec 10, 2012 22:19 |
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Siroc posted:I got annoyed when the Enterprise-E reversed propulsion and pulled itself out of the Scimitar. In space, nothing would "hold" the Scimitar in place; the E-E would pull both ships in that direction. ...what? John Harrison? That sounds a lot like "Gary Mitchell" except it's not Gary Mitchell. Unless someone else knows who this is my guess is they just changed the name since he was a minor character anyway.
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# ? Dec 10, 2012 22:20 |
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I thought it was the name of the Enterprise-B Captain for a second, but that was John Harriman.
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# ? Dec 10, 2012 22:36 |
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MadScientistWorking posted:Except you are forgetting that if space is moving at the speed of light then there are rocks, pebbles, and pieces of dust which can ram right through your ship. At that speed ram right through would be lucky. The kinetic energy would likely just turn the ship into a ball of plasma.
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# ? Dec 10, 2012 22:37 |
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Supercar Gautier posted:House MD in space. It's essentially the same thing, but all the diseases are bizarre made-up alien nonsense. Something like this, sort of kind of: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sector_General
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# ? Dec 10, 2012 22:37 |
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MadScientistWorking posted:Except you are forgetting that if space is moving at the speed of light then there are rocks, pebbles, and pieces of dust which can ram right through your ship. That's what the deflector field is for
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# ? Dec 10, 2012 22:38 |
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Some Other Guy posted:...what? John Harrison? That sounds a lot like "Gary Mitchell" except it's not Gary Mitchell. Unless someone else knows who this is my guess is they just changed the name since he was a minor character anyway. I'm betting it's a marketing pseudonym. Don't want to spoil the plot this early.
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# ? Dec 10, 2012 22:40 |
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Yonic Symbolism posted:That's what the deflector field is for Can we get a " Non-Trekkie " spreadsheet/FAQ to post on every page so this kind-of Old-Trek knowledge is easily answered? I swear this exact same conversation happened last page.
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# ? Dec 10, 2012 22:42 |
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Yonic Symbolism posted:That's what the deflector field is for MadScientistWorking posted:Also, the whole point of a deflector shield is to prevent the ship from imploding in on itself.
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# ? Dec 10, 2012 22:45 |
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You can also reroute power through the plasma conduits into the deflector dish and make a mean cheese omelet.
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# ? Dec 10, 2012 22:48 |
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Unless you're Riker. He can't cook eggs for poo poo.
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# ? Dec 10, 2012 22:52 |
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Riker just seems like a raman noodles kind of guy
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# ? Dec 10, 2012 22:56 |
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Riker is a busy man, okay? He has to keep his beard nautical and decorative, he has daily trombone practice as well as regular ambo-jutsu sessions, there's poker games to arrange, women to flirt with, he has important meetings with staff leaders in which he belittles their work for an episode's B/C-plot, and he's the Enterprise XO. The man simply does not have the time to learn how to make good scrambled eggs. (The secret is fat, so use at least 2% milk. gently caress skim.)
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# ? Dec 11, 2012 00:39 |
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They don't enslave animals for food (says Riker, before he later devours live worms), so they're not even real eggs. Already starting off on the wrong foot.
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# ? Dec 11, 2012 01:39 |
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The big issue isn't that they'd be incapable of making a starship that can fly in an atmophere and go underwater, it's that they didn't. They very clearly made one that's meant to stay in space, which is obvious just looking at it, and no matter what century, when you do ridiculously stressful things with something that you're not meant to do, they tend to fall apart.Siroc posted:I got annoyed when the Enterprise-E reversed propulsion and pulled itself out of the Scimitar. In space, nothing would "hold" the Scimitar in place; the E-E would pull both ships in that direction. No, this one works. Inertia partially holds the Scimitar in place. They're not bound together tightly enough to overcome that entirely. Also the navigational deflector and the deflector shields are two different things entirely. MikeJF fucked around with this message at 02:41 on Dec 11, 2012 |
# ? Dec 11, 2012 02:37 |
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Blade_of_tyshalle posted:Riker is a busy man, okay? He has to keep his beard nautical and decorative, he has daily trombone practice as well as regular ambo-jutsu sessions, there's poker games to arrange, women to flirt with, he has important meetings with staff leaders in which he belittles their work for an episode's B/C-plot, and he's the Enterprise XO. The man simply does not have the time to learn how to make good scrambled eggs. He's also the Chef on the NX-01. In the Holodeck. Everyday. Pulls a duty shift in real time there daily. Some Other Guy posted:...what? John Harrison? That sounds a lot like "Gary Mitchell" except it's not Gary Mitchell. Unless someone else knows who this is my guess is they just changed the name since he was a minor character anyway. Haha, what the poo poo? http://en.memory-alpha.org/wiki/Harrison People are saying it's this guy, a I was just finally coming around to liking it being Gary Mitchell instead of my previous hope, Khan. If this is true it'll be really lame.
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# ? Dec 11, 2012 03:02 |
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I've rolled my eyes a couple of times at this whole mystery villain thing. It is the type of thing that I'd expect the hacks behind "Lost" to come up with. What's next, a teaser clip where there's a polar bear on the bridge?
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# ? Dec 11, 2012 03:17 |
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Oh, come on dude. You seriously have a problem with producers of a film wanting to keep details quiet until it's released?
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# ? Dec 11, 2012 03:18 |
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MariusLecter posted:You can also reroute power through the plasma conduits into the deflector dish and make a mean cheese omelet. No, that's from another classic science fiction story.
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# ? Dec 11, 2012 03:23 |
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MikeJF posted:The big issue isn't that they'd be incapable of making a starship that can fly in an atmophere and go underwater, it's that they didn't. They very clearly made one that's meant to stay in space, which is obvious just looking at it, and no matter what century, when you do ridiculously stressful things with something that you're not meant to do, they tend to fall apart.
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# ? Dec 11, 2012 03:28 |
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Heavy pressure along the ship's designed lines of acceleration, sounds fine to me.
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# ? Dec 11, 2012 03:34 |
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It's kind of funny that you use this image because I don't give a poo poo what magic technobabble you spout off, anything this close to an actual black hole would be compressed to the size of a pinhead in about a tenth of a second. e: Plus they eject the warp core and somehow manage to not get sucked in when the ship suddenly loses power, you know, what with losing its power generation capability - although there's probably some explanation for that too.
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# ? Dec 11, 2012 03:34 |
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Well, also, let's be honest, it's impossible to compare that to what should really happen because Black Holes Do Not Work Like That At All. That was less of a real black hole and more of a magical trek space distortion with high gravity.
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# ? Dec 11, 2012 03:35 |
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MikeJF posted:Well, also, let's be honest, it's impossible to compare that to what should really happen because Black Holes Do Not Work Like That At All. Fair enough, but however they work I think it's safe to say anything getting that close to the event horizon isn't getting away, rerouting the plasma manifold or not.
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# ? Dec 11, 2012 03:36 |
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My guess is, John Harrison is a name the Benedict Cumberbatch's character is using but it's not his true identity, which won't be revealed until towards the end. Kind of like with The Dark Knight Rises, how everyone guessed Marion Cottillard's character was Talia Al Ghul and the studio went "nuh uh, it's Miranda Tate". Well... As long as they don't try and do something clever and twist-y with the reveal, I think things ought to be okay.
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# ? Dec 11, 2012 03:37 |
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WarLocke posted:Fair enough, but however they work I think it's safe to say anything getting that close to the event horizon isn't getting away, rerouting the plasma manifold or not. That's what I mean, I don't think it even had a drat event horizon. It was just a two-dimensional black disc in space surrounded by lightning swirlies. MikeJF fucked around with this message at 03:43 on Dec 11, 2012 |
# ? Dec 11, 2012 03:40 |
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So it turns out that Alive Eve is apparently playing Carol Marcus... http://www.comingsoon.net/news/movienews.php?id=97940
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# ? Dec 11, 2012 04:16 |
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Starscream posted:I believe this is called "Dune" in most civilized parts of the world. To be honest, I thought of "Legend of the Galactic Heroes" myself, but "Dune" fits that description to a tee as well. e:fb to the LoGH reference. Young Freud fucked around with this message at 04:27 on Dec 11, 2012 |
# ? Dec 11, 2012 04:24 |
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sean10mm posted:In TOS the Enterprise survived nuclear explosions. So I don't think water pressure would be an insurmountable obstacle for their engineering skills. What's a nuclear explosion in space? There's not enough gas for a blast wave, so you basically just end up with a giant burst of radiation. sean10mm posted:The deflectors survive weapon hits measured in megatons. Meanwhile we've been building subs with our lovely technology for over a century. Dispersing energy is not the same as withstanding thousands of pounds per square inch of sustained pressure. LitigiousChimp posted:It's a ship that can handle the stress of accelerating to FTL speeds without falling apart, why do you think a little water pressure would be too much for it? The ship never actually experiences the acceleration and deceleration effects directly. mind the walrus posted:Sperg Answer: The Deflector Array basically makes the Enterprise shielded in a bubble, so the answer to your question is "water pressure shouldn't be an issue at all, provided the Deflector Array is still working." The deflector array is only really effective against small points of incursion, some dumbass episodes excepted. Some Other Guy posted:I've rolled my eyes a couple of times at this whole mystery villain thing. It is the type of thing that I'd expect the hacks behind "Lost" to come up with. What's next, a teaser clip where there's a polar bear on the bridge? hacks behind "Lost" Yes, and at their hacky hackiest, too.
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# ? Dec 11, 2012 04:24 |
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# ? May 10, 2024 09:46 |
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Just because (if) she's Carol Marcus, it still doesn't make Cumberbatch Khan. David was already like 25 when Star Trek II rolled around.
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# ? Dec 11, 2012 04:25 |