------------------
"Si vis pacem, para bellum." (If you want peace, prepare for war)
- Vegetius
Prakesh's Star Trek Site
[This message has been edited by Prakesh (edited March 05, 2000).]
That will probably be 2032.
-Seven downloaded over 60 teraquad of information from the Ares, on a single tricorder!
Ouch, that much??!
------------------
The Miranda Class model is not a kitbash, it is a bashkit.
(-=\V/=-)
[This message has been edited by 95munrocc (edited March 05, 2000).]
------------------
"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
------------------
"Si vis pacem, para bellum." (If you want peace, prepare for war)
- Vegetius
Prakesh's Star Trek Site
I take that back. That'd just take two or three thousand credit-card sized devices NOW. You could fit that in a ship that size, easily.
Any guesses as to what LIDAR stands for?
------------------
You are wise, witty, and wonderful, but you spend far too much time reading this sort of trash.
------------------
690 consecutive rejections by women since January 1993.
LIDAR is currently used for a variety of devices, from simple rangefinders (like the one the shuttle used for docking with Mir) to high-resolution imaging devices that can spot power lines for low-flying helicopters. Sounds like a plausible piece of technobabble for the Ares ship. I'm less convinced about the ion engines - real-world ones would be low-thrust, high-endurance devices and unlikely to allow a rescue mission from Earth in a mere week.
..And also unlikely to justify the "Space Seed" idea that advances in propulsion at this rough era had made cryosleep unnecessary. Never mind what Earth was doing with cryosleep in the 2030s, it apparently either hadn't made the significant propulsion upgrade yet (if the ion engines are like the things we think they would be) or were indeed using super-duper engines (in which case calling them ion engines is bad technobabble - a nonsense word like "phion engine" would be better).
Timo Saloniemi
------------------
"You are stupid and evil and do not know you are stupid and evil."
--
Gene Ray, Cubic
Anyway... Why would "Future's End" have any bearing on "One Small Step"? They aren't in that timeline. The timeline of OSS would be the normal Trek one, which was restored at the end of FE. As far as anything but FE is concerned, Henry Starling was never anything more than a hippie, who might have ended up doing some computer work later on. But the whole Chronowerx thing never happened (anymore), since the timeline was restored. The only thing that stayed around was the Holodoc's mobile emitter, since the Voyager wasn't restored to its original condition along w/ the timeline.
------------------
Homer: "I can see what's happening. They did it to Jesus, and now they're doing it to me."
Marge: "Are you comparing yourself to our lord?!"
Homer: "Well, in bowling ability..."
-The Simpsons
------------------
"My Name is Elmer Fudd, Millionaire. I own a Mansion and a Yacht."
Psychiatrist: "Again."
------------------
"Si vis pacem, para bellum." (If you want peace, prepare for war)
- Vegetius
Prakesh's Star Trek Site
Except, since where in Voyager, Janeway conveniently avoids the paradox in the end by blasting Starling, making our predestination paradox an almost-predestination one.
Makes sense? No? Don't worry, let's explain it the old-fashioned Voyager way by all repeating : "It gives me a headache" or "It's too complicated for you to understand".
------------------
-If you took that broomstick out of your tail-pipe once in a while, you might have some FUN for a change!
*Rattrap - Beast Wars*
-Let the Fates land where they may!
*Megatron - Beast Machines*
------------------
Homer: "I can see what's happening. They did it to Jesus, and now they're doing it to me."
Marge: "Are you comparing yourself to our lord?!"
Homer: "Well, in bowling ability..."
-The Simpsons
Once Janeway blew up the Aeon, there was no Temporal Explosion and Braxton never got in a fit of rage to destroy Voyager.
I can't speak for the writers, but I see it like this:
When Voyager encounters the Aeon, there has been an explosion in the 20th century caused by Braxton. That means it's already part of normal history. The only difference in the end is that 29th century Earth will survive.
Also, at no point did Janeway talk about restoring the timeline, has if she had acknowledged the fact Starling was part of her history.
However, the catch is, by blowing the Aeon (instead of letting it go, which caused the big boom), Voyager slightly changed its own past. So at the end of the episode, Voyager would normally BE in an alternate timeline. However, I assume here that any change in the past drastically changes the future (the chaos theory). Still following?
But we all know that the writers don't see it like this. Remember "Trials and Tribble-lations" where Sisko and the others interfered, changing the original timeline without any problem. If we hadn't seen that they weren't there before (in "The trouble with Tribbles") it would have a predestination paradox. As for now, I just don't know anymore...
On a side note, I would like to reiterate my hatred of the Federation Temporal Police, the temporal "Reintegration", the ever-self-contradicting paradoxes and the fact that Time Travel is that easy. If I were to have my way, I'd have about 3 or 4 time travel stories in the whole series, and good ones like "Yesterday's Enterprise", "Future's End" (Yes, I did like it, unlike the sequel "Relativity"), "Year of Hell" and the one with the Polaric Ion Explosion.
You'll notice that even though in some of those instances there are unresolved paradoxes, the story is generally good enough to ignore thoses issues. Which isn't the case in "Relativity" in my opinion.
Oh slag, I gotta learn to write shorter posts...
------------------
-If you took that broomstick out of your tail-pipe once in a while, you might have some FUN for a change!
*Rattrap - Beast Wars*
-Let the Fates land where they may!
*Megatron - Beast Machines*
I mean, we see 400 years into the future. Therefore, any threat to the Federation between now and then is kindof anti-climactic. We know they will survive in some way, shape or form. There are SO many continuity errors (In "The Visitor" DS9, Dax said they had done away with 2-D consoles by the early 25th century just to name one). The plot line is simply set way too far in the future and Time Travel seems way too easy (although I will still argue that the Relativity is probably a semi-unique ship and that time travel is still not the order of the day for all Fleet ships. After all, according to the ded plaque, there have been 8 Relativities...). This story line has turned time travel into a silly plot contrivance, unlike quality temporal eps like "Yesterday's Enterprise" TNG.
------------------
"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
------------------
"You are stupid and evil and do not know you are stupid and evil."
--
Gene Ray, Cubic
I prefer my time travel subtle, sparse and with a touch of tragedy .
By the way, maybe we should start a thread with this. Who here thinks the timeline was restored at the end of "Future's End" and why? Same challenge to those who think it was not.
------------------
-If you took that broomstick out of your tail-pipe once in a while, you might have some FUN for a change!
*Rattrap - Beast Wars*
-Let the Fates land where they may!
*Megatron - Beast Machines*