I'd like some more info on this one...
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Dream on...in the end...dreams are everything...
oh yeah...and leave the other topic...
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Dream on...in the end...dreams are everything...
[This message has been edited by Marko Latin (edited January 21, 2000).]
Anyway, where did you hear that this battle lasted for 4 freaking days? Unless this came from an original line of dialouge not aired or from one of TPTB, I would catagorically say that it is non-canon and noone should consider it reliable at all. I mean we heard the start of the battle on the com and Picard took off and called for Red Alert right away. They must have only been a few hours away at most. Now while I agree this was a writing oversight, the battle did most assuredly not last 4 days.
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"A gathering of Angels appeared above my head. They sang to me this song of hope, and this is what they said..." -Styx
Aban's Illustration www.thespeakeasy.com/alanfore
I noticed some other inconsistances too...when was the Chin'toka retreat if there was such an event? The USS Defiant was destroyed in the battle according to the info there...I know that CAN'T be true...the defiant is still in one piece in Insurrection and will hopefully stay that way...some say that one of the defiant-class ships in VOY:"Message in a bottle" was the Defiant herself...but that's only assumption...
______________________________________________________
Here is the part of the battle report where it says about the battle lasting 4 days:
The second Borg attack on the Federation came in 2373. A single cube again attempted to reach Earth and assimilate its population. By this time Starfleet had been building up its forces in the core of the Federation for several years in response to the Romulan, Borg and Dominion threats; a fleet of five hundred Starships met the Borg ship at the Typhon sector and fought a four day running battle all the way to Earth. Starfleet managed to inflict significant damage on the cubes outer hull, but the Borg inflicted massive losses on the fleet in the process. By the time the cube reached Earth some three hundred and twenty ships had been lost, most of them with all hands.
______________________________________________________
i know it's only speculation but where did the guy who made the site get this???
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Dream on...in the end...dreams are everything...
If you havent seen the Last episodes of Ds9 please stop reading here because im about to spoil it for Marko.
Im not going to say much just that yes the Defiant did go boom and yes thge Chintoka Retreat did take place.
As for the 4 day Sector 001 remark , if you notice this particular site has a "Key" if the Text is Yellow on the page it is Canon Info either from the Episodes or from the Encyclopedia , if the text is white it means that the comment is the webmasters Opinion or theory and if the text is Green that means that the comment is either backstage info , what he means by backstage info i dont know.
Where he came up with this thoery is also a mystery , i emailed him about it but I have yet to receive any reply.
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"Marge .. Do you have other men in this House ? .. Radioactive men?"
~Homer "The Simpsons"
Jupiter Station , Starfleet Research & Development
[This message has been edited by Dhunter (edited January 21, 2000).]
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"The things hollow--it goes on forever--and--oh my God!--it's full of stars!" -David Bowman's last transmission back to Earth, 2001: A Space Odyssey
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Somehow we're going somewhere.
Looks like someone did some creative writing...
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Sometimes I run
Sometimes I hide
Sometimes I'm scared of you
But all I really want is to hold you tight
Treat you right, be with you day and night
Baby all I need is time
-Britney Spears
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Dream on...in the end...dreams are everything...
I'd always thought that a small fleet was thrown at the cube for the first battle, which allowed numerous Federation ships to amass at Earth, while other Federation deployments were constantly relieving the ships actually tasked with fighting the cube. That way the cube would be under constant attack while the Federation ships could stand down and regenerate their shields. The battle in First Contact wasn't on the verge of being lost, it just hadn't turned in the Federation's favour yet.
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"I promise you, Wilma, that not one man on this force will rest until the criminal scum that did this are behind bars. Now let's go get a bite to eat." - Frank Drebbin, Detective Lieutenant in Police Squad
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Dream on...in the end...dreams are everything...
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"I promise you, Wilma, that not one man on this force will rest until the criminal scum that did this are behind bars. Now let's go get a bite to eat." - Frank Drebbin, Detective Lieutenant in Police Squad
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Navigator-"Heading, Sir?"
Kirk-"Out there...somewhere...out thatta-way."--Star Trek: TMP
I'd also say the glimpse we got of the final sublight part of the battle aren't representative of the battle in general. We saw perhaps half a dozen ships get destroyed during that glimpse of perhaps five-six minutes. A ship per minute just isn't likely - Starfleet would rather give up than lose such numbers of ships on a lost cause. If a ship per minute is lost without causing more than the "heavy surface damage" Data observed, then there is no hope of saving Earth even with thousands of sacrificed ships.
There would be good reasons to assume the battle got bloodier as Earth approached. The Cube was interested in getting through this time, not in stopping to assimilate the fleet. It probably simply didn't bother to destroy too many ships while at warp.
Timo Saloniemi
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"A few more calculations"
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Calvin: "I'm killing time while I wait for life to shower me with meaning and happiness"
Hobbes: "I hope you're comfy."
Federation Starship Datalink - Starship site of the new millennium.
Now, as for why the battle might have gotten worse near Earth... It's my opinion that the reason we saw so many of the same four classes of ships at the battle is that those four classes had been recalled to various shipyards to be upgraded (possibly to be given the new "environmentally friendly" warp engines). Now, if these ships were in the process of being refit (or even if they had already been refit, but hadn't had a shakedown), there could have been unforseen problems. Hence, the ships weren't working at 100% efficiency, so they were more apt to be destroyed. Of course, despite this, Starfleet couldn't very well tell them not to fight. They were probably the only ships around.
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Col. Maybourne: "Teal'c... It's good to see you well."
Teal'c: "In my culture, I would be well within my rights to dismember you."
-Stargate SG-1: "Touchstone"
-Akira and Nebula are fast deep-space explorer ships, thus they got to the scene from faraway locations (Galaxies might have, too, but there are probably much fewer of those overall than there are Nebulas or Akiras).
-Saber is a tiny ship, so perhaps it doesn't go far. Thus, there would be a swarm of such local-defence vessels near Earth to begin with.
-Norway is a one-off ship never seen later. Perhaps something experimented on at the big research facilities of Utopia Planitia or Earth's yards?
-Steamrunner seems old and ugly and not very fast if sleekness is a measure of speed (and it often seems to be!). These could be warships with no peacetime use, perhaps "floating docks" for planetary assaults (they do look like today's amphibious assault floating docks to me). Since ST:FC takes place in peacetime, the ships would be stocked in garrisons, possibly near Earth. Note that they fare extremely poorly in the battle, getting blown up in high numbers by single "belly shots". I can't see any of them taking a single hit and surviving, even though the other ship types do take hits without blowing up.
The odd thing about that battle was the absence of Excelsiors. Those are normally everywhere. Did they form some sort of an outer defence perimeter and were all destroyed there?
Timo Saloniemi
Perhaps the events that transpired in BoBW happened over a span of a week or something. Although the Borg Cube has some awesome capabilities, it- like all other starships- can only travel at a certain maximum speed. How long does it take for a Starship to travel between the outskirts of the Federation to Earth itself?
From what I read in the novelized version of ST-FC a fleet of ships engaged the Borg Cube in the Typhon sector. Rather than stay and fight the fleet, the Borg chose to break through the line as quickly as possible while inflicting as much damage within a short time frame. Not all ships in the Typhon fleet were destroyed, this including the Defiant, and Admiral Hayes' Flagship. I believe that Data mentioned that about 20 ships were in that Typhon sector fleet. This fleet followed the Borg cube to Earth where another fleet was waiting to fight the cube. No one knows how long this battle was, but it was long enough for the Ent-E to get to Earth to help finish the cube off.
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I can resist anything.......
Except Temptation
Picard talked about an invasion. Bones would probably say: "Since when does 1 ship constitudes to an invision?"
Here is what I think what may have been the full conversation about the Borg invasion on the Enterprise:
Picard: "I just got a message from Admiral [whatever his name was]. The Borg are invading the Federation. We have put some 400 ships on it to intercept the [insert a number] Cubes. But the last thing I heard is that the Borg have broken through the lines."
=== Here begins the scene in First Contact:
Riker: "How many ships?"
Picard: "One, and it is... "
The rest you know.
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"Reality is a condition that occurs because of a lack of alcohol."
- Albert Einstein
(-=\V/=-)
[This message has been edited by Altair (edited January 26, 2000).]
1. Romulan Wars in low warp vessels
2. Past Tense 1. Kira scans the area and there is no sign of Starfleet activity - the closest aliens are Romulans... they have colonies in the Rigel system - one of - remember the heaviest populated systems in the Federation... and close to Earth - at least I think its the Rigel system...
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"...it might be easier to study
ancient societies from distant orbit than it might be to sit next to the
Guardian of Forever with a tricorder." - Baloo, January 2000
That being said, I do have to agree with others on this list that the battle may have actually been a protracted series of meeting engagements, over a period of two to four days. A can see small task groups of 3 to 50 vessels, using every dirty trick in the book to disrupt the Borg Cube's warp fields, lay traps to force course corrections, harassing the Cube at every opportunity, inflicting as much damage as possible and then breaking off (perhaps hoping in vain to draw the Borg off of their intended target), all in a dedicated effort to allow other ships to reach the Sol System for the final stand, the very end of which we witness in those early scenes of ST:FC. I don't know if I can buy the loss of 400 ships, especially in light of the vast quantities of ships we see later being fielded in the Dominion War. Or maybe, this is in spite of it.
YMMV,
Larry
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"20th Century, go to sleep."
--
R.E.M.
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Col. Maybourne: "Teal'c... It's good to see you well."
Teal'c: "In my culture, I would be well within my rights to dismember you."
-Stargate SG-1: "Touchstone"
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"We set sail on this new sea because their is new knowledge to be gained and new rights to be won" John F Kennedy
members.aol.com/mfwan/index.htm
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"20th Century, go to sleep."
--
R.E.M.
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Col. Maybourne: "Teal'c... It's good to see you well."
Teal'c: "In my culture, I would be well within my rights to dismember you."
-Stargate SG-1: "Touchstone"
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"We set sail on this new sea because their is new knowledge to be gained and new rights to be won" John F Kennedy
members.aol.com/mfwan/index.htm
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"A few more calculations"
At wolf 359 the fleet probably fought for more than an hour maybe even two before getting oblieterated
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"20th Century, go to sleep."
--
R.E.M.
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"We set sail on this new sea because their is new knowledge to be gained and new rights to be won" John F Kennedy
members.aol.com/mfwan/index.htm
Also I've heard there was some ship(s) that survived by retreating or something. I wonder which ship held out the longest...
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Somehow we're going somewhere.
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"We set sail on this new sea because their is new knowledge to be gained and new rights to be won" John F Kennedy
members.aol.com/mfwan/index.htm
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"...and if frogs could fly; well we'd still have this problem, but wouldn't it be cool?" - Drew Carey
Federation Starship Datalink - Starship site of the new millennium.
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Somehow we're going somewhere.
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Attempting to solve the mysteries of starships.
As for the USS Ahwahnee, it's assumed to have survived since we know the USS Ahwahnee NCC-73620 model was part of the wreckage, but in "Redemption", a screen showing the ships in Picard's fleet listed the USS Ahwahnee NCC-71620. It's assumed (and possibly confirmed) that they thought the original registry was too high and lowered it. Therefore, it's assumed she survived. It's most likely that she was damaged and her crew killed (or escaped), and was repaired and recommissioned.
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"The things hollow--it goes on forever--and--oh my God!--it's full of stars!" -David Bowman's last transmission back to Earth, 2001: A Space Odyssey
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Frank's Home Page
John Linnell: "This song is called...it's called..."
Audience: "Louisiana! Montana!"
John Linnell: Don't tell me what it's called..."
[This message has been edited by The Shadow (edited January 30, 2000).]
i remember they said there were 40 federation ships and 2 klingon BOPs
[This message has been edited by warbird5 (edited January 30, 2000).]
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"We set sail on this new sea because their is new knowledge to be gained and new rights to be won" John F Kennedy
members.aol.com/mfwan/index.htm
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"The things hollow--it goes on forever--and--oh my God!--it's full of stars!" -David Bowman's last transmission back to Earth, 2001: A Space Odyssey
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You are wise, witty, and wonderful, but you spend far too much time reading this sort of trash.
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"I Got two words for you.. S*uck it!"-DeGeneration X
Oh Hell Ya there back!
Bonecrusher
http://members.xoom.com/smartiee
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"We set sail on this new sea because their is new knowledge to be gained and new rights to be won" John F Kennedy
members.aol.com/mfwan/index.htm
And more than one ship could have survived the battle at Wolf 359. Roughly 40 ships were summoned initially, and at least 40 arrived since 39 were lost and at least one must have survived to pick up the lifepods. But there's nothing to say that 42 or even 50 ships couldn't have arrived eventually, so that there could be dozens of survivors or semi-survivors. 40 is just the minimum figure.
If a big and mighty Nebula like the Endeavour decided to retreat before destruction, then many lesser ships probably also saw the wisdom of such a maneuver...
Timo Saloniemi
Secondly - the Awhanahee from Redemption could have been a previously decommisioned ship that was recommisioned for the sole purpose of the blockade...
Allowing for a lower registry than the one damaged/destroyed at Wolf 359
There were only Fed ships at Wolf 359 they often reuse stock footage... see Shades of Grey! there was even a scene from The Search for Spock in Riker's dreams.
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"...it might be easier to study
ancient societies from distant orbit than it might be to sit next to the
Guardian of Forever with a tricorder." - Baloo, January 2000
But Janeway could never have known about that, since they left the Alpha Quadrant about 2 years before 'First Contact'.
Could this be the same Endeavor?? Appearantly Asamov survived, or else he could not have made a report about his contact with the Borg. He would have had previous experience with fighting the Borg. But then again, so has Picard...
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"Reality is a condition that occurs because of a lack of alcohol."
- Albert Einstein
(-=\V/=-)
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"We set sail on this new sea because their is new knowledge to be gained and new rights to be won" John F Kennedy
members.aol.com/mfwan/index.htm
We know that at least one ship retreated, since someone had to pick up Sisko's lifeboat. The Admiral DID give orders to fall back just before his ship was destroyed, so it's at least possible that some decided to follow that, even though he was dead. Where they went, and why they were never mentioned, I have no idea.
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You are wise, witty, and wonderful, but you spend far too much time reading this sort of trash.
As for the Endeavour... Even if it was at W359, it could still have been destroyed. As mentioned, Amasov could have escaped on a lifeboat. Sisko survived, too, but that doesn't mean that the Saratoga wasn't destroyed...
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Col. Maybourne: "Teal'c... It's good to see you well."
Teal'c: "In my culture, I would be well within my rights to dismember you."
-Stargate SG-1: "Touchstone"
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"Reality is a condition that occurs because of a lack of alcohol."
- Albert Einstein
(-=\V/=-)
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takeoffs are optional; landings are mandatory
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"A few more calculations"
I believe that the E-D was the first ship to reach the scene of the battle after the massacre, and she didn't detect any lifesigns. If someone else had gotten there first, they surely would have told the E what happened. Maybe someone tractored all the escape pods out of range, then went back and got blown up.
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You are wise, witty, and wonderful, but you spend far too much time reading this sort of trash.
Hello?
Have we all wondered off the topic?
I think that a saying fits perfectly with an invasion or any contact with the Borg: "Shit happens!", Duke Nukem
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Dream on...in the end...dreams are everything...
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Dream on...in the end...dreams are everything...
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"Si vis pacem, para bellum." (If you want peace, prepare for war)
- Vegetius
Prakesh's Star Trek Site
It's not even close to anything remotely official, and is a pretty bad job of conjecturing anyway.
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I bet when Neanderthal kids would make a snowman, someone would
always end up saying "Don't forget the big heavy eyebrows." Then they would all get embarrassed because they remembered they had the big hunky eyebrows too, and then they would get mad and eat the snowman.
-Jack Handey
But of course, no number was ever said and all we can do is count how many we saw on screen...even though that won't give us a good number either because we could be recounting a ship.
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7 alarm clock: "Do not touch me."
Dilbert: "Then how do I turn you off?"
7: "Believe me, I am plenty turned off."
I just can't imagine 100 ships being needed, especially with all of the knowledge and research on the Borg.
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I bet when Neanderthal kids would make a snowman, someone would
always end up saying "Don't forget the big heavy eyebrows." Then they would all get embarrassed because they remembered they had the big hunky eyebrows too, and then they would get mad and eat the snowman.
-Jack Handey
(Yes, I realize that there is at least one argument to be made for a Starfleet advance in technology and tactics, namely that there was a battle at all, unlike Wolf 359. But there's a big difference between being able to survive a battle and being able to win it.)
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"20th Century, go to sleep."
--
R.E.M.
As for the Endeavor and the Excalibur, the could have met other Borg Cubes prior or after Wolf 359. There was Borg activity before the tragedy and after. Since neither the show stated that either ship encountered a Borg ship at Wolf 359, we should not be saying anything definate about the Endeavor and the Excalibur. All we know is that those ships ran into some Borg problems.
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Sometimes I run
Sometimes I hide
Sometimes I'm scared of you
But all I really want is to hold you tight
Treat you right, be with you day and night
Baby all I need is time
-Britney Spears
------------------
"We set sail on this new sea because their is new knowledge to be gained and new rights to be won" John F Kennedy
members.aol.com/mfwan/index.htm
------------------
"20th Century, go to sleep."
--
R.E.M.
------------------
Dream on...in the end...dreams are everything...
------------------
You are wise, witty, and wonderful, but you spend far too much time reading this sort of trash.
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We did it on the floor,
We did it by the door,
We did it all night,
We did it under a light,
So how about for tonight we do it some more...
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"We set sail on this new sea because their is new knowledge to be gained and new rights to be won" John F Kennedy
members.aol.com/mfwan/index.htm
It is rather unlikely that the small pods we have seen so far would have independent warp drive. But the ones on the Saratoga are among the very largest. Perhaps they did have warp engines (shuttlecraft-sized but warp-capable nevertheless)? Perhaps lots of people ejected at Wolf 359, but all who had ejected in a non-warp-capable pod were soon killed or assimilated, and only those with shuttlecraft or warp-capable pods survived? That way, one wouldn't need to postulate a starship that would have rescued Sisko before the E-D arrived. (Also, towing of pods by warp-capable shuttles is possible, although I think we have never seen a shuttle equipped with a tractor beam.)
Then again, I see no reason not to postulate such a ship. When the ship sees that all is lost, it scoops up as many pods as it can and withdraws at warp speed, away from the doomed Sol system and under comm silence so as not to tip off the Borg about new assimilation targets. The Endeavour can be one such ship, just as the new Encyclopedia claims - although I'd rather it would have been a less powerful ship, lest it be suspected of deserting the battle.
Timo Saloniemi
And look at how they filmed the escape pod ejecting. The entrance is from the starboard and Sisko sits on the port side next to a window. The pod ejects and we see that Sisko looks out toward the Saratoga's aft section. That would mean the pod was facing sideways (foreward section of pod faces Saratoga's starboard). But then the pod's starboard side faces toward space and that's where the entrance is. With that, there's no way people could board the pod from it's starboard side.
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7 alarm clock: "Do not touch me."
Dilbert: "Then how do I turn you off?"
7: "Believe me, I am plenty turned off."
As for the entry door vs. window dilemma... I see none. The model has port and starboard entry doors, but it's impossible to tell if there is a stern window. Let's assume there is one. The one we saw the Saratoga through was not shaped like one of the side windows, after all - it was much bigger.
Obviously, the Runabout set was used for the pod with minor modifications, so there were the side entry doors and the small oval side windows. There were also two blueshirted pilots facing forward (but the Runabout windows were covered - the pilots apparently had only viewscreens). Sisko was facing starboard. A view from bow to stern showed Sisko facing left, staring at nothing, while directly in front of the camera (that is, directly astern) was the big window that showed an aft view and the explosion of the Saratoga.
I guess the pods were lowered from the shuttlebay ceiling to the bay floor, after which people boarded from whichever door was most convenient. Then the pod departed much like a shuttle.
Timo Saloniemi
as for the endeavor i do not believe it was at wolf 359. do most of you believe that all one on one confrontations with a borg cube in the vastness of federation space, the borg cube encounters the enterprise. i believe that in the time frame between w359 and first contact, the borg has "probed and proded" the federation. and the endeavour must have been sent out to confront them.
didn't janeway quote aminsov on that particular episode. why would one quote a rescue ship captain on the behavior of the borg. Normally a retrospect quote on the behavior of the enemy has been quoted from a person of great importance and intellegence, a little over qualified for a rescue ship capt..
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For all you Fighting needs
http://www.fighters.net
PS: I have yet to learn how to do italics.
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7 alarm clock: "Do not touch me."
Dilbert: "Then how do I turn you off?"
7: "Believe me, I am plenty turned off."
Also, Wolf 359 is in the heart of the Federation, more or less. I'm sure there were at least a few ships in the surrounding area that could make a quick dash over to pick up escape pods and be gone before the Enterprise arrived.
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"You are stupid and evil and do not know you are stupid and evil."
--
Gene Ray, Cubic
Regardless, I never meant to imply that the idea was all that logical or necessary. Just that I like it.
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"You are stupid and evil and do not know you are stupid and evil."
--
Gene Ray, Cubic
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Jackson: "Basically, he was the original Satan."
O'Neill: "Well, isn't that special?"
-Stargate SG-1: "Serpent's Song"
My impression was that the system was uninhabited, perhaps even devoid of planets. There would certainly have been some concern by the E-D crew over the fate of the local inhabitants, had there been any. I doubt any civilian starships would have been in the vicinity.
Why did the Cube come to Wolf 359? Why not go around the system? Presumably because the Cube wanted to battle Starfleet in order to assimilate its tactics and weapons.
But why did Starfleet go to Wolf 359? What reason did they have to think that the Cube would stop there? Or fly through that system so that it could be forced to stop? What was special about Wolf 359? AFAIK, it doesn't lie in the direction of Delta quadrant, but more like "northeast" from Earth. Was Jouret IV exactly in that direction (which is usually the direction given for the Romulan Star Empire, as in the DS9 Tech Manual map)? Was Wolf 359 by an incredibel coincidence smack in the middle of the most direct route from Jouret IV to Earth?
(And PopMaze: Why would you say there was only one escape pod? We saw two others fly by as we watched the Saratoga explode. While those may not have been from the Saratoga due to the flightpaths, I'm sure the Saratoga would have launched several pods as well. Sisko probably simply stayed so long with his dead wife that he boarded the very last pod out of the Saratoga.)
Timo Saloniemi
Personally, I'm guessing that the Borg were using something like the transwarp conduits, but they accidentally missed and ended up on the other side of us. They had to turn around and go through W359 to get to Earth. Either that, or the cube that came to Earth just happened to have previously been on the opposite side from the DQ. When the Borg decided to attack, that cube was closest, so they sent it.
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Jackson: "Basically, he was the original Satan."
O'Neill: "Well, isn't that special?"
-Stargate SG-1: "Serpent's Song"
------------------
"You are stupid and evil and do not know you are stupid and evil."
--
Gene Ray, Cubic
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"You are stupid and evil and do not know you are stupid and evil."
--
Gene Ray, Cubic
I think I like best TSN's idea that the Collective just dialed up the most suitable Cube already in the region, instead of sending one all the way from Delta quadrant. There could easily be unexplored space "east-southeast", especially beyond Romulan space, with Cubes teeming around unbeknownst to the Feds. Who knows, perhaps there might even be a big Borg-assimilated planet there, and this planet is sending all the Cubes that have attacked Earth or scouted around the RNZ.
Even the later "Sector 001 attack" of ST:FC (which this thread is about ) need not necessarily have come from the direction of the Delta quadrant at all. All we know is that the Cube passed Typhon sector, which in turn was "relatively close" to the RNZ. It's all incredibly vague.
Timo Saloniemi
1. - The Borg wanted to avoid crossing Romulan and Klingon Space... so went around them to come at Earth from the "south"
2. System J25 was beyond the direction of Wolf 359 - and that ship was INDEED the ship they had encountered previously... so ever since its encounter with the E at J25 its been making a Bee-line to Earth.
We never found out where J25 was (cause they hadn't invented the quadrant sys yet) we only know that it took a damn long time to get back to Federation space...
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"Who wouldn't be the one you love
Who wouldn't stand inside your love." - Stand Inside Your Love, The Smashing Pumpkins
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-At least I can get it up without biomechanical pumps.
-Try falling into a pit of lava, Moffy. Then see how horny you feel.
In any case, J-25 cannot be in Delta. It was mere 7,000 ly away from the Federation, and the nearest point of Delta (namely, the galactic center) is 24,000 ly away from Earth. Are we really to believe that the Federation extends as much as 14,000 ly from Earth towards the Delta quadrant? Even the Encyclopedia doesn't make such an outrageous claim. J-25 can easily be in Beta, though.
* * * *
If the Cube met by the E-D at J-25 really was the same that hit Earth in "BoBW", then there's an oddity. Starfleet was surprised by how the attack came earlier than thought (they were obviously thinking that the Cube in "Q Who?" was the nearest to Earth), yet it was obvious that the Cube that performed the attack was not faster than the E-D at all. To the contrary, Riker caught up with it rather easily. If the Cube had a better drive for long-distance travel, why didn't it use that drive on the final leg of its journey?
Earlier, we could speculate that the long-distance drive wouldn't work at short distances. But now we know that transwarp conduits can be erected anywhere, and there is no need to e.g. establish them at both ends before use.
So now there are two choices. Either the Borg at that time did not have transwarp (at least not aboard that specific Cube), or they for some reason volunteered not to use it. The latter seems like the less implausible explanation of the two - but why, oh why would the Borg volunteer that way?
Timo Saloniemi
Maybe this applies for borg travel over big big distances... like how you can't do warp in a solarsystem... (high warp I assume) then maybe to cross vast distances the borg use a 'faster' speed... BUT - it only works in sparsely populated regions of space - with few stellar occurances - a prime case for this would be the 'voids' between arms... ok there might be a few stars - but nothing like in the arms... so once the borg cube reached more stellar dense areas - they can't do the 'super speed' - maybe this is something that stops them from attacking the federation en masse - they have to pass through a few ARMS where they are restricted to speeds like Federation starships. once they get to the 'voids' they can go as fast as they want - but once they get back to the arms - its back down to the ole warp speed - sorta like galactic speed bumps. So from J25 they probably had to cross only one void part - and boom they could have ended up at Jouret - on the edges of Fed space - which also could be restricted by one of these sparse star areas...
I don't know if this is the same was the thing from 'night' in Voyager - since you'd be able to see stars - they'd just be further away - the Voyager thing from night look like swirling light absorbing gas - like a pitch black nebula...
They didn't SPECIFICALLY say in 'night' that it was the 'void' between the galactic arms.
Andrew
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"Who wouldn't be the one you love
Who wouldn't stand inside your love." - Stand Inside Your Love, The Smashing Pumpkins
And if their super-duper fast engine only worked in huge voids, it might concievably be faster to go AROUND the galaxy than through it.
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You are wise, witty, and wonderful, but you spend far too much time reading this sort of trash.