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Posted by pIn'a' Sov (Member # 293) on :
 
Well, Mojo, of course we start this wishlist in it�s own thread. To start it of I�ll quote Timo and Shik:

Timo:

quote:
A scene from Wolf 359 could with full justification be reproduced by giving us a fuzzy screencap from a videotape, and then slapping graphics over it that would specify this as a "gun camera shot", or something taken by a recording drone amidst the battle's heavy EM interference and subspace shockwaves and whatnot.

Similarly, a key live-action event could be presented as a snapshot taken by an away team's tricorder-wielding Ensign Expendable, just when he was hit by that disruptor beam. Or then he had to take it covertly through some vegetation, from a distance. Surely the reduced quality of the image could be forgiven.

Here's a possibility that should not be overlooked when making use of all that accumulated wealth of Trek visual records.


Shik:

quote:
:::nods in agreement::: That's absolutely right, Timo. In fact, a lot of times these items come from the strangest sources. Imagine if you will a shot of a scorched, somewhat shredded, & ice-crystalized section of photo of Ben & Jennifer Sisko at Gilgo Beach; the caption in true NG style reads: "'Some times the hardest part of doing this,' says salvage worker Thon Lorit, 'is finding the small things. It affects everyone in ways you just can't describe.' A full Betazoid, Thon says that he sometimes is overwhelmed by the raw emotions of the rest of the work crew when they find a fragment of a person's life floating among the wreckage. Here, at left, a happy moment captured forever shows the scars of horror."

 
Posted by AndrewR (Member # 44) on :
 
Shik's first message:

quote:
Mojo: I was planning to email this to you before posting it here in an effort to promote
the idea first, but...yeah. No matter.

You've discussed your plans an concepts for "Unseen Frontier" here many times.
Throughout it all, you've kept mentioning a variant or the same phrase: "The events we
know as seen through something like National Geographic." This line is what has really
stuck with me.

Like most of the people here I'm sure, I've grown up reading NG all my life. I don't really
look at it that often nowadays due to fiduciary concerns, but when I do, the images are
always what grab me, even if they concern an article I'm not particularly interested in.
I've had the good fortune to meet and talk lengthily with many NG photographers, both
staff and freelance, and so the stories they have to tell are stuck in my mind as well.

One of the reasons NG is held in such high regard is because it excels at its primary goal:
to bring understanding of the world around us home to the average person. Whether it be
through funding expeditions to the Weddell Sea and the Kalahari or simply sending a field
reporter to live in Brussels or Ville De Qu�bec for three months, the experiences and
stories of other places are brought to us in a short, hardhitting and striking form. Many
of us on this forum are naval history fans; who among us can forget the late 1985 issue
of NG in which Bob Ballard published his first mosaic images of Titanic? I was ten years
old and they still take my breath away. I remember leafing through old issues with
articles about the circumnavigation and later polar voyage of the Nautilus. I remember
seeing the shots of Robert Falcon Scott's final fateful encampment in Antarctica. I've
seen underwater shots of black smokers and aerial images of a barren glacier with three
small dots on it--a Norwegian scaling team.

These are the same things that should be captured in "Unseen Frontier," the same
breathtaking feel. Some of this can come from ships, yes, but let the word "unseen" by
the guide. We've seen Wolf 359; what about the aftermath, the cleanup effort? Was
there one, or is it now like the Arizona memorial? The comings and goings of a busy
spaceport; all DS9 has shown us is a few floating vessels--nothing like a real harbor. Are
there festivities for Federation Day like Independence Day? Did they have something like
OpSail on the Federation's 200th birthday in 2361?

But the Trek galaxy--like the real world--is more than just starships. There's people.
Legends. Heroes. Cultures. So many unknowns. Celebrations after the end of a war,
whether it be the Dominion War, Cardassian Wars, Romulan Wars. The memorial service
for James T. Kirk in late 2293. Someone suggested the signing of the First Khitomer
Accords. There's interstellar phenomena, natural wonders of black holes and pulsars and
nebulae. These are all things that the average Federation citizen wouldn't know about.
Even other worlds in and out of the Federation: Betazed, Andor, Tellar. Trill's oceans
were said to be purple in a DS9 episode; who knows from purple water?

"Omnipotent observation" is fine for calendars; there it's not expected. For "Unseen
Frontier," as a reader, I'd like it to be more first-person. I'd like to feel that there was a
person there who saw this perfect image and captured it so that others may share and
revel in its power, its beauty, its sense of amazement. That sense of humanity is what
would set this project apart from all others. (Indeed, an idea has just hit me on a way to
help accomplish that feel. Often in NG itself and most definitely in its compilation tomes,
there are comments from photographers and staff on the power of the imagery--what
they felt when they saw the sight, how they decided to choose that particular one, how
that perfect combination just happened to come together at the right moment.
Comments like that--not just from humans, but others--would definitely help with the
touch.)

I encourage you to take all of the above to heart. Following this train of thought, this
overall feeling and setting will almost guarantee that the book will reach beyond the
hardcore audience that the more recent offerings have pandered to. I know for a fact
that this is something many friends would be overawed at and by, not so much because
it's Trek, but because of what it could BE. They are not the kind of people to purcashe
technical manuals and don't care if a bird-of-prey has been rescaled or not. They are the
"casual fans," the one who enjoy the stories and imagery, the ones who've been left in
the lurch. This is a chance to reconcile the two ends of the markets in a most spectacular
way.

I, like others here have in the past, formally offer my help, advice, and knowledge on
this project, and I would consider it a great honor to take part in such an endeavor from
such an early stage. But let us lay the groundwork for reason and rationality here, at the
beginning, so that later on we can progress smoothly.


[ November 09, 2001: Message edited by: AndrewR ]


 
Posted by The359 (Member # 37) on :
 
Well, since we've already seen Utopia Planitia (a few times now), how about some nice shots of the San Francisco Yards? It'd give you guys a good chance to show off a CGI Earth.

And now that I think about it, how about setting it during the Movie-era, with Constitutions and Mirandas and Oberths and Excelsiors?

[ November 09, 2001: Message edited by: The359 ]


 
Posted by Reverend (Member # 335) on :
 
How about the building of Spacedock 1?
It would be cool to see such a large station half completed, with the inner tower exposed and workbees flying alover the place.

It would make a good tie in to TMP, where we see an orbital office complex for the yard, nearing completion. You could say that the entire facility was upgraded in the 2270s, and that the big mushroom spacedock was the first of its kind.


It would also be interesting to see the moon as it is in the 23 or 24th century as described in ST:FC

[ November 09, 2001: Message edited by: Reverend ]


 
Posted by Mark Nguyen (Member # 469) on :
 
Definitely, we would like to see the everyday scenes of life on familiar Alpha Quadrant worlds. Earth's San Fransisco old quarter (or New Orleans, for that mater), Romulus, Quo'nos... Specific events could be covered too from the official photo archives, including incidents when Earth was under various crises, like when the whale probe was in orbit, when the Borg were attacking, or when the planet was under martial law in "Paradise Lost".

Mark
 


Posted by David Templar (Member # 580) on :
 
How about a view from an Spacedock orbiting Earth or from Starfleet Headquarters itself, as the Breen assualt fleet opened fire on Earth? As the Golden Gate bridge crumbled into ruins?

I always imagined a scene with a 5-ish year old child watching from his home in one of the orbital habitats as the Breens attacked Earth, with a Defiant swooping gracefully close past his field of view to engage the attackers. The reflection of the little boy's face on the window would be "I'm gonna join Starfleet when I grow up".

Hell of a Starfleet Academy recruiting poster.

Something involving Starfleet infantry would be nice, too. Maybe something Vietnam or Iwo Jima like, with Marines disembarking from a combat hopper. Of course, that would require CG people.

[ November 09, 2001: Message edited by: David Templar ]


 
Posted by Malnurtured Snay (Member # 411) on :
 
Not really.

Starfleet may take on the role of the military, but I imagine they'd rather play up the whole "Space, the final frontier ..." aspect. You know ... exploration.
 


Posted by Reverend (Member # 335) on :
 
quote:
with Marines disembarking from a combat hopper. Of course, that would require CG people

First you'd need a design and the one I came up with appears to be just a little too tricky for those 3-D folks...
 


Posted by David Templar (Member # 580) on :
 
But exploration is such a "seen" frontier, this is suppose to be the hidden, mysterious, neglicted unseen frontier.
 
Posted by Malnurtured Snay (Member # 411) on :
 
Uh ... look, Dave, I don't think Starfleet's going to push the military side of what they do. Even in the 24th Century, there's lot of places to explore ...
 
Posted by Shik (Member # 343) on :
 

[ November 09, 2001: Message edited by: Shik ]


 
Posted by The_Tom (Member # 38) on :
 
*exhales slowly*

On a more constructive note:

Mojo, how about solving the mystery of how the Phoenix returned to Earth after Cochrane's flight?

Or, on a similar note, a shot of the Smithsonian in the 24th century (with the Phoenix and perhaps some other space goodies) in it, or alternately the mentioned-but-unseen "Fleet Museum"?

[ November 09, 2001: Message edited by: The_Tom ]


 
Posted by J (Member # 608) on :
 
*drools*
 
Posted by Reverend (Member # 335) on :
 
quote:
B]Or, on a similar note, a shot of the Smithsonian in the 24th century (with the Phoenix and perhaps some other space goodies) in it, or alternately the mentioned-but-unseen "Fleet Museum"?[/B]

Now that is an excelent idea, perhaps the fleet museum is the orbital wing of smithsonian, showing exibits that are too large to be displayed on the surface.
Aside from that, a vacume is a great perserver.

It would be great to see the Phoenix side by side with other small spacecraft like say...the unused luna lander aquarius, Friendship 2 (if there is a number 1 then logically there is a second one too), A section of Aries III or V, perhaps a surviving module of the ISS, the NCC-1701's Gallileo shuttlecraft (did that one survive? I forget). There are alot of really interesting possiblities with that one and a great potential for interesting backstories
"this golden plate belonged tothe early earth space probe, pionner 11...it was discovered onboard a deralict pakled vessle near the klingon border, they had welded it to the hull to plug a breach.."
 


Posted by Mark Nguyen (Member # 469) on :
 
So, let's take an informal poll here: What planets would we the fans like to see represented in this book? Earth is a given. But where else?

Mark
 


Posted by Reverend (Member # 335) on :
 
Andor?

Tellar?

Quo'nos (we never did see much of it)

Alpha Centauri

Memory Alpha (in the 24th century)

Narandra III? (A still taken from the surface by a klingon civilian as the battle wages above the clouds...just as the E-C' warpcore breached, or a STIIIish shot with the hull burning up)

[ November 09, 2001: Message edited by: Reverend ]

[ November 09, 2001: Message edited by: Reverend ]


 
Posted by Akula (Member # 319) on :
 
One thing that would be cool,
Since your doing the Wolf359 scenes from scratch you could add in designs for the Apollo and Rigel,or perhaps there could be a massive map of the battle on one page, with ships that perticipated with a side view of each as a bottom border.
Also, Mars and the Moon in the 24th century.
And since it's the unseen universe perhaps it's time to see some ships that were never seen in star trek but mentioned.
 
Posted by Masao (Member # 232) on :
 
Some TOS ship things I'd like to see:
Fesarius (Combomite Maneuver)
Remants of Earth Outpost 4 after Romulan attack
Enterprise as viewed from the F-104 (Tomorrow is Yesterday)
Botany Bay
Nomad in space, before it collided with the alien probe (The Changeling)
Space Station K7 (Tribbles)
Space Amoeba (immunity Sydrome)
USS Hood, Lexingon, Potempkin, Excalibur flying in formation (Ultimate Computer)
Tholian Web

Are you planning to do scences from the animated series? Or does Paramount want to ignore this series some more? Also, are you going to design ships that have been mentioned but not seen? Can you use ships in other liscenced works, such as those by Franz Joseph?

On a more personal note , if you need some pre-TOS ship designs, I have a mess of them that you could use: http://www.ex-astris-scientia.org/sfmuseum/index.htm
 


Posted by pIn'a' Sov (Member # 293) on :
 
I for one would like to see pictures of starships that we�ve only seen in diagrams or models on the show, like the saladin/hermes/ptolemy in the movies, or ships like the DY-500, or from "Conspiracy", or the daedalus-model from DS9, or...

Well, you get the picture, the rare starships almost never seen before
 


Posted by Harry (Member # 265) on :
 
::Engage Fanboy Mode::

I'd like to see...

Ships/stations/places from TOS and perhaps even TAS. What about a 24th century articles on the Guardian of Forever, the cloudcities of Ardana. Perhaps a view of some DY-100s in orbit of Earth, or even docked to the ISS. You could design your own Earth-Saturn probe, from "Tomorrow is Yesterday".
Or what about a blurry shot of the S.S. Valiant's last moments near the galactic barrier. A visualisation of a Denevan parasite infection on one of the other planets mentioned in "Operation: Annihilate!", or a humankinds first steps on Mars and the foundation of the Martian Colonies.
Daedalus ships being constructed, or a Daedalus on a mission.
Another nice touch would be a CGI model of the original 1701, as seen in the pilots. Bring back the spikes, the unlit ramscoops, the large bridge dome and the black strips! Maybe for a visualisation of the launch of the 1701 in 2245?
You know what also would be cool? Some shots of the aquashuttle or the scouter gig from "The Ambergris Element" (TAS).
I would appreciate some 'screentime' for the very much unseen aliens from the movies, like the Saurians or the Betelgeusians.
I agree with Masao (or who said it?) that the ships from the Star Fleet TM are a nice addition.
And that idea of picturing a busy starbase appeals to me as well. All kinds of unseen freightery looking ships, workbees, travel pods, runabouts, shuttles and the occasional major Starfleet ship all floating around one of those large 'mushrooms'. Just imagine...

::Wakes up from fanboy mode::

Whatever you choose to do, this book definately has the potential for being one of the coolest books on Trek .
 


Posted by First of Two (Member # 16) on :
 
I think it's becoming clear that this should be one of those bigass 'coffee table' books... you know, the kind people use for tables when they're writing in their laps, the kind that weigh more than a good-sized dog...
 
Posted by Veers (Member # 661) on :
 
It could have a section on the "dark events" of Federation history:
The Romluan War
Station Salem One
Antwerp Bombing
Wolf 359
Breen Attack
Those three months between "Call to Arms" and "A time to Stand"
Diagrams and pictures would be appreciated.
 
Posted by AndrewR (Member # 44) on :
 
Some of these suggestions sound AWESOME!

As for planets... I'd have to say

Trill
Betazed
and perhaps even the raising of Cardassia Prime or a view out those Windows that Vedek Winn and Minister Jaro Esa were infront of during "The Circle". Blue skies and those wierd-ass monastary buildings.

Elaysia - that planet that Ensign Melora Pazlar was from - where they have low gravity would be awesome too.

The Borg assimilating the sex planet from "Justice" TNG season 1! LOL! I think that's were the Borg Queen came from ;o)

The Jarada!! (or maybe just a ship?)
 


Posted by Harry (Member # 265) on :
 
Does anyone remember that Phase II sketch of a starbase inside an asteroid? Would be very " ".
 
Posted by Sol System (Member # 30) on :
 
Well, since we're submitting ideas, here's mine.

The interior of the largest temple on Bajor. They always seemed vaguely Catholic in organization, so I'm wagering they've got their version of St. Peter's there somewhere. Set the camera down in the, uh, Bajoran equivalant of pews, and look up. Religious iconography always makes for fun photographs. For drama's sake, half the cathedral could be covered in scaffolding, with a caption describing how it was nearly destroyed during the Occupation, and how rebuilding it was the first task Bajor undertook once the Cardassian's withdrew.
 


Posted by Masao (Member # 232) on :
 
Asteroid starbase and very cool SFHQ: http://www.ralphmcquarrie.com/movies/startrk/index.html
 
Posted by Reverend (Member # 335) on :
 
For some reason I was under the impression that the Asteroid base seen in "The Art of Star Trek" was supposed to be a First Federation Base (remmember Balok?)
Does anyone have any info on the Phase II scripts that were never used? its either that or I'm just plain old crazy.
 
Posted by Harry (Member # 265) on :
 
Another little idea popped up in my head. What if, in the starship scenes, you play around a bit with the threedimensional positioning of ships.
This is what sparked my imagination: Bridge Commander screenshot
 
Posted by Mojo (Member # 536) on :
 
I'm really happy to see so many of your thoughts and ideas for this book. Many of them are already in the works, although including all of them would be impossible!

Of course, I can't comment on exactly what will and will not be in the final publication, but I'm aiming to make it as exciting as possible.

Also, keep in mind that 'Unseen Frontier' mostly refers to imagery we haven't seen before on the show, not necessarily *events* we haven't seen.

Some chapters will be expansions on what was aired, some will be all-new.

The dimensions of the book are the same as the Star Trek ACTION book released a few years ago, something like 9.5 X 10.5.
 


Posted by Shik (Member # 343) on :
 
Some ideas:

--The Gratitude Festival & the Ha'mara Festival as they take place on Bajor.

--a baseball game on Cestus III between the Pike City Pioneers &....I dunno, the Niners? Or as many that are left. Remmember, Kasidy's brother lives there.

--various alien worlds including Bynaus (home of the Bynars), Pacifica (a pelagic planet perhaps?), & the aforementioned Trill.
 


Posted by Mark Nguyen (Member # 469) on :
 
Ladies & Gents, I do believe we need an official "Mojo Day" on the Flare forums.

Mark
 


Posted by The359 (Member # 37) on :
 
"Mojo Day"?

Some newbies might get confused and thing we're having an orgy...
 


Posted by MinutiaeMan (Member # 444) on :
 
I must say, Mojo, that you've sold this book to me already!
 
Posted by OnToMars (Member # 621) on :
 
Mojo:
::summons up best little kid voice::

Please sir, may we see some more Mars?

A Martian city? A Federation R&D facility on the surface? Can we please reconcile the Mars we've seen with a terraformed or partially terraformed Mars? I don't recall what part of the surface was shown in 'Relativity', but we could reconcile it as if it were the Tharsis region, which is high enough in elevation that it would be a sort of preserve.

To summarize what I would like to see: Mars Mars Mars Mars Mars!!! But NOT Utopia Planitia!
 


Posted by Veers (Member # 661) on :
 
Let me guess: your favorite movies are, as follows:

Total Recall
Mission to Mars
Red Planet
Ghosts of Mars

Am I forgetting any?
 


Posted by The359 (Member # 37) on :
 
The Bradbury Chronicles
 
Posted by AndrewR (Member # 44) on :
 
The Kim Stanely Robinson Mars Trilogy... but I digress...

I mentioned before about seeing different parts of ships from different angles, i.e. peering out a large window and seeing another part of the ship or even some of those windows on DS9, you notice that we NEVER saw any of the Docking rings or pylons outside anyones quarters on the habitat ring!?!

Also, speaking of different things we haven't seen on ships... the CETATION SECTIONS on the E-D... the WHALES and the DOLPHINS are active crew members... they aid in navigation... I'd love to see the big tanks... and the've gotta have windows. I wonder if they're allowed to use the holodeck?

The arboretum on the E-D - those big blue windows or the flight deck on either the E-E or the Voyager!

Wasn't there also a Venus station mentioned!?! Or some more of Starbase 12 seen in "The Die Is Cast" and "Court Martial"
 


Posted by Malnurtured Snay (Member # 411) on :
 
quote:
WHALES and the DOLPHINS are active crew members... they aid in navigation...

They do? Uh ... this isn't seaQuest, DSV.

And yes, I noticed that about the DS9 windows, too. Maybe the living quarters on the top and bottom most levels of the habitat look "over" the docking ring? And then, of course, the ones we've seen (in addition to being on the top or bottom levels) also don't face a pylon, or the Core.
 


Posted by TSN (Member # 31) on :
 
"Uh ... this isn't seaQuest, DSV."

Read the TNGTM. And refer to the episode where someone (Geordi or Riker) makes some comment to the effect of "You gotta see the whales..." (or was it the dolphins?).
 


Posted by Malnurtured Snay (Member # 411) on :
 
Yes, yes, I'm not surprised they're on-board the Enterprise, just that they help in navigation.

"Gee, I wanna be a navigator!" "No, sorry, we got more then enough blue whales enlisting this semester."
 


Posted by AndrewR (Member # 44) on :
 
LOL! I wanna see Chekov appear in the 24th century...

"Vhere is your Nawigator!?!"
"Ahhh well we use whales for that now"
"uh"


 


Posted by PsyLiam (Member # 73) on :
 
That's why he switched to tactical. Although he might have switched back (is anyone sure what Chekov's job is by TUC?)
 
Posted by Shik (Member # 343) on :
 
Ship's counselor.

"I feel like shit, Commander..."
"Let me TELL you about feeling like shit, OK? I've had an EEL in my ear, been fried by Nomad, had my chick killed by a planet-running computer, had ANOTHER chick become a space hippie, been arrested by 20th-century American military authorities, fallen off the flight deck of an aircraft carrier, almost operated on AND KILLED by medics in that same time period, been scared half to death by corpses...but then, that kept me from getting old....so don't tell ME about feeling like shit!"
:::blinks::: "You're a Russian Jew, aren't you."
 


Posted by CaptainMike (Member # 709) on :
 
1) didnt the TNG TM say the whales were Lieutenant Commanders?

2) Chekov never had his 'chick' killed by a planet running computer.

3) Scotty was fried by Nomad, not Chekov. However, Chekov got lightly toasted by V'Ger, but not fried.
 


Posted by OnToMars (Member # 621) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Veers:
Let me guess: your favorite movies are, as follows:

Total Recall
Mission to Mars
Red Planet
Ghosts of Mars

Am I forgetting any?


Total Recall was OK, though Mars was much too red. Mission to Mars sucked balls. I haven't worked up enough of a stomach to sit through Red Planet without puking yet. I refuse to acknowledge Gosts of Mars even exists...

And the Bradbury Chronicles were cool except for the first part where they tried to explain why Viking didn't find a Martian city ("If it had looked behind it..." )

And the Mars Trilogy rocks. Can't wait for James Cameron to put that sucker on film...

[ November 19, 2001: Message edited by: OnToMars ]


 
Posted by Shik (Member # 343) on :
 
YOU!!.....need to stop your chronic marsturbation & cease your infernal incessant jizzing all over the walls, lest I be inclined to have you lick it all up.

As for the other one: Chick killed, sterilized, raped by a computer & knocked up ala Julie Christie in "Demon Seed"...whatever. On a similar note: Nomad, V'Ger, your mom...it's all the same.
 


Posted by OnToMars (Member # 621) on :
 
quote:
YOU!!.....need to stop your chronic marsturbation & cease your infernal incessant jizzing all over the walls, lest I be inclined to have you lick it all up.

I don't think I've ever heard Shakespeare quoted more eloquently before in my life...
 


Posted by CaptainMike (Member # 709) on :
 
I have no idea what any of this means
 
Posted by TSN (Member # 31) on :
 
I'm not sure the people saying it do, either.
 
Posted by PsyLiam (Member # 73) on :
 
*cough*
 
Posted by The359 (Member # 37) on :
 
Stop bending over and coughing, Liam...we don't want to do that...
 
Posted by Ryan McReynolds (Member # 28) on :
 
You mean you're not supposed to bend over when the doctor grabs your balls? Shit.
 
Posted by PsyLiam (Member # 73) on :
 
This sillyness is getting silly now.
 
Posted by The359 (Member # 37) on :
 

 
Posted by Sol System (Member # 30) on :
 
The Bradbury Chronicles?
 
Posted by PsyLiam (Member # 73) on :
 
Actually, no. It's turning into an episode of Brak Presents The Brak Show Staring Brak.
 
Posted by The359 (Member # 37) on :
 
Yes, The Bradbury Chronicals. Written by Ray Bradbury. About aliens on Mars. There was a mini-series, shows every so often on the Sci-Fi Channel.
 
Posted by Masao (Member # 232) on :
 
You must mean "The Martian Chronicles" written by Bradbury. There was also a show called "The Ray Bradbury Theatre."
 
Posted by The359 (Member # 37) on :
 
Oh yeah, that...
 
Posted by AndrewR (Member # 44) on :
 
James Cameron... Mars Trilogy... KIM STANLEY ROBINSON'S MARS TRILOGY!?! WOW! That'll be AMAZING!

Who would they get to play everyone though? And would they have OLDER actors to play youthful but +150 year-olds!?!

John, Frank, Maya, Nadia, Ann, Peter, Nirgal, Jackie, Hiroko!?!?!?!
 


Posted by TSN (Member # 31) on :
 
John, Paul, George, Ringo?!
 
Posted by Shik (Member # 343) on :
 
ANYway....

I think someone mentioned the Smithsonian Orbital Annex earlier...what of other "institutes o' importance?" The Vulcan Science Academy, the Daystrom Institute, etc.

Is there a "Federation Red Cross?" Do they do relief work on Cardassia? What about a Peace Corps?

What do concerts look like in the 22nd, 23rd, & 24th centuries? Is there still places like Tanglewood, or are there neat-azz rock concerts like Sharon Apple's show in "Macross Plus?" Are missile fields on the "Register of Historic Earth Places?"
 


Posted by OnToMars (Member # 621) on :
 
Dunno how he's gonna do it, but he bought the rights to do so. But right now he's working on (or was) an IMAX movie following the first mission to Mars.

Cool shit.

Oooh, another idea, Mojo: the landing of the first Martian colony(ies); featuring everybody's favorite multigenerational famous family; the Picards.
 


Posted by David Templar (Member # 580) on :
 
If someone can do marine animals, I would like to see the aquarium/oceanography department shown in the Ent-D blueprints.
 
Posted by Masao (Member # 232) on :
 
For institutes, don't forget the first, The American Continent Institute!
 
Posted by pIn'a' Sov (Member # 293) on :
 
Mojo, tell me, do you ever read your messages?

[ November 22, 2001: Message edited by: pIn'a' Sov ]


 
Posted by The_Tom (Member # 38) on :
 
Oh, he's probably hard at work rendering hordes of Andorian battlecruisers. Give the man some slack...
 
Posted by AndrewR (Member # 44) on :
 
I think he's concentrating on the Morg ship from "Spock's Brain" ;o)
 
Posted by CaptainMike (Member # 709) on :
 
quote:
For institutes, don't forget the first, The American Continent Institute!

of course, after years of getting old on Talos, Dr. Haskins should have called it the American Incontinent Institute

BA-DOOM-BOOM!
chhhhhhh!
 


Posted by Mojo (Member # 536) on :
 
Eventually I get back here to read the mail :-)

Actually, I've been VERY hard at work finishing up the 2003 Ships of the Line calendar. I may end up eating these words (you lot are a tough bunch to please) but I do believe it is the best one by far. The images are turning out just spectacularly and I think the concept is working better than planned.

Anyone who had a beef with the 'artistic' concept of the 2002 edition will be pleased to know that we're back to nice, horizontal shots of full-screen ships again.

However, I will tease you all and say there's not a SINGLE shot of a ship in space :-)


Mojo
 


Posted by Mojo (Member # 536) on :
 
A CALL TO ARMS! MOJO NEEDS *YOU*

Ok, folks, I need your help doing research for the UNSEEN FRONTIER book. I'm currently hard at work on the outline, and YOU can have an impact on it! Have your voice heard and your wishes granted!

The toughest chapter for me to outline is THE DOMINION WAR. Partly because it is such a complex beast, but mostly because - and don't hate me for this - I haven't seen every DS9 episode a dozen times.

This weekend I am going to sit down with a pile of DS9 tapes and a LOT of cheese doodles and figure out just what the hell to do with this chapter.

How can you help, I hear y'all murmuring?

Well, I'd love for each and every one of you to post what YOU think the most important dozen-or-so episodes are in the Dominion War saga. The episodes that tell the meat of the story and feature the all-important ACTION that we want to see in this book!

Also, feel free to list major events (either seen on the show or NOT seen) that you'd like to see covered in the book. Obviously I'm looking for moments that are important to the story but also visually compelling. The Breen attack on San Francisco and the big battle in 'Sacrafice of Angels' are examples.

And don't bother nitpicking each other's posts - I want your personal, individual opinions. My job is to consider all the options and choices and pick what I think works best.

So rev up your keyboards, lend a hand and help make this the best Trek book ever.


Mojo
 


Posted by pIn'a' Sov (Member # 293) on :
 
Not actually in keeping what you asked for Mojo but I just have to say this. I would like to see Cyrano Jones ship the Spacematic from "Trials and Tribbleations", it�s such a fun ship

Btw, Mojo, thanks for checking your messages I actually had your emailadress, but that didn�t work, wierd, it worked when I sent you that pic of the klingon ship from "All good things.." Btw, I have better caps now...
 


Posted by The Vorlon (Member # 52) on :
 
Some we've seen before, some we haven't...

- Death of the Defiant
- Beginning of battle in "Sacrifice of Angels"
- Arrival of the Klingons in "Sacrifice of Angels"
- Breen Attack on San Francisco
- Dominion ships last stand at Cardassia Prime
- Orbital bombardment of Cardassia Prime
- Cardassia after the bombardment
- Federation Fleet destroying Dominion Shipyard in "Call to Arms"
- The 7th Fleet getting it's ass whooped in "A Time to Stand"
- Battle of Betazed

Even the ones we DID see on TV would be nice to see in a more artistic portrayal.
 


Posted by Shik (Member # 343) on :
 
Stuff from "In The Pale Moonlight." Picking through the wreckage of Vreenak's shuttle, the signing of the treaty of alliance with the Romulans (or Proconsul Neral's "televised" speech on it?), the first Romulan attack on Dominion holdings.

During "Sacrifice Of Angels," there was a hole unseen part of the battle after Defiant shot through the ranks.

The attack on the Torros III Dominion shipyard that Sisko mentioned at the end of "Call To Arms."

The actual destruction of the Honshu by Cardassian attack fighters from "Waltz."

I'm more of a "little thing" person though. I want to see LT Vilix'pran's budlings. I want to see stuff from the Klingon Conflict of 2372-73. There's lots of little "holding action" battles that were one-line mentions from the Dominion War Those would work, too.
 


Posted by Guardian 2000 (Member # 743) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mojo:
A CALL TO ARMS! MOJO NEEDS *YOU*

Wow . . . this is the coolest thing I've ever seen. I'm the new guy asking: 'Where were these forums all my life?' :-D haha

I've got to agree with the fellow who mentioned "In the Pale Moonlight" . . . and also a great deal of "Siege of AR-558". Not only is there ground combat galore, but you also get to see the grittier, tough-as-nails "counselors be damned" side of the fleet.

G2k
 


Posted by Mark Nguyen (Member # 469) on :
 
Ooh! Ooh! I wanna play!

But a cozen episodes is almost too *few* to really encapsulate a war which is described over 52 episodes, which itself only covers the adventures of a group of twenty or so people in a war that had millions of players. Not to mention the three years of buildup to the war itself that we saw. I'd recommend looking at the Dominion War with that sort of epic scale, since there's no way the DW was completely portrayed in the show.

Anyway, were I to recommend a dozen episodes, I'd probably choose the following. The first five episodes actually occur BEFORE the war, and portray points inthe buildup to it. I've also included interesting points covered in these episodes not actually SEEN in the show, but mentioned.

Also, for a pretty review of the show and another person's opinions of the war as a whole, I recommend going to Jammer's DS9 reviews site at http://www.st-hypertext.com/ . The exhaustive reviews there may help you get a better overall view of the War. I further suggest reading the related chapters of the "Deep Space Nine Companion" book for lots of behind the scenes stuff, conceptual art, and lots of ideas.


1) "The Jem'Haddar" (Season 2 Finale) - Details the real introduction of the Dominion after a year of rumours. We hear of the destruction of New Bajor, the first Bajoran colony in the Gamma Quadrant. We do see the destruction of the Galaxy-class USS Oddysey, in a spectacular battle.

2) "The Die is Cast" (Mid 3rd Seson) - The Romulans and Cardassians get together to destroy the Founders' Homeworld, and get clobbered. This is the second part of a two-parter, which leads to a number of threads involving captured Alpha Quadrant races stuck in a POW camp in the Gamma Quadrant.

3) "Paradise Lost" (Mid 4th Season) - Earth is brought under Martial Law as paranoia over shape-shifters infiltrating the Federation hits a peak. Also the seond part of another two-parter, it deatils what Earth is sorta like in a crisis, or at least New Orleans and San Fransico anyway.

4) "The Quickening" (Late 4th Season) - Dr. Bashir tries to save a planet whose people were purposely inflicted with a terrible disease by the Dominion. Not in the War per se, but it really shows the human(oid) side of people suffering at the hands of the Dominion.

5) "Nor the Battle to the Strong" (Early 5th Season) - Jake, seeking to find out about "courage under fire", goes with Bashir to a medial ourpost under attack by Klingons. This is not a key episode, but it really shows the whole "War is Hell" stuff without showing much fighting.

6) "The Sacrifice of Angels" (Early 6th Season) - Duh.

7) "In the Pale Moonlight" (Mid 6th Season) - Sisko and Garak conspire to bring the Romulans into the War, at the expense of the typical Federation morals we love so much. This is a fairly low-brow character epsiode that is mostly "behind the scenes", but it's a key turning point in the war. We never really saw much of the Romulans fighting in the War alone, but we know they made numerous actions without the help of the Klingons or the Federation.

8) "Shadows and Symbols" (Early 7th Season) - While a soul-searching Sisko travels with his family to the Desert planet Tyree to find an orb and reopen the wormhole, Kira leads a bunch of Bajoran ships in a standoff against the superior Romulan fleet who've armed an "unarmed" hospital moon in Bajoran space. Cool stuff, especially with the standoff.

9) "The Siege of AR-558" (Mid 7th Season) - Sisko and crew defend a captured Dominion communications array, helping out the Federation garrison that's been under constant attack for five months. Some real character drama there, plus the very rarely seen Federation ground combat we've really been missing.

10) "Inter Arma Einem Silent Leges" (Mid 7th Season) - Bashir is recuited by the shady Section 31 to spy on the Romulans at a medical conference on their homeworld. Yummy cloak & dagger fun, plus a real look into the Romulan side of the war.

11) "The Changing Face of Evil" (Late 7th Season) - After the Breen allies of the Dominion lauch a sneak attack on Earth, the Federation-led Alliance returns the favour in the Chin'toka system, only to have their butts kicked by Breen distruption technology. Plenty of cool space battles are seen here, including the destruction of the Defiant. Note to Mojo: WE REALLY WANT TO SEE THE BREEN ATTACKING EARTH, AND/OR THE AFTERMATH THEREOF.

12) "That You Leave Behind" (Series Finale) - The Dominion War climaxes with a ginormous battle, followed by a standoff in Cardassian orbit while Odo goes down to end it once and for all. There's unseen action everywhere in the finale, from Cardassians fighting in the streets, to the space battles, to the Founders nuking whole Cardie cities in retaliation. Plus there's the final showdown between Dukat and Sisko on Bajor.


There you have it. Also, I'll throw in a list of cool "Original Series & Movies" moments that could be described in the book:

-The first signing of the Khitomer Accords ("Star Trek VI") - We see what Khitomer looks like close up, insdie and out of its main hall.
-The alien probe in orbit of Earth ("Star Trek IV") - Probe over earth, powerless Spacedock and Excelsior. Beautiful.
-The almost beginning of Klingon-Federation war over Organia ("Errand of Mercy" - Late 1st season TOS) - We never say a fleet of old Connies (and support ships) almost go to war against a bunch of old Klingon ships. We would love to.
-The TOS Enterprise and damaged USS Constellation vs. the planet eater ("The Doomsday Machine" - Early 2nd season TOS) - Damaged Connies vs a giant ice cream cone. What more do you need?

Thanks for letting us help out, Mojo!

Mark

[ November 27, 2001: Message edited by: Mark Nguyen ]


 
Posted by Reverend (Member # 335) on :
 
Damn, there must be a million & 1 cool things that we'd all like to see!

Personally I'd like to see a little bit of the aftermath of the war and some of the missions that were mentioned but never seen.

Relif ships arriving at Cardassia.

The transfer of starfleet hospital ships to the Romulans (Possibly Olympic-Class)

The Defiant destroying the Dominion sensor platform on the other side of the argus cluster.

The Cairo being attacked near the Neutral zone.

The bits of "Opperation Return" that we never saw..."The Magellan & The Venture are in too tight..." Images of the Venture and the Centaur (a Captain Reynolds was mentioned in the battle) breaking through the Dominion lines...

Heres an idea, you could include a little side story about the rescue or the return of the Sarajevo from the Gamma Quadrant.
If you remember this was one of the ships mentioned in "Purgatory's Shadow" as being lost in the Gamma quadrant, supposedly destroyed by the Dominion. Then in the next season we see a casualty report with "U.S.S. Sarajevo NCC-38529" written on it...
This may have been an oversite (or not) by the art department but it has the potential for a good story, sort of a "Voyager in the gamma quadrant" with the ship returning home after spending a couple of years running from Dominion forces on the other side of the galaxy...
 


Posted by Sol System (Member # 30) on :
 
D'oh!

[ November 27, 2001: Message edited by: Sol System ]


 
Posted by Hunter (Member # 611) on :
 
quote:
and don't hate me for this - I haven't seen every DS9 episode a dozen times.

Hey don't worry about it. We're all glad your doing it. (Of course the Dominion War could be it's own book. Just imagine it, lots of ship shots, big chapters on battles with those little maps with the numbers indicating what happened where. ok i;ll get back to the point)

I agree with mark some of the episodes that you should watch are from before the war

1 "The Jem'hadar"
2 "Improbable cuase/The die is Cast" two parter
3 "The Ship" Sisko and crew recover a crashed Jem'Hadar attack ship and find out what happens to Jem'hadar who fail their gods.
4 "By Infernos Light" mostly for Gul Dukhat joining the Dominion.
5 "Call to Arms" The War finally begins
6 "The Sacrfice of Angels"
7 "In the Pale Moonlight" Really good episode.
8 "Tears of the Prophets" StarFleet Stirkes back!
9 "Image in the Sand"
10 "The Siege of Ar-558"
11 "Penumbra"
12 "THe changing face of Evil"
13 "What you leave behind"
preety much all the epsiodes form penumbra to waht you leave behind would be good.

As to battles the Destruction of the shipyards from "A Call to Arms".

The destruction of the 7th fleet.

The Dominion capturing Beatzed.

The Romulan "liberation" of Benzar

The Recapturing of the Kalandra sector(The Destiny and the 7th Fleet? are preparing to attack it in afterimage then in Once More Unot the Breach, an ep you could see if you wanted to see the Klingon view of the war, in which its suggest as a meeting place

The Battle of Earth

The Cardassian Resistances attack on the Rondac III cloning facilities

The Destruucation of the Cardassian Resistance

The Battle of Carassia prime.

I'd also like to see some of the victory celebrations from across the FKR alliance along with say impounded Jem'hadar ships or interned prisoners.They've already done treaty signing other wise i'd reckomed that (Did any bod else think that the treaty celbration was to small?)
 


Posted by AndrewR (Member # 44) on :
 
OK, Mojo, I'm gonna have to sit down and think of the less shoot-em-up requests for your book...

I've of late been watching Season 1 and 2 better than season 6 and 7 in some instances...

Remember that there were some ties to the Dominion story line early on in the series...

this is just info to get discussion flowing/thoughts jumping - prollay not stuff for the book... or maybe!?!

Season 1
"Captive Pursuit" - Tosk and Hunters of Tosk, look VERY Dominion/Jem'Hadar-esque. At one time Ron Moore and/or Ira Behr were contemplating letting us see a Tosk as a Dominion pilot.

"Vortex" we see the first evidence of Odo's people in the form of a shape-shifting Key...

[we never see it again - I wonder if it returned to the link!?!]

Season 2

"Rules of Aquisition"

Quark and Pel find out about a 'power' in the Gamma Quadrant - who the Grand Nagus already has sketchy details on, called the Dominion. The Karemma are members of the Dominion.

"Sanctuary"

The Skreeans, a refugee race looking to settle on Bajor tell how their opressors were removed by the Dominion - who had attacked them (the opressors)

"The Alternate"

Again in the Gamma Quadrant the trail to Odo's race is travelled a little further with presence of a Changeling race's ruins and evidence of shape-shifting material.

"Shadowplay"

We find out that the creator of a Holographic community had come from a planet which had been taken over by the Dominion!

"The Jem'Hadar"

We finally meet the Jem'Hadar!

This was great how we got all these tid-bits along the way to "The Jem'Hadar" which totally blew me out of the water.
 


Posted by Mojo (Member # 536) on :
 
Ok guys, thanks SO much for your input on the Dominion War... I have ANOTHER question for anyone who might know the answer:

Do we know ANYTHING about the Klingons during the 150 year period between Archer and Kirk?

Has anything ever been said in the show? Does anyone know if any novels or other non-canon material have covered this?

I'm probably going to have very specific questions during the next few days as I hammer out the outline for the book. I'd love to be able to consider you guys my official 'help' button :-)


Mojo
 


Posted by Mark Nguyen (Member # 469) on :
 
Cool! We'll do our best to oblige, Mojo!

As for Klingon stuff between Archer & Kirk, there's surprisingly little stuff. McCoy once said that first contact with the Klingons led to hideously disasterous results and decades of agression - though the events of "Broken Bow" seem to counter this statement. Mind you, first contact with the Klingons may have yet to lead to this aggression.

However, if there's anything to say about trying to map out Klingon history in that era, if there's one thing to stay away from is the forehead explanation thing. I've got a sneaky suspicion that this will be something that the Enterprise producers will address..

Mark
 


Posted by Phelps (Member # 713) on :
 
Canonically, we know next to nothing about that time period, and even novels and such have never really created a solid fandom backstory.

The important thing is that hostillities with the Federation will start in 2223 or thereabouts. This date was established by both "Day of the Dove" (TOS) and "Star Trek VI". You might want to keep in mind that most fandom sources prior to "Broken Bow" assumed that this was when the Klingons first met with humans. The hostillities will never escalate into a full war. However, that *almost* happened in "Errand of Mercy" (TOS) before the Organians intervened and artificially imposed a peace treaty.

Other than that, the events of TOS probably give us a good idea of the kind of hostillities that went on. In "Once More Unto the Breach" (DS9), we learn of the attack on the Federation outpost on Caleb IV, executed by Kor and Kang on the old, cloak-capable D-5 cruisers (supposedly the animated series version of the Klingon battlecruiser from TOS). This may be the period of TOS, or slightly before.

Feel free to make up stuff. Watch "Errand of Mercy", "Day of the Dove", "Trouble with Tribbles" of TOS, and "Blood Oath", "The Sword of Kahless", "Once More Unto the Breach" (DS9) for inspiration about Klingons of the TOS and pre-TOS era. The animated series might also be good to review if you have it.

[ December 04, 2001: Message edited by: Phelps ]


 
Posted by Reverend (Member # 335) on :
 
I think its safe to say that the Klingons were busy attacking things most of the time. Possibly raiding Romulan assets, fighting off Gorn incursions, squabbling with the Breen...there's a lot of potential to just make stuff up, especially with a nobel house system where families are going off on their little blood feuds.
 
Posted by TSN (Member # 31) on :
 
Also, somewhere between Archer and Kirk, the Klingons lost their ridges, only to regain them between TOS and TMP.
 
Posted by AndrewR (Member # 44) on :
 
I think the smooth heads were just a fashion-fad in the late 2260's!
 
Posted by Reverend (Member # 335) on :
 
Really? I reckon Q did it to them, just for fun...
 
Posted by CaptainMike (Member # 709) on :
 
Too easy.. i think that they were genetically engineered by a certain dude from the future during a certain temporal cold war.. an ability weve already seen the Suliban exhibit is the ability to squish various parts of themselves
 
Posted by Mojo (Member # 536) on :
 
A NEW QUESTION:

I'm doing some Wolf 359 research. The Encyclopedia states that 39 out of 40 ships were destroyed and 11,000 lives. Is this generally regarded to be canon?

Do we know which ship survived, or how?


Mojo
 
Posted by Malnurtured Snay (Member # 411) on :
 
Actually, I always took that to mean that when the number "40" was mentioned in the episode, it was just the 39 ships rounded up ... therefore, all the ships present were destroyed.
 
Posted by CaptainMike (Member # 709) on :
 
This is a hairy point continuity wise, and one of the moments of Trek history where we wonder what Okuda was thinknig when he wrote it.

I believe that in BoBW that Admiral Hanson said they had about forty ships. Then, in 'The Drumhead' the official casualty figures was 39 ships and 11,000 personnel.

Somebody figured this meant a ship survived. Even though 'The Best of Both Worlds' pretty much established that there were no starships that survived. The best explanation is that there were always 39 ships there and that they were continuously approximating when they said forty. I think that would be an easy step to make, saying 'almost forty ships' instead of the exact number.

In a Voyager episode, Janeway read the log entry of a Captain Amasov of the USS Endeavour, noting that he had found the Borg to be horrifying to combat. The Encyclopedia assumes that this meant that the Endeavour was at Wolf 359 and survived (since the Endeavour was seen in later productions). But, the fact that Captain Amasov had a log entry about the Borg, this could simply mean that

1) He met the Borg in battle while not in command of the Endeavour. (remember.. Sisko survived to command another ship.. )
by that logic
'Captain Amasov of the Endeavour fought the Borg must mean that the Endeavour was at Wolf 359'
is like saying
'Captain Sisko of the Defiant fought the Borg so that must mean that the Defiant was at Wolf 359'.. very faulty logic.

2) He met the Borg in battle while in command of the Endeavour, but not at Wolf 359. Many canon minded fans will say that we didnt meet the Borg anywhere else, but the fact that Starfleet had funded the Hansens to study the Borg long before Q pushed us into them indicates there could be other humans that have fought them. The fact that there were Borg scouts in Fed space (as of I,Borg) indicates that there may have been smaller, non-cataclysmic but still frightening encounters with Borg that werent in a huge-cube all out assault on Earth. There were Borg in Fed space even before the Q contact, because they ravaged lotsa colonies in TNGs first season. Perhaps Amasov (on or off the Endeavour) was involved in an encounter there.

It is the belief of many fans that no ships survived, but Okuda's theory is accepted in some circles, even though it really doesnt make sense for the Endeavour to have just taken off in an opposite direction after Wolf359, before the Enterprise arrived. I think the Okuda theory also dilutes the dramatic intentions of the writers of that episode too. If a ship did survive, i believe it wouldve been severely damaged and possibly unrefittable (unlike the prefectly built Endeavour een later) and possibly a non-combatant that would have a decent reason to leave a battle and then not provide backup for the Enterprise. And if it was an escaping vessel, porbably its the one that recovered the Saratoga escape pods seeing as they were gone by the time the 1701D arrived.

so thats the can of worms you asked about opening
 
Posted by Phelps (Member # 713) on :
 
It could be that the writer of the "Drumhead" (Jeri Taylor) mistakenly assumed that the Enterprise-D was one of the forty, and hence the surviving ship.

The simpler explanation is that "forty" (Admiral Hanson) is an approximation. After all, they needed to get as many ships as they could, not a specific round number. Maybe "forty" was the target number, while only 39 could be gathered in practice. Or maybe there was a 40th ship that just happened not to be there on time. Could make for an interesting story.
 
Posted by The_Tom (Member # 38) on :
 
I'd be inclined to believe Jeri Talor consciously "roughened" the 40 ship figure when doing "The Drumhead" to make it sound more like a official figure and less like an approximation. (obscure historical fact: for decades the British imperial surveyors couldn't estimate the height of Mt. Everest any more accurately than 29000 ft, but to make it look more realistic used to print it on their maps as 29001.) Hanson's line in BoBW works just fine in the context of the conversation as a rounded-off figure or an early estimation. The fandom obsession with "there had to be one ship that survived" (especially when you take into account the issue of the USS Ahwahnee) has always struck me as rather anal-retentive.
 
Posted by CaptainMike (Member # 709) on :
 
And it already has made for an interesting story.. in Peter David's 'Vendetta' it was stated that Captain Morgan Korsmo was commander of the ship that didnt make it in time, and was furious about it. His new first officer Shelby tries to convince him that he wouldnt have made a difference, but he still gets irrational when it comes to dealing with a new Borg threat, and holds a grudge against the more powerful Enterprise-D for it.

And in a little more irony, Korsmo is mentioned again by David.. as a casualty of the First Contact battle.. looks like he got his big chance.
 
Posted by Mojo (Member # 536) on :
 
Actually, the idea that one ship out of forty survived works for me, and I like the idea dramtically. Having one haggard ship return from this terrible conflict gives us a focus for the emotional burden of the fight and places a huge toll on the crew that made it back.

In fact, I have developed a story for how this ship survived, and it's even based on a line of dialog in BOBW - but alas, you'll have to wait for the book to find out what I've cooked up.

One piece of INCREDIBLE cooncidence tonight: Once I read in the Encyclopedia that one ship did indeed survive, I needed a name for it. So, I pulled out the tech manual and went through ship names before I found one that just 'felt' right to me - the USS ENDEAVOR.

How weird it was that when I came back here to see how people responded to my post that the ship had actually been named in the show as the Endeavor!

Weird.

Somehow, it's a good sign :-)


Mojo
 
Posted by Timo (Member # 245) on :
 
Regardless of the original or later intentions of the writers, simple logic requires that at least one ship survive. Otherwise, there could be no surviving *personnel*, since mere lifepods or shuttles would be unlikely to take them to safety, or beyond the sensor range of the E-D when she arrives and finds no survivors. Yet we know that some personnel did survive, including Ben Sisko.

Naturally, there could have been more than one of those surviving ships, if we take the 40 ship figure to be a rough estimate. And Hanson did speak of the possible arrival of further vessels (including Klingon ones).

Personally, I feel that the surviving vessels should not have been of powerful designs, since the retreat of such ships would feel like cowardice. In turn, the retreat of a small ship like Oberth would be a bold and correct choice, if it helped take to safety the survivors from other ships. A Nebula class ship like the Endeavour retreating from the battle just does not sound right - if nothing else, the ship could try ramming, and might even have some realistic chances of getting through the Borg tractor beams, whereas a smaller vessel couldn't even hope to ram successfully.

Timo Saloniemi
 
Posted by Veers (Member # 661) on :
 
Why did you all condemn the "one ship survives" theory? Doesn't it make for a good dramatic point, like Mojo said?
 
Posted by MinutiaeMan (Member # 444) on :
 
Damn, I should've kept up with this thread more often...

Although Mojo seems to have ideas of his own already, here's my perspective on the Endeavor (Nebula-class) surviving the battle: a heavier ship is more likely to withstand the massive damage that the Borg cube dealt out, and survive. At the same time, it's possible that the Endeavor was almost totally crippled; there's nothing to say that a surviving ship had to make it out completely intact. So when the fleet is almost totally gone, with just a few ships left, just one ship is NOT going to make any difference. We can even say that previous starships during the battle tried to ram the cube, but without success. And that would be why the Endeavor didn't try that same tactic. (It might also make Riker's attempt to do the same thing later on appear even more desperate, and possibly futile.)

Here's a way to make it even more heroic: say that the Endeavor fought a valiant holding action against the cube, collecting survivors from the other destroyed ships, and this saving crews from certain assimilation. Once they'd collected as many people as possible, they escaped.

True, that doesn't sound quite as heroic as the Enterprise's all-out battle to the bitter end. And maybe that doesn't quite fit. But we know that there have to be survivors of the battle, given that Sisko was on DS9 for seven years. But having ONE ship out of FORTY limp away from the battle scene, and only when there is literally nothing to be done to stop the cube, to me seems just as poignant.
 
Posted by CaptainMike (Member # 709) on :
 
I just dont want it to be the Endeavour.. or maybe, an earlier Endeavour of a smaller class that was unrecoverable after it delivered the survivors.. and then the new Endeavour was commissioned during season 4 in time to be mentioned and seen later. That would get you around the 'Nebula wouldnt run away' problem we all seem to be getting behind
 
Posted by Sol System (Member # 30) on :
 
I always liked to think that there was some sort of small outpost or research station in orbit of Wolf 359, whose inhabitants were told, essentially, "You don't have time to run. Just be real, real quiet." The Borg come, wipe out the fleet, but leave the relatively worthless civilian station untouched. (Maybe it's on the other side of the star, at the time, or what have you.) After the Borg leave, the traders, or scientists or whomever come out, answer whatever distress signals they find, and then get the heck out of Dodge, as it were.

I'm not sure why. I just like the image of a bunch of tiny, ragtag ships coming to the rescue.
 
Posted by Shik (Member # 343) on :
 
The deuce you say, Mr. Greene...
 
Posted by Reverend (Member # 335) on :
 
I've always liked the Endevour surviving idea...it has a nice dramatic resonance and is consistant with everything we know about Wolf 359...with only two minor niggles.

1. Why didn't it pursue?

Warp drive knocked out, lossed main power...left to burn in space

2. Where was it when the E-D showed up?

It got better...and limped back to Alpha Centauri with all of the survivors on board

That last one would make a good image...a Nebula Class, the pride of the fleet pulling into spacedock...battered and scarred with its mission pod sliced off, its nacelles mangled almost to the point of destruction...her shuttle bays filled with escapepods, the cargo bays and quarters crowded with the dead and wounded...
 
Posted by Ace (Member # 389) on :
 
I agree with MinutiaeMan. A whimpy, little ship probably would not survive as well as a larger ship such as a Nebula class. Just look at the Excelsior class Melbourne. One shot from the cube and it was done for. And what's wrong with the Endavour being the ship? We see the Endeavour later in the 4th season as part of a fleet under construction/repairs, right? If the Endeavour was severely crippled at Wolf 359, she might have needed an extended repair time.

Also, when Janeway reads Captain Amasov's log, she also quotes Picard, as I recall. Why would she just pick any captain to read about his/her thoughts, esp. when she only quotes two to her first officer out of the other ones she was reviewing? To me, it makes perfect sense to quote Amasov along with Picard because if he was at Wolf 359, she would be reciting from two great sources: the captain who discovered the Borg and the captain who survived the Federation's worse conflict with the Borg.

I like the idea of one ship surviving because it helps explain how Sisko and the other survivors weren't detected by the Ent-D. Like Mojo said, the name "Endeavour" is just another nice touch!

BTW, Mojo, the ship is named after the British Captain Cook's ship, the HMS Endeavour, so there is an extra "u" in the name.

And CaptainMike, be fair to Okuda! He never states the Endeavour IS the surviving ship as canon. He puts it in his annotations beneath the actual entry.

[ December 10, 2001: Message edited by: Ace ]


 
Posted by TSN (Member # 31) on :
 
It could also be that Picard and Amasov were just the two most eloquent Borg-log-people.
 
Posted by CaptainMike (Member # 709) on :
 
yes, the other entries could have been like

Cmdr J.C. Arnold, survivor, USS Bonestell:
"The Borg are.. just awful.. i dont like them.. my leg hurts"

Lieutenant Ron L.W. Haskill, survivor, USS Roosevelt
"On SD 43982.1 we TACed the surviving FWE units to a STD RTFC sensor array and used LMQ type particle sensor s to DB the retroactive array to rescue POW drone PTCs from periphery 187.3211 mark 4"

Ensign M. Tanner, USS Melbourne
"I'm not sure what class ship this is. I'm tired. I had too much ice cream after lunch. Billy in engineering said he had a crush on me to Tom in astrotelemetry, but Sally in the sensory said he has cooties"

Janeway just read the more poetic dudes, like Capt. Amasov from his encounter with the Borg at 4745 Cancri.
 
Posted by Dat (Member # 302) on :
 
Or that Amisov was already a very famous Starfleet captain without having to battle the Borg and the name stood out to Janeway.
 
Posted by Mojo (Member # 536) on :
 
Ok, now I just need 15 or 20 people with Starfleet uniforms to play the stunned survivors of the Endeavour, a few Next Gen corridors and a LOT of carbon scoring so I can take some pictures for the book...


Mojo
 
Posted by CaptainMike (Member # 709) on :
 
*volunteers*
 
Posted by Mark Nguyen (Member # 469) on :
 
And I volunteer to burn the stuff you need to create the carbon scoring.

Anyway Mojo, you can obviously see that Wolf 359 is an extremely hot topic amongst tech-heads. You could arguably say that more analysis has been put into this battle than any other fight in all of Trek history. The whole Endeavour thing will likely cause some people concern no matter how you portray it, since there are as many people want to believe she was at Wolf 359 as there are people who don't - so I say press on with whatever you have in mind. Personally, I'm with the latter camp, as lost-cause battles tend to be more poignant for me.

Regardless, there's more than half of the fleet at Wolf 359 unaccounted for - any photo essays could easily be about any of those ships. And hey, if one of them is called the USS Nguyen, I'd be plenty happy.

Mark <--- There's an emperor named Nguyen, you know
 
Posted by Ace (Member # 389) on :
 
Don't forget a beautiful space shot of the ship burning in space!

I like Sol System's vision of small, dirty ships/shuttles picking up the survivors. Maybe (assuming the Endeavour is the survivor) the crippled ship was used as a temporary base for rescue ops while the crew was getting decent engine power back up. While some parts of the surviving crew are repairing the ship systems, others are going out to pick up other survivors, such as from the Saratoga, with shuttles and other small craft.

It'd be a neat picture. A small shuttle bring back survivors is in the foreground flying over the wrecked Endeavour (sparks and all). In the background and in the reflection of the shuttle windows, the burning hulls of the other ships can be seen.
 
Posted by Masao (Member # 232) on :
 
Mojo: I didn't notice your question about Fed/Klingon history until now. I've been working on an article on just this topic for my website and have found there are precious few established events during this time. Only a disasterous first contact around 2220 (since swept away by Enterprise), Battle of Donatu V (23 years before TOS), and the Battle of Caleb IV (unclear when it happens).

Whatever you do with this time period, I beg you to come up with a more creative solution than the producers of Enterprise did for Klingon ships of the past. Also, please you some genuinely old designs for Federation ships. Don't just resurface those TOS ships and call them old.
 
Posted by Mojo (Member # 536) on :
 
I know there are archives of AVI/MPG Trek episodes out there. Now, I do not condone the trading of copyrighted material, but if someone were to be searching for a few key Next Gen and DS9 shows in this format, what would be his or her best bet?

It SO much easier to get framegrabs off an AVI than a VHS :-)
 
Posted by CaptainMike (Member # 709) on :
 
I usually see a lot of eps available on Gnutella networks (i use the LimeWire v1.6d client for its resumable downloads and other goodies.. available at www.limewire.com)

The disadvantages of Gnutella--like most peer2peer sharing, sometimes you dont get on a big enough network to find what you need, people who cut your download..

and i dont know what the quality of the eps is because, as a 56K user, ive never downloaded one of those 100,000+MB files.

but if you have a faster connection you would be in a better condition to get on a large search net, find the ep you need and DL it quickly. But it still might be catch as catch can.

A lot of people tell me its easy to get TV shows on MIRC or other p2p sharing environments..
 
Posted by AndrewR (Member # 44) on :
 
quote:
Ensign M. Tanner, USS Melbourne
"I'm not sure what class ship this is. I'm tired. I had too much ice cream after lunch.
Billy in engineering said he had a crush on me to Tom in astrotelemetry, but Sally in the
sensory said he has cooties"


LOL! I nearly wet my self laughing! I'm picturing M. Tanner as being a guy for some reason... It just made it all the more funnier! Maybe Ensign M. Tanner is Betazoid --> The ice-cream!?! ;o)
 
Posted by The_Tom (Member # 38) on :
 
quote:
Only a disasterous first contact around 2220 (since swept away by Enterprise)

Not to be:
a)mean
b)nitpicky
c)aggressive
d)hijacking the thread
e)rude
f)reopening old wounds
...but you know how that date has never had strong canonical support, and that indeed "First Contact" strongly undermined it.

We know return to regularly scheduled programming.

[ December 10, 2001: Message edited by: The_Tom ]


 
Posted by AndrewR (Member # 44) on :
 
Mojo reguarding Wolf 359 remember the resources

1. The episodes of course BOBW/Emissary
2. The extremely detailed arguments we got into here and subsequently beautifully compiled and presented at "Copernicus Shipyards"
3. The supposed lost footage of Wolf 359 done by Rob Legato for "Emissary"
4. Mike Okuda and those encyc people-type thingies ;o)
5. There are a lot of those kitbashed/study designs SEEN on SCREEN at Wolf 359, action shots of these ships would be great!
6. What type of Star is WOLF359?
7. Why did the Borg ship meet the fleet or vice versa at Wolf359, when it is on the otherside of Earth relative to Borg Space/Delta Quadrant.

(I think that is a SWDAO) I theorise that transwarp conduits are set or are unpredictable and that one opened on the far side of the Federation relative to The Delta Quadrant/Borg Space.

OR That after the events in Q Who? The hunt was on, by the borg (who are all connected) for this ship that can appear out of nowhere, be easily carved up "like a roast", and can easily disappear again. (Thanks a lot Q) The Borg probably told all ships to FIND this Federation, or they would have taken it's location from the info gleaned from the E-D's databanks and/or from other ships. The ship that attacked during BOBW - was not necessarily the same cube from QW? and might have been closer to the Federation than that cube from QW? So even though it was closer it would come from a line of site that had it passing nearby Wolf359 to get to Earth.

OR Transwarp Conduits can open at certain points and that they (the Borg) have to warp it to particular destinations then impulse it thru the systems. Maybe they can only transwarp it through relatively empty space like those between the Galactic Arms!?!

OR the Cube in BOBW is indeed the Cube from QW? And that System J25 was (what was it 12 years?) Away from Fed space, but out "behind" Wolf359 (looking from Earth or sector 001).

What is sector 001 anyway (does a sector have to have a particular volume?) Maybe sectors closer to Earth are smaller, since sectors there might have been mapped on a smaller scale hundreds of years ago (rel to TNG). "Sector 001 - The Terran System" mentioned by Worf could be taken two ways... that Sector 001 = The Terran System or That he was narrowing it down... Sector 001... still narrowing... The Terran System!
 
Posted by OnToMars (Member # 621) on :
 
I had the idea that the 'sole survivor' was the saucer section of a ship, most likely the saucer of that proto-Neb. If those extra nacelles were attached to the saucer (are they?) it could've picked up survivors and warped away. However, I don't know how plausible that is.

But I've always thought that the image of a mangled and nearly shredded Galaxy saucer picking up survivors was especially poignant.

If it was a Nebbie that picked up survivors, than it would offer the possibility of seeing the inside of the Main Shuttlebay for the first time, filled to capacity with dead, dying, and wounded.

[ December 11, 2001: Message edited by: OnToMars ]


 
Posted by TSN (Member # 31) on :
 
Regarding the question of what type of star Wolf359 is... It's a red dwarf.
 
Posted by Reverend (Member # 335) on :
 
quote:
If it was a Nebbie that picked up survivors, than it would offer the possibility of seeing the inside of the Main Shuttlebay for the first time, filled to capacity with dead, dying, and wounded.


Damn, I was just about to suggest something very similar.
A view of the inside of the Endevour's main shuttle bay, filled with damaged shuttles, the Endevour's own and the rescued ones, ala USS Liberator...good oppertunity for name dropping there (Shuttle 6, USS Chekov, Shuttlecraft Hubble USS Roosevelt).

There should also be escape pods and lifeboats* with all the spaces in between filled with the dead and injured, medical teams dotted about doing triage.
It would be quite dramatic to have the shuttlebay doors open for the rescue shuttles, as a result you can see out into space, the twisted reminants of the severed sensor pod's supports strut in the foreground and the BOBW graveyard scence (or a reproduction of it) in the background.

It shouldn't be too difficult, the 1701-D blueprints have some pretty good plans of the extensive shuttle bay, the Saratoga lifeboats are a pretty simple shape and as such wouldn't pose too much of a modelling challenge. The people would be a bit tricky...but doable with a little photographic manipulation


*The distinction between these two, in my mind is that the things we see ejecting from the E-E, Voyager the Defiant and the Valient are escape pods and the things that the Saratoga had in it's shuttle bay were life boats. The Escape pods being just that, while the lifeboats are more independant are generally bigger and have a greater range
 
Posted by J (Member # 608) on :
 
"Why at Wolf 359?"

Maybe because the Alpha Q transwarp hub was on the other side of Earth from the Delta Quad.
 
Posted by Mojo (Member # 536) on :
 
DEBATE TOPIC: VOYAGER'S 'ENDGAME' WEAPONRY

When Voyager returned home, she brought with her shields and weapons from 23 years into the future. These tools are clearly far in advance of anything the usual suspects in the Alpha Quadrant possess.

So, what would be done? Would the Federation keep the technology? Would they consider it temporal contamination and destroy it?

I have my theories. Let's hear yours!


Mojo
 
Posted by Krenim (Member # 22) on :
 
Ooh... A time travel question.

As for the whole Voyager's future tech thing, I can see a situation that parallels the Pegasus incident. Officially, the Bureau of Temporal Investigation would probably come and site the Temporal Prime Directive and either destroy or lock away the technology. Of course, you'd have some Starfleet Admiral(s) who believe that, with Starfleet probably still in shambles after the Dominion War, that they should use everything at their disposal to protect the Federation, and they'll somehow steal away some of that future tech and do experiments with it or whatever, and then they'll get busted.

Or something like that.
 
Posted by Phelps (Member # 713) on :
 
If the principled Janeway doesn't destroy it first, the Temporal Investigations guys from "Trials and Tribbleations" will try to do so, and will likely be supported by the more conservative part of Starfleet. After all, the Dominion War had been over for more than two years at that point.

On the other hand, there will always be those who'll say that another Dominion War isn't something they can afford to be unprepared for. They'll push for the technology to be kept, and maybe a compromise will be reached in which the technology will be stored somewhere in a high security location until needed most. Sure, as Krenim said, the Nasty Admirals (tm) will probably try to get their hands on it and do stuff.

Then there's also the 29th century time police who could choose to intervene and simply destroy the weapons when nobody's watching. Personally, #3 seems most consistent with the way the writers have chosen to forget about so many other technologies and technical solutions discovered in random episodes.

[ December 11, 2001: Message edited by: Phelps ]


 
Posted by Mark Nguyen (Member # 469) on :
 
Personally, I think the Timecops from the 29th century are morons. They let the Holodoc keep his mobile emitter, didn't bother erasing the memories of Janeway and Seven after "Relativity", and if they knew that Voyager would be bringing back all sorts of toys, they wouldn't have let Admiral Janeway leave in the FIRST place.

Actually, if anything those guys are probably only really concerned with stuff originating in THEIR century, and as such wouldn't care about something happening that was STILL centuries in their past. So, I think the temporal mash that Voyager caused over its seven years would be mostly in the jurisdiction of the people in that century, and as such they couldn't do much about undoing it.

So for Voyager, the Temporal Investigations people would probably get a hold of all the tech and lock it away, and slap "Don't ask me how I got back - it's a Temporal Prime Directive thing" stickers on all the crew's foreheads. Then they'd either wait for someone from the future to take it away, or destroy it themselves, making a lot of brass very angry.

However Mojo, if you want to get another explanation of what they could have done with the future technology, then you may want to wait for the release of the Voyager relaunch novels starting late next year (I think - anyone have a solid release date?). I dunno how Pocket Books works, but since the novels are supposed to tell the story of what happens following "Endgame", they may want to keep a thing or two consistent.

Mark
 
Posted by Raw Cadet (Member # 725) on :
 
Perhaps this is an instance of a "predestination paradox;" the only reason Starfleet of the future had such technology is because "Voyager" of the past brought it back.

Personally, I hope we do not see the technology again. The "super-shields," as a visual effect, looked worse than the Batmobile shields featured in "Batman" over 10 years ago. Besides, the concept of little boxes on the hull turning into a huge metallic cover is just stupid, in my opinion. As for the "uber-torpedos," what is next? A giant laser that can blow up entire planets with one shot?

Though my preference for the fate of the technology requires a lame, cop-out explanation, I would write off its non-appearance in future Treks as the result of the Temporal Prime Directive, just so we do not have to see it again. In fact, I would probably not even offer an on-screen explanation, I would just let "tech fans" debate over the technology's fate . . .
 
Posted by OnToMars (Member # 621) on :
 
Ya, that's probably the meat and potatoes of that debate.

But if you want an absolute concrete air tight answer:

Wait for Star Trek: X
 
Posted by The_Tom (Member # 38) on :
 
Considering this topic continues to be debated online on a fairly frequent basis, I'm assuming no spoilers for Trek X have leaked indicating that the Enterprise-E will show up with Batmobile armour and ass-whomping spatial torpedoes. I haven't been reading Trek X spoilers beyond the fairly light stuff, so I'm probably not the best to talk, though.

Personally, were I given the choice, I'd assume they don't continue on. For starters, getting Voyager's crew home early is a breach of the TPD on one level, but changing the balance of power in the quadrant is another entirely. While Janeway was irrational here and there, I don't think she was willing to do something that abusive to that natural flow of history. (Indeed, if "The Void" is any indication, Janeway would be quite ready to toss away technology that she had come in contact with through less-than-morally-white means.) Perhaps all the uber-torpedoes were used-up and the armour stuff needs a finite number of magic beans to make it deploy and the Admiral only brought enough for one deployal [is that even a word?].
 
Posted by Mojo (Member # 536) on :
 
Magic beans... I like that!
 
Posted by CaptainMike (Member # 709) on :
 
so thats what powers it..

ooh.. it could be a whole story in itself.. we know that the 29th timecops are bunglers..
in Future's End Braxton lets his ship get captured
then he lets the Doc keep his mobile emitter
then in Relativity they need 7 to do their dirty work. .they let everyone remember what happened, even though they have the ability to abort the whole problem before it happened (and DO, in reference to Braxton).. plus in Double Time, Braxton is short sighted enough to let the Enevians get the better of his trying to contain Calhouns ill-considered slingshots.. PAD even writes a nice crack about his 'multiple shortcomings' ( an alternate version of him joke, im sure)

so lets say they try to recover the goodies. But they screw up.. and fracture the timeline somehow so that some of Voyagers crew doesnt remember this, discontinuities start occurring and they have to fix the mess before the whole continuum collapes.. it has dramatic potential..
 
Posted by Timo (Member # 245) on :
 
Well, 'em big guns and armor is a problem all by itself, yes. But people seem to be forgetting the other problem the "Endgame" solution created. Namely, the two Janeways managed to piss off the Borg worse than ever before.

It would make sense for the Borg to now see the Feds as a real threat. No more pussyfooting around with single cubes on intricate missions of reconaissance or time-tampering. A good solid invasion with, oh, a dozen cubes should finish off Starfleet and its allies easily enough. The Feds cannot discount that possibility, not when Janeway can stand witness to such assaults and their success against civilizations more advanced than the 2370s UFP.

I'm pretty sure that even the most enlightened UFP decisionmakers would happily waive all temporal protection laws (And most of the civil rights [Heck, they could even accept a salary decrease! Or perhaps I shouldn't exaggerate.]) in order to have the one and only Borg-proof technology installed on a greater number of Starfleet ships.

Whether the known time-traveling agencies would interfere is another matter, but it's pretty much clear that if they do, then Earth gets assimilated. And Braxton's timecop organization and Daniels' folks both seem to be associated with Earth somehow, so they wouldn't want to take away Starfleet's new toys.

Frankly, I don't want to watch what happens next in the TNG era. I want to jump forward a couple of decades or centuries to check if the Feds are guerilla-fighting desperadoes without a homeworld, or an almighty galactic superpower with allies and adversaries on a wholly new level.

Timo Saloniemi
 
Posted by MinutiaeMan (Member # 444) on :
 
I'm currently participating in a fan fiction project that is set 25 years after DS9, and we had a bear of a time trying to figure out what to do with the "Endgame" technology.

In the end, we decided that Starfleet would be extremely foolish to just throw away the technology, considering the enemies that are out there and the thrashing they'd just gotten from the Dominion. Plus, we've seen that a larger number of officers in Starfleet have become more practical, willing to bend the spirit of the law to achieve the "greater good." The safety of the Federation is sufficient reason to not repair the timeline by destroying the advanced technology.

However, I also doubt that any time-travelling tricks would take the technology away from the Federation involuntarily. Admiral Janeway only cared about getting Voyager home, and flouted the Temporal Prime Directive enough that I doubt she'd care about cleaning up the mess by planting some sort of "trojan horse" in the tech so that it couldn't be used later. For instance, there was really no reason for Admiral Janeway to give Voyager those transpatial torpedoes, anyway. All she needed to do was get Voyager through the Borg transwarp hub; she didn't need to piss the Borg off as well by blowing up a number of cubes.

Also, I think we can rule out interference from the future for a number of reasons. Mainly, because they didn't interfere with Admiral Janeway in the first place (unless you count Krenim's "Series ?" version of events ). So why would they worry about the technology afterwards, when the largest mess (probably) was Voyager getting home in the first place.

Another problem with the armor and torpedoes, is what happens to the Federation's allies and the other races? Are they going to get the technology too, or is the Federation going to try to keep a monopoly on it? I think that there would be a serious interstellar incident resulting from this, either way; with Starfleet ships achieving a power at least an order of magnitude greater than any other ship in the quadrant, it not only upsets storytelling but also the balance of political and military power. Sure, the Federation is the "good guy," but that doesn't ensure stability. For example, other races could form a big alliance against the Fed just to counter their newfound immense power.

Mojo, I have a request if you end up doing images of starships deploying that "Batmobile" armor. Could you restyle it a bit so that it includes some features of the ship? I thought that the design looked extremely ugly when the armor was deployed, it covered up the beauty of the starship. The shape isn't enough.
 
Posted by Krenim (Member # 22) on :
 
I'm not sure how useful the future tech would be against the Borg now. They did manage to assimilate Admiral Janeway, and now know how the technology works. The only reason I think that last transphasic torpedo worked (the one Voyager used to blow up the sphere from the inside) was because the Collective had other things to worry about (The Queen falling to pieces, the loss of both Unimatrix One and the transwarp hub) besides adapting to the weapons. I'm sure they've adapted by now, though.
 
Posted by CaptainMike (Member # 709) on :
 
I had always assumed that the Queen, Janeway and a lot of the Borg infrastructure was irretrievably destroyed.. i.e. the Borg have no benefit from assimilating Janeway or knowledge of her designs.. no one seems willing to say that was the permanent end of the Borg, but we have to admit it was a defeat they should feel the effects of.

But i just came up with another idea.. Admiral Janeway somehow survived, and since the Borg queen was toasted, she is made a Locutus-type administrator.. in a future Voyager story they would have to go up against the assimilated Janeway.. shades of Best of Both Worlds? it would be a helluva show.. like BoBW on crack!
they should make that the VGR TV movie.. and then end the Borg shit for good.. they were worried that the Borg were played out after BoBW, and every time since we beat them 'once and for all' and then they come back better.. and the original problem remains.. its just bad storytelling to have to continuously up those stakes to the point it becomes repetitive.. VGR did great stuff with the Borg, and explored all of the off-key non-major-battle eps they could, a la 'I,Borg'.. its probably time to finish them off
 
Posted by Mojo (Member # 536) on :
 
ASSIGNMENT: BORG

Ok, A call to arms! I need some help here, folks. Believe it or not, I'm having a very tough time tracking down reference of the Borg Cube model from Next Gen. I've got plenty of screen captures from the show, but I'm looking for model referece.

My usual sources are scouring their archives, but that could take until after the holidays.

Does anyone out there know of anything?

A credit in the book awaits ye who can provide :-)


Thanks!
Mojo
 
Posted by Shik (Member # 343) on :
 
Roger Sorenson to the rescue.

There's also an extreme closeup of the FC model surfacing in the TNG Sketchbook, pages 216-218, wit hthe TV version on page 219. The sphere is also shown on page 207.
 
Posted by Mark Nguyen (Member # 469) on :
 
Bernd's badass bunch o' Borg pics:

http://www.ex-astris-scientia.org/scans/borg1.htm

And I've made scans of the model from a couple books too, since I couldn't find them on the net. They're from the "ST:TNG Movie Sketchbook" and the "The Making of DS9", respectively. Warning - these images are >400k JPEGs. I'll take 'em down in a week or so.

http://www.thepurplebuffalo.net/~mark/cube1.jpg
http://www.thepurplebuffalo.net/~mark/cube2.jpg

Hope this helps,

Mark

[ December 13, 2001: Message edited by: Mark Nguyen ]
 
Posted by Mojo (Member # 536) on :
 
Thanks for the Borg pics, they were a huge help! Of course, I have a copy of the Sketchbook and had no idea that excellent pic was in there.

D'OH!

Now the only trouble I'm having is figuring out how I'm going to cram all this stuff into the book...
 
Posted by Mark Nguyen (Member # 469) on :
 
Foldouts.

Mark
 
Posted by Grokca (Member # 722) on :
 
Don't the foldouts always have staples in the bellybuttons though
 
Posted by Reverend (Member # 335) on :
 
Just make sure that the book is much bigger than the starship spotter...really, that book was way too small. So Mojo, are you planning on making new meshes of the Wolf359 ships, or not?
 
Posted by OnToMars (Member # 621) on :
 
Mojo, just got TMP :D E a few days ago and watched it before my mom got the chance to wrap it. Of course, I watched all the extras and exclaimed in girly glee "Hey, I know that guy! Sorta." when I saw the Mojo in quotation marks at the bottom of the screen.

Anyway, I don't want to spin off on a TMP tangent, nor did I want to ressurect that thread, so I will suffice to say a job well done. The Enterprise looked great and Vulcan was awesomely redone.

ANYWAY, with the ass kissing out of the way; may we ask about the progress? Any idea what kind of scenes you're going to do yet?

[ December 21, 2001: Message edited by: OnToMars ]
 
Posted by Reverend (Member # 335) on :
 
Oh yes! please do spoil the surprise for us all!
While your at it why don't you just publish the entire book on here so we don't have to go a buy it for ourselves.... [Razz]
 
Posted by Pos_21 (Member # 757) on :
 
yes, please do, i'm a cheap @$$ and probably won't buy it anyway!
 
Posted by Pos_21 (Member # 757) on :
 


[ December 23, 2001: Message edited by: Pos_21 ]
 
Posted by Veers (Member # 661) on :
 
Well, you didn't object when he posted info on the Starship Spotter, did you?

Mojo, can you just tell us some details when you get the chance?
 
Posted by AndrewR (Member # 44) on :
 
Mojo, I really liked the Exeter bridge in the 2002 calendar... I was wondering maybe you could do an Engineering scene!?! I don't know what it is about Engineering on the Connie class, but I just can't seem to wrap my head around it - I've probably not seen enough episodes - and probably it doesn't help that it's (as far as we know) not symmetrical sorta like Voyager's or the E-D's...

Another good pic/idea would be a view from INSIDE The Defiant's shuttlebay - maybe when the door is open or what ever? We sorta see inside in "The Sound of Her Voice".

Oh, and the fusion reactor chamber section on DS9... sort of it's "Engineering" we never got to see down there - something I was hoping for.

A view out of one of the Promenade or Habitat rings to the actual habitat and/or docking ring and pylons.

Also, what about the shuttle that is docked underneath a Ferengi Marauder (different to the Ferengi Pod we've seen) and seeing it detatch?

A view of Chakotay's raider as it is just about to hit the large Kazon ship in "Caretaker" but from a window ON BOARD the ship!?! ;o)

A Federation Starbase like an old K7-type you could call it T-2 or something ;o) being engulfed by a Tholian Web!!

The E-D being built in a MUSHROOM spacedock - as per "Booby Trap" - it wasn't outside in a drydock or McKinley station type drydock.

An April or Pike era Enterprise - with the earlier bits... larger bridge, no bulbs on the back of the nacelles - people around here know what all the differences are.

The Enterprise-nil being BUILT! a ye olde style drydock to accompany this!?!

An Iconian gateway... with Ocampa appearing!
[Big Grin]
 
Posted by Reverend (Member # 335) on :
 
Oh! and a shot of the mirror I.S.S. Enterprise-A battleing a Vor'cha in the early 24th century! and then a Victory Star Destoryer appears and blows it in two...and...and then...and then a Borg omnispatial megaplanet assimilator drops out of hypertranswarp and assimilates the empire....then suddenly superman comes along to save the day....then Data wakes up in the shower and it was all a dream
*goes into fanboy-convulsive fit to the Dallas theme tune*
 
Posted by CaptainMike (Member # 709) on :
 
alright guys, time for your injections
 
Posted by Mark Nguyen (Member # 469) on :
 
I've got 'em to spare.

Mark
 
Posted by Reverend (Member # 335) on :
 
Seriously though, if you want to get an idea of what Mojo will probably be doing then all you have to do is read through these 10 pages of suggestions, its a fair bet that at least some of them will be used.
 
Posted by AndrewR (Member # 44) on :
 
Reverend, you don't have to be condescending - I'm just throwing out ideas... there was nothing FANBOYISH in those suggestions... just 'unseen' stuff. Just throwing out ideas - people could build on them - not just dismiss them like you did. Building on the start of your idea - an exterior shot of the ISS Enterprise would be interesting... would it have that 'Earth and Dagger' logo? Would it be so 'spick and span' white - or would it be a little more... dirty!?!
 
Posted by Reverend (Member # 335) on :
 
That wasn't condesending, that was plain old taking the piss. Its really fun actually...
 
Posted by Reverend (Member # 335) on :
 
Its been a while since I saw 'mirror mirror'
were there any exterior shots of the ISS Enterprise? if so then I'd say that she look absolutley identical to the the normal one.

I was actually thinking of what a mirror refit connie could look like...all battle scared and covered in spam.
 
Posted by Dat (Member # 302) on :
 
From what I remember, there was only one exterior footage of the ISS Enterprise and it was stock footage of the Enterprise in either her "The Cage" or "WNMHGB" appearance. So we know there was a difference in design between the two Enterprises.
 
Posted by Sol System (Member # 30) on :
 
No no no! It was not reused footage! It was brand new footage, shot just for that episode. And it featured...the Enterprise orbiting the planet in the opposite direction! The opposite direction!! Needless to say, that episode put many a poor fan into the hospital for a few days.
 
Posted by Reverend (Member # 335) on :
 
How shocking! Who knew that 60's TV series were so lavish in their attention to detail and special effects.
 
Posted by Dat (Member # 302) on :
 
Actually, I think it was stock footage. They just flipped the negative around, so it looks new.
 
Posted by Malnurtured Snay (Member # 411) on :
 
Sarcasm.

Ahhhh. Such a wonderful thing. And so sad for people who just don't 'get it.'
 
Posted by TSN (Member # 31) on :
 
Erm... If they flipped the negative, the nacelle would read "1071-CCN", except w/ the letters themselves also backward.
 
Posted by Harry (Member # 265) on :
 
But they did *have* negative transfers, I think it's somewhere on the IDIC page...
 
Posted by AndrewR (Member # 44) on :
 
quote:
That wasn't condesending, that was plain old taking the piss.


That's OK then. ;o)
 
Posted by Mojo (Member # 536) on :
 
Actually, if memory serves, they did a number of shots of the original series Enterprise with the reg numbers painted *backwards*, so they could later flip the frame and make it appear as if the ship was going the other way. It may have been because only half the model was properly completed, but I may not be remembering that part correctly.

As far as details about the book goes, you probably shouldn't be checking the floor for spilled beans quite yet. Especially since the outline is not fully approved and it may yet change!

On the other hand, if any of you want to come out to LA in mid February, there's a convention called Galiffrey that I do every year. I plan to premiere ALL the images from the 2003 calendar there, as well as talk about the book and probably show some advance pics as well. I'll probably also have some of the guys from Foundation come out and talk about Enterprise!

And please keep up with the suggestions, they really are great food for thought. If you all pay close attention to the questions I'm asking on here, you may yet deduce what will be between the covers :-)


Mojo

[ December 28, 2001: Message edited by: Mojo ]
 
Posted by Harry (Member # 265) on :
 
quote:
It may have been because only half the model was properly completed, but I may not be remembering that part correctly


The reason they could only film the ship from one side is because the cables for the lights 'n' stuff were on the other side.

http://members.aol.com/IDICPage/ReversedDecal.html
 
Posted by AndrewR (Member # 44) on :
 
Another suggestion: A pic with the Defiant's landing struts being used... maybe inside a Mushroom spacedock... or how about some sort of platform a la the Couruscant docking platforms from The Phantom Menace (not to copy... just the idea of it [Smile] )

That would allow an atmosphere shot.

Tom Paris being given lessons by his father in an old J-type shuttle craft?? Did I dream this up - or was it from "Pathways" or was it actually in an episode?

When doing Earth shots Mojo... are you going to include that "Atlantis Project" as mentioned in "Family" there's an Okudagram in the Continuing mission I think... Picard was thinking of working on it - it was basically creating a small continent in the middle of the Atlantic by raising the sea floor.

What about an Ariel view of Starfleet headquarters... matching up everything we've seen over the last 20 years...

from the Tram terminal in TMP, to the round mushroomy buildings in STIV and TNG to the Headquarters in DS9 (Homefront and Paradise Lost) and the wrecked San Francisco in DS9 and the Academy grounds in TNG - The First Duty etc... we alway seem to glimse the Golden Gate Bridge in each area... I'm sure someone has worked out where each place is around the bridge?
 
Posted by OnToMars (Member # 621) on :
 
SF HQ is established to be where the Presidio stands now, based on The Motion Picture (especially those new shots of the shuttle's approach), Undiscovered Country, and Voyage Home. I don't know about the Academy or any of the shots from the series, but it's pretty definite that HQ resides sometime in the future where the Presidio stands now. I remember hearing something a long time ago about the Great Earthquake that was a one liner somewhere that swallowed the Presidio whole, making room for SF HQ (because it is now a historical landmark).

The Presidio is, by the way, an old decommissioned Army base on the San Francisco side of the Golden Gate Bridge, and nearly immediately next to it. It's beautiful country out there.

BTW, Mojo, if there's a shuttle anywhere in the background, how 'bout puttin' "Finifter" on it. Shuttles are after all, named after great explorers and scientists and this is after all, the first man on Mars typing... [Big Grin]

[ December 28, 2001: Message edited by: OnToMars ]
 
Posted by Dat (Member # 302) on :
 
From what I can see, the Academy is on the Sausalito (Marin County) side of the bridge.
 
Posted by Reverend (Member # 335) on :
 
That would put it close to Skywalker Division, famous builders of the Olympic-class [Wink]
 
Posted by The_Tom (Member # 38) on :
 
I'm pretty sure the Academy's on the Presidio side, too, but west of the Golden Gate.

Actually, I think a nice aerial view of the Presidio complex would be quite nifty. In "In the Flesh" we saw a pretty substantial CGI view of the entire area... might that model still be punting about on a CD somewhere?
 
Posted by Reverend (Member # 335) on :
 
There is a shot of the Terrasphere model in the fact files, its not hugely detaled but it does depict a number of buildings, including the piramid shapes ones seen in that Harry Kim alternate timeline jobbie (are they real? I'm not familiar with today's San Fransisco skyline).
One thing I will note however, it only has one side of the Goldengate Bridge. I also recall seeing an arial map of the area in Dominion Headquarters, but I assume all the labeling was in Cardassian or Dominion.
 
Posted by The_Tom (Member # 38) on :
 
IIRC, the map from "The Changing Face of Evil" showed little demarcations (presumably representing damage) all over the SF Bay area, but (surprisingly, perhaps) most of them seemed to be in the Oakland area. That isn't to say that the Presidio wasn't shown to be hit; I'm pretty sure it was, but so was Sausalito and Marin County, and then south of San Francisco towards San Jose. No word on whether the Charles Capps Childhood Home National Historic Site got nicked by an errant torpedo.
 
Posted by Reverend (Member # 335) on :
 
Here is a map of the area incase anyone would like to fill in where they think the starfleet & fed buildings are.

link

[edited to fix link -TSN]

[ January 02, 2002: Message edited by: TSN ]
 
Posted by Mojo (Member # 536) on :
 
Ok, gang, I'd like to hear your thoughts on another topic.

What are some good, 'unseen' events specifically relating to the Borg, Klingons and Romulans?

Wolf 359 and Narendra III are two obvious examples. The first war between the Federation and Romulans is another.

What else?


Mojo
 
Posted by The_Tom (Member # 38) on :
 
Off the top of my head, I'd say the biggest fan-fave with regards to the Romulans would be the relatively cataclismic "Tomed Incident." It's pretty much open season as to what it might actually have been, but you could work in some nice movie-era (or later) ships and stimulate sperm counts from coast to coast.

On a Klingonny note, how about Klaang's shuttle being chased by the Suliban minutes before it checked into Farmer Moore's cornfield in "Broken Bow"?
 
Posted by CaptainMike (Member # 709) on :
 
The Battle of Klach D'kel Bracht was mentioned in 'Blood Oath' as being a Klingon Romulan conflict (im not sure actually) that Kor was involved in. The era would be between TOS and the Movies too i think , to use some old tech
 
Posted by Shik (Member # 343) on :
 
I suggest:

--the Borg assimilation of Arturis' people
--the Borg-induced scattering of the El-Aurians
--the Klingon invasion fleet over Organia (mmm..Klingon troop transports)
--a Klingon welcoming ceremony for the return of Kahless (ground or space based)
--the Romulan Senate (something I've always liked to see)
--the arrival of the first anti-logic Vulcans at what will become Romulus
 
Posted by StyroFoam Man (Member # 706) on :
 
How about some footage from the running battle that proceeded First Contact? Seems the Defiant was pretty chewed by the opening scenes. The intercepted com messages that Picard and Friends listen to could spark some ideas.

As for the Romulans: I second the Tomed Incident. No on knows what happened there so it's basicly open season.
 
Posted by Mojo (Member # 536) on :
 
Hmmmm funny y'all should mention the Tomed Incident, I was considering that. If I remember correctly, this was a bloody conflict that resulted in the Treaty of Algeron. It left thousands dead on both sides.

I imagine it would have to have something to do with cloaking devices.

As far as Klach T'Kel Bracht, I belive it was said to be a famous Klingon victory over the Romulans.

The FC Battle is a good idea, but Wolf 359 is pretty much going to cover the Borg/Fed warzone.

Klingons over Organia? Already have a temp image of that :-)
 
Posted by StyroFoam Man (Member # 706) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mojo:

I imagine it would have to have something to do with cloaking devices.



The LAST UNICORN STAR TREK RPG I play list the Tomed Incident as a Romulan attack on a Federation base that they suspected was the hotbed of Fed cloak technology. They attacked it, and several cloaked Fed ships showed up to defend it.

Non-canon to the max, but still an intresting angle
 
Posted by Krenim (Member # 22) on :
 
Well, if you're looking for Borg and Romulan "unseen" stuff, I'd like to see something about the Borg attacks on the Romulan Neutral Zone outposts mentioned in "The Neutral Zone." After all, it was the first sign the Borg were in local space. And I'd like to see some mention of how the Romulans handled the Borg invasions of the Federation. After all, most maps put the Romulan Empire in-between the Federation and the Delta Quadrant. Do they give Starfleet a heads-up if they detect a cube on the way?
 
Posted by AndrewR (Member # 44) on :
 
I'd say they'd give a 'heads up' if the Cube or what ever shape was passing through their space - but as we saw in BOBW - re Wolf 359 the cube came from the other direction!

To be brutally honest, Mojo - we don't REALLY know much about the Romulans OR the Borg...

I'd like to see a Romulan ship from the movies era... and the Enterprise C era... I've got to say they CAN NOT be the same as the Warbirds we see in TNG/DS9/Voy.

How about some scenes of the Obsidian Order/Tal Shi'ar decimation by the Dominion from "The Die Is Cast" - of course there'd be the little Deffie flitting in an out around there.

How about a really cool clear shot of the scene in "The Neutral Zone" with the extra large Warbird...

Oh Oh or a scene from that 'report' in Best of Both Worlds where 30 Warbirds were amassing along the Neutral Zone!

What about a Borg ship assimilating a Kazon ship - but then getting really pissed off at what they had just assimilated - realising it just decreased their collective IQ by about 50! ;o)
 
Posted by MinutiaeMan (Member # 444) on :
 
Here's my ideas about the Tomed Incident:

There has to be some kind of tit-for-tat involved in this situation, because if there were a Romulan attack on a Federation outpost, that would merely justify the Federation's research in cloaking devices, by putting Starfleet on par with Romulan ships -- which have always had a serious leg up thanks to the cloak.

I believe that the Tomed Incident involves a territorial dispute. Consider that when the Earth-Romulan War was concluded in 2160, the treaty authors would not have divided up the entire galaxy, they'd just have drawn a line in local space to separate the two powers.

But as both sides expanded, they got past the edge of the neutral zone, and the two sides came into contact again. There might have been some sort of interim agreement which extended the end of the NZ in a straight line, but after about 50 or 100 light-years, the border could get very fuzzy.

Anyway, I believe that the Federation received the territory in question, in exchange for their promise not to use cloaking devices.

The Tomed Incident would merely be the bloodiest battle that was fought over this territory around 2311. (I'm thinking that this could have been nearly a minor war, before the treaty was arranged and the Romulans went into isolation.)

~~~~~

Here's a really cool idea for an image: we saw the interior of the Borg cube's hangar bay in "Collective," when the Delta Flyer got swallowed.

What if you showed a bunch of Federation ships captured in the hangar bay? You could say that the image was recovered from a Starfleet marker buoy inside the wreckage of the Borg cube in Earth orbit. (From the end of "The Best of Both Worlds.")
 
Posted by Mark Nguyen (Member # 469) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mojo:

Klingons over Organia? Already have a temp image of that :-)



This is me doing the happy dance. Kickass, Mojo!

Mark
 
Posted by Harry (Member # 265) on :
 

Woohoo!

[ January 02, 2002: Message edited by: Harry ]
 
Posted by CaptainMike (Member # 709) on :
 
And at organia we should see Klingon scouts that are similar to birds-of-prey, but show less Romulan design influence (less birdlike wings, no feather painting, less 'green', etc).. perhaps show the one that was destroyed by Enterprise (it was just an animated blob)
 
Posted by Reverend (Member # 335) on :
 
Ah, the fabled Blur'el-Class [Wink]
 
Posted by Mojo (Member # 536) on :
 
- Re: Post-movie era Romulan ships: Well, I'm going to need SOMETHING to attack Narendra III now, aren't I? ;-)

- Interesting, I don't remember that line about 30 Romulan Warbirds in BOBW. Where was it?

- Tell me more about the Klingon blur ship! Was it actually mentioned in the show as a different class vessel? And I assume it was the ship that the Enterprise destroyed in the beginning of the episode... it would be nice to have a pre-movie Bird of Prey...

- I've been toying with the idea of showing a Borg Cube in a Tholian Web. I just have that image stuck in my head :-)
 
Posted by Sol System (Member # 30) on :
 
I think the only description of that Klingon vessel was "scout," so it could presumably be whatever one wants it to be.
 
Posted by Harry (Member # 265) on :
 
Just now another fanboyish dream came to mind: I want to see Olympic hospital ships! I don't care how and where, as long as I can see that beautiful design [Smile] !

http://employees.csbsju.edu/rsorensen/modelcitizen/trekships/olympic/index.html
http://www.ex-astris-scientia.org/scans/sfvarious1.htm
 
Posted by Mark Nguyen (Member # 469) on :
 
Regarding the 30 Romulan ships in BOBW, there was no such reference. Hanson's line was to the effect that "The Klingons are sending warships. Hell, we've even thought of opening up talks with the Romulans". There is no implication that the Romulans ever sent ships, nor that the Klingon fleet arrived at Wolf 359 in time to help. Some people seem to think that the 39 ships lost at Wolf 359 include some Klingon ships, but there's no evidence to prove it and it's generaly regarded as fanboy hopefulness. [Smile]

Mark

[ January 02, 2002: Message edited by: Mark Nguyen ]
 
Posted by TSN (Member # 31) on :
 
Actually, the images in "Unity" suggest that there were Klingon BoPs @ W359. I'm sure it could be interpreted otherwise if you really wanted to, though.

As for the Tomed Incident, I would say that it couldn't possibly be a simple Romulan attack. The Feds must have been doing something they shouldn't have (or it must have seemed that way, and they couldn't disprove it). Otherwise, they wouldn't have given in to a concession like a complete lack of cloaking devices forever.
 
Posted by Dukhat (Member # 341) on :
 
quote:
originally posted by Mojo: Re: Post-movie era Romulan ships: Well, I'm going to need SOMETHING to attack Narendra III now, aren't I?


Thank you, thank you, thank you. In both fan artwork and novels, people seem to have the impression that the ships which attacked both Narendra III and Khitomer were D'Deridex class, when that's blatantly not the case.

Minor ST:X spoilers ahead...
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Although I'm itching to see what this new Scimitar warbird looks like, I'm also interested in what a post-movie era Romulan ship would look like. Would it be a pure Romulan design, or would it have Klingon design throwbacks from when the Romulans were using Klingon designs?

[ January 02, 2002: Message edited by: Dukhat ]
 
Posted by Mojo (Member # 536) on :
 
I definately believe the Klingons were at Wolf 359, and this plays a major role in the book. You'll just have to wait and see :-)

For the new Romulan ship, I'm working with some of Trek's most seasoned designers (as will be the case with all new models).

Who, I ain't saying!
 
Posted by Reverend (Member # 335) on :
 
-The Klingon Blur Scout was only seen as a glowing silhouette...checkout this thread

-As for the Post-movie era Romulan ships, there are a few rather nice looking designs on the computer game "Klingon Academy" you might want the thieve one of them for the occasion, or just build one similar.

-I think the line about "30 Romulan ships" was from "All Good things"

-As for what the Tomed was about...what if it involved another one of Starfleet’s little renegade Admirals using a federation, or a captured romulan cloak installed in a prototype ship, causing general mayhem and destruction. In the end Starfleet could have been forced to hunt him/her down.
It would be a nice change to have Starfleet doing the attacking for a change, also it would explain why the federation promised not to develop cloaking technology any further and why the romulans went all secretive and isolationist.

-I agree, the Klingons could very well been at Wolf 359 at some point, there was defiantly shots of exploding klingons against a borg cube and we know that many have been assimilated. (Unity, Infinite Regress, Unimatrix One)

-One thing that I wouldn't mind seeing is the Battle of Maxia. Does anyone think that the Ferengi ship was a D'Kora-Class? Given that Picard should have recognised the configuration later on in "The Last Outpost" & "The Battle".
I feel another "new" design coming on ;-)

[ January 02, 2002: Message edited by: Reverend ]
 
Posted by Mark Nguyen (Member # 469) on :
 
All of 'em, I'd hope. [Wink]

I admit that the dialogue indicates that Klingons *could* have been at W359. It's just that the graveyeard scene doesn't conclusively support it, and I'm fairly certain that the episode wasn't supposed to show it that way. The footage in "Unity" is of course stock footage reuse, which could have been from anywhere.

But if Klingon ships are to be present, I would like at least some passing explanation as to why we don't see 'em in the graveyeard or battle scenes. One reason was that there were so few of them in the first place - less than, say, five or so could be easily lost in the mess. That, or they simply were blown to unidentifyable chunks of scrap. This would make sense with the smaller ships like BoPs, as we didn't see many (if any) "small" (Miranda-sized) ships in the graveyard scene.

Also, if you included D7/K'tinga class ships in the mix, you'd get around the problem of why we didn't see any green-coloured scrap in the mix. Grey Klingon ships mix better with the carnage. [Wink]

Mark

[ January 02, 2002: Message edited by: Mark Nguyen ]
 
Posted by Mojo (Member # 536) on :
 
Do we know for sure if the Farragut was destroyed by Klingons surrounding the episode "Nor the Battle to the Strong?"

I don't have the ep with me and it will be a few days until I can get it.

Any other info you guys have on Klingon/Fed conflict following "Way of the Warrior" would also be handy!


Thanks
Mojo
 
Posted by Reverend (Member # 335) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mark Nguyen:
All of 'em, I'd hope. [Wink]

I admit that the dialogue indicates that Klingons *could* have been at W359. It's just that the graveyeard scene doesn't conclusively support it, and I'm fairly certain that the episode wasn't supposed to show it that way. The footage in "Unity" is of course stock footage reuse, which could have been from anywhere.

But if Klingon ships are to be present, I would like at least some passing explanation as to why we don't see 'em in the graveyeard or battle scenes. One reason was that there were so few of them in the first place - less than, say, five or so could be easily lost in the mess. That, or they simply were blown to unidentifyable chunks of scrap. This would make sense with the smaller ships like BoPs, as we didn't see many (if any) "small" (Miranda-sized) ships in the graveyard scene.

Also, if you included D7/K'tinga class ships in the mix, you'd get around the problem of why we didn't see any green-coloured scrap in the mix. Grey Klingon ships mix better with the carnage. [Wink]

Mark

[ January 02, 2002: Message edited by: Mark Nguyen ]



You could explane the lack of Klingon debris by saying that, in BOBW we diddn't see the whole graveyard, only a bit of it. This is a fair assumption anyway since there is no way that there were anywhere near as many as 39 hulks onscreen, there was no Ambassador, Miranda (I think), Excelsior or Oberth bits either. So we can say that there were infact Klingons at Wolf 359, and they got their arses kicked just like Starfleet.
 
Posted by Veers (Member # 661) on :
 
Mojo: I've never seen the episode, but I believe Sisko or someone did say the Farragut was destroyed in "Nor the Battle to the Strong."
 
Posted by MinutiaeMan (Member # 444) on :
 
Yes, the Farragut was destroyed in "Nor the Battle to the Strong."

A brief summary of the post WOTW Fed-Klingon conflict:

Things were tense but generally stable throughout most of season four, the Klingons had occupied a big chunk of Cardassian territory but nothing else.

Then came the big fight in "Broken Link," when Gowron reclaimed the Archanis Sector for the Klingon Empire (a claim which had been relinquished approximately 100 years previously -- probably at the Khitomer Conference). I got the impression that Archanis was a fairly important part of Federation territory, so by the beginning of Season 5 ("Apocalypse Rising") the Federation was in outright war with the Klingons.

Gowron called off the war when Sisko's team exposed the changeling at the end of "Apocalypse Rising," but there were still skirmishes and other fights on some of the border worlds for a while.

One personal wish: I would LOVE to see a CGI version of the New Orleans Class thrown into the mix. The New Orleans-class USS Rutledge was mentioned as being a participant in the Klingon War in "Nor the Battle to the Strong," and so that would be a great occasion to toss in an image of every treknologist's favorite background starship. [Smile]
 
Posted by Ace (Member # 389) on :
 
Anyone else think the Federation/Cardassian War in the early to mid 24th century would be a great "unseen frontier" to show?

From what we know, it was basically like World War I (with the Dominion War being Star Trek's World War II) and it would be great to see the early TNG ships in their prime. Ships like the Ambassador and New Orleans classes.

Speaking of wars, is there any way you could include maps and diagrams of battles like the displays we saw in DS9?
 
Posted by Mojo (Member # 536) on :
 
What sort of DS9 diagrams are you talking about?

I do plan to have maps of things like neutral zone borders and the locale of Wolf 359, done in the 3D style of Astrometrics.

Elaborate, please!


Mojo


PS: I know everyone is in love with the New Orleans class ship, so I *DO* plan to have one built...
 
Posted by Reverend (Member # 335) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by MinutiaeMan:
One personal wish: I would LOVE to see a CGI version of the New Orleans Class thrown into the mix. The New Orleans-class USS Rutledge was mentioned as being a participant in the Klingon War in "Nor the Battle to the Strong," and so that would be a great occasion to toss in an image of every treknologist's favorite background starship. [Smile]



I second that! It would be great to see the Rutledge! its a tough ship with a long history.

I recall a bit in "Apocalypse Rising" about a Klingon bragging how he beamed on to the bridge of a Starfleet ship and killed the Benzite Captain named Laporin (breathing tubes ripped off or something) there was also a Tellarite helmsman involved.

Some info on the ships involved in the Klingon War

U.S.S. ARMSTRONG
NCC-57537
CHALLENGER-CLASS
Ambushed by Klingon battle group in 2373, Docked at DS9 for repairs and medical aid.
OPERATIONAL

U.S.S. DRAKE
NCC-70956
ANDROMEDA-CLASS
Ambushed by Klingon battle group in 2373, Docked at DS9 for repairs and medical aid .
OPERATIONAL

U.S.S. FARRAGUT
NCC-60597
NEBULA-CLASS
Rescued Enterprise-D crew from Veridian III in 2371, Destroyed by Klingon forces in 2373 near the Lembatta cluster while enroute to evacuate Federation colonists from Ajilon Prime.
DESTROYED

U.S.S. RUTLEDGE
NCC-57295
NEW ORLEANS-CLASS
Commanded by Captain Benjamin Maxwell during the Cardassian War, Miles O'Brian once served as Tactical Officer, First ship on the scene after the Setlik III massacure, Partisipated in counter attack against Klingon Forces near Ajilon Prime with the Tecumseh in 2373.
OPERATIONAL

U.S.S. TECUMSEH
NCC-14934
EXCELSIOR-CLASS
Commanded by Captain Raymond, Fought during the Cardassian War, Partisipated in counter attack against Klingon Forces near Ajilon Prime with the Rutledge in 2373, Suffered losses in 2374 during the Dominion war.
OPERATIONAL

U.S.S. TRIAL
NCC-UNKNOWN
UNKNOWN (Its either an Excelsior or a Miranda)
A part of the task force of six ships under Admiral Haster that responded to the Klingon threat at DS9 in 2372
OPERATIONAL

U.S.S. VENTURE
NCC-71854
GALAXY-CLASS
Commanded by Admiral Hastur, lead the fleet of six Starships that responded to the Klingon threat at DS9 in 2372, Participated in Operation Return and the invasion of Chin'toka in 2374.
OPERATIONAL

[ January 02, 2002: Message edited by: Reverend ]
 
Posted by Shik (Member # 343) on :
 
Mojo, your mention of the Tholians brings up other TOS ideas for me:

--Joint exercises with the First Federation
--Peacekeeping patrols near the Gorn
--That Altairian inauguration from "Amok Time"
--Garth's use of the Cochrane deceleration manuever at Tau Ceti
--The Battle of Donatu V
--The peace mission to Axanar
--The aftermath of Tarsus IV, when ships arrived after Kodos' edict (this could tie into a modification of the call above for hospital ships)
 
Posted by Mojo (Member # 536) on :
 
Reverend:

Thanks! That will come in handy.

Can someone give me a little shorthand history on the New Orleans so I can better understand why eveyone is so enamored of it?


Mojo
 
Posted by Sol System (Member # 30) on :
 
I don't think it really has any. It's just we tend to get overly excited about ships that have never been seen clearly onscreen.
 
Posted by Sol System (Member # 30) on :
 
Er...that is, unless you're talking about the model itself, which was a Galaxy-esque thing built to suggest a Galaxy design family extending earlier into the 24th century.

Uh, yeah.
 
Posted by Shik (Member # 343) on :
 
For my part, it's because I like small ships. Yes, I love the larger cruisers & explorers, but you can get a little more "bang for your buck" with a bunch of smaller frigates, destroyers, scouts, & escorts.

We know the NEWs were in service by 2347 (ref. "The Wounded") & that the lowest known rego is 57295 for Rutledge; I'd like to think that they entered service somewhere between 2339 & 2344. We know that as frigates they have to be like a "mini-explorer," bridging the gaps between small single-mission less-capable assets like destroyers & escorts and the large multimission cruisers & explorers we see on a regular basis. Heavily armed for a midsized vessel, they'd need stamina as well, but not be "over the top." I'd imagine special attention would be paid to sensors, weapons, & speed as well as related systems--fast enough to get into places (& get out when it gets too hot; this is the idea behind my "rapid response frigate" idea) with the armanent to make a short-term show of force & the sensors to handle it all.

I've imagined them as being sent into hot spots during peacetime, pulling patrol duties along borders & spacelanes, perhaps even handling limited exploration. During wartime they'd be fleet information coordinators like modern-day AEGIS-equipped naval vessels, perhaps even flagships thanks to this intel coordination ability; they'd also handle convoy duties as well as minor strikes or composing major fleet pickets.

But that's me.
 
Posted by Mojo (Member # 536) on :
 
If someone could give me a rundown of what situations (other than Wolf 359) New Orleans class vessels have been involved in, it would help me figure out what to do with it in the book!

In other news, I just watched "Nor the Battle to the Strong" and it gives me a WHOLE lot of ideas for just the kind of images I'd like to present. LOTS of great, unseen stuff implied here.

Has there ever been an official design for the Starfleet Hopper? Has it been mentioned in any other episodes?

I assume the guys on the ground were Starfleet Marines. Have they ever been mentioned by name on the show? Has there ever been another instance of these guys in black sweaters with the red stripe?

I'd LOVE to do an image of that last Marine holding off Klingon ground troops as the Hopper makes its escape in the distance...


Mojo
 
Posted by Harry (Member # 265) on :
 
As for the Hopper, you could make someone really happy with looking at this: http://www.ex-astris-scientia.org/asdb/hopper.htm

As for the NO:

-Cardassian War (I imagine the NO being the Defiant of that war)
-Tzenkethi Wars
-Narendra III, if it is not too early?
-Perhaps one of the ships responding to the Khitomer massacre of 2246, with the (Excelsior class?) USS Intrepid (which carried Rozhenko)
-Responding to the Tholian attack on a starbase, mentioned in "Unnatural Selection" (TNG) as being around 2252.
-Talarian conflicts (mentioned in "Suddenly Human")
-The "Conspiracy" (TNG) alien invasion of SF Command. Both the Thomas Paine NCC-65530 and the Renegade NCC-63102 are part of the secret meeting on Dytallix B. The Thomas Paine was also part of Picard's blockade in "Redemption II" (TNG).
 
Posted by Harry (Member # 265) on :
 
Random Thoughts:

- The future Romulans leaving Vulcan in in huge multi-generation ships.
- The Mirror Universe war between the Terran Empire and the Alliance
- A Mirror Universe story in the ENT timeframe? Perhaps the upcoming Terran Empire at war with Vulcan?
- The NCC-1701 undergoing refit from pilot-version to series-version
- Early "Valiant"/ENT-intro style warp ships, making the first Earth trip to Vulcan.
 
Posted by AndrewR (Member # 44) on :
 
I must APOLOGISE for my incorrect comment about the 30 warbirds amassing along the neutral zone - that was indeed from All Good Things... OOPS! [Wink]

The secret meeting at Dytallix B - yeah that's a NO place - 1 Galaxy, 1 Ambassador and 2 NO's were there.

I second the opinion that the Ferengi ship at the Battle of Maxia was NOT a D'Kora class Marauder.

Never ever seen or heard of hoppers ever again after 'nor the...'

What about seeing the rest of the Erewhon Class from "Paradise"!?! It was a 'Jim Martin' design I think.

And if there is any earlier Cardassian War ships shown... no Keldon or Galor class ships! (Actually a nice 'real' view of the first version of Voyager (seen in the Art of Star Trek) would be nice - I LIKED that design! And I think it was built as an 'older ship' if my early rumours from mags about Voyager are correct. The opening of Voyager was originally going to show Janeway in the Cardassian Wars - and that Voyager was not a brand-spanking new ship. The scene mentioned was later brought up between her and Harry Kim I believe.

I'd like to see some of those other ships in actual scenes - the ships seen in the background of BOBW and Unification - the prototypes for the Excelsior and the E-refit etc.

Re the New Orleans again - it's rarely seen in pics... there's a black and white version in The first encylopaedia... a redone version in colour in the second encyclopaedia and then there is the only other three pictures floating around the net - the pic of it hanging up in someone's office - the scorched ship... another of it on a desk next to a Challenger and one docked to DS9 - mentioned recently in another thread. This seems to be from some abandoned effect.
 
Posted by Reverend (Member # 335) on :
 
New Orleans Class Starships:

U.S.S. RUTLEDGE
NCC-57295
NEW ORLEANS-CLASS
Commanded by Captain Benjamin Maxwell during the Cardassian War, Miles O'Brian once served as Tactical Officer, First ship on the scene after the Setlik III massacure, Partisipated in counter attack against Klingon Forces near Ajilon Prime with the Tecumseh in 2373.
OPERATIONAL

U.S.S. RENEGADE
NCC-63102
NEW ORLEANS-CLASS
Commanded by Captain Tryla Scott, Met Enterprise at Dytallix B in 2364.
OPERATIONAL

U.S.S. KYUSHU
NCC-65491
NEW ORLEANS-CLASS
Lost at the battle of Wolf 359 in 2367.
DESTROYED

U.S.S. THOMAS PAINE
NCC-65530
NEW ORLEANS-CLASS
Commanded by Captain Rixx, Met Enterprise at Dytallix B in 2364, Apart of Picard's tachyon detection grid in 2368, Assigned to diplomatic missions to Alderaan and Epsilon Aslinti III in 2369.
OPERATIONAL

[ January 03, 2002: Message edited by: Reverend ]
 
Posted by CaptainMike (Member # 709) on :
 
the most information about the calsses design can probably be found at Bernd's site:
New Orleans Reconstruction
and people have been building their own in plastic
USS Honshu site
and in 3DTrekmania

since the ship was a Galaxy-kitbash (with the windows rearranged to make it half the size) the saucer, nacelles and deflector are just scaled versions of the Galaxy-model. it'd be interesting to flesh out a new 3D version that maybe has some variations on that theme to make it look less Galaxy-like (thats what the top and bottom pods were added for, i recall)
 
Posted by Dat (Member # 302) on :
 
I'd have to say the NO class was designed after the Galaxy class. I believe the TNG TM states the Galaxy class was a revolutionary design, suggesting it was the first design of it's family members. Since work on the Galaxy class began in 2344, the NO class must have been designed after that year. Ships of the NO class have lower registries because even though construction started after the Galaxy class, they were launched and commissioned earlier than the Galaxy herself (due to being a smaller ships and faster to complete). This means there would be no NO at Narendra and the Cardassian War(s) happened after 2344.
 
Posted by Reverend (Member # 335) on :
 
Correct me if I'm worng but I thought that the Enterprise-C was the ONLY federation ship at Nerandra III, so while the New Orleans could have been around at the time, there couldn't have been one at that perticular battle.


I think of the New Orleans as being one of several "mini galaxys" that were developed from the early design work from the Galaxy class project the others being Challenger, Cheyenne and Springfield, I think the nebula would have been a 3rd project, seperate from the minni series but still connected to the Galaxy.


But what would be the justification for this? Well these ships would instantly benefit from the cutting edge hull shapes and warp field..blah blah blah that were being developed at Utopia Planitia.

Also these ships could have been study vessles, to test out the new hull shapes at 1/2 scale, later the more sucessful ones would have been given propper names, regs, a class designation and for the New Orleans (and possibly the Cheyenne too) full production status.
This would explain why there are apparently so few Challengers and Springfields and why they were all apparently hanging around Sector 001 when the borg attacked.

[ January 03, 2002: Message edited by: Reverend ]
 
Posted by J (Member # 608) on :
 
Someone used 22** when they should have used 23**.

Anyway, the NO should have a full history dating back to the mid 2330's at the least. The ship was definately around by the mid to late 2340's when the first Cardassian War occured [namely the Setlik 3 incident and surrounding time period].

The E-C was the only ship at Neranda 3.

The GCS was certainly not the first vessel of it's period. We already have evidence that the New Orleans was around before the NX GCS was launched in 2353. All indications are that every GCS-like ship came before the GCS itself. From the lowliest kitbash [Niagara, Challenger] to the more respectable kitbash [Cheyenne, Springfield (without that lower pod if it turns out to be real), and New Orleans], to the recognizable Nebula.

That's all I can remember, the rest should be corrected by others
 
Posted by TSN (Member # 31) on :
 
As for why everyone likes the NO so much... I think it's due to the fact that we like background ships so much, and the NO is the one we've known about the longest. There was a photo in the first Encyclopedia, but we had no accurate designs for any of the other W359 kitbashes until recently (except the Cheyenne).

Also, and arguement could be made that the NO is the best-designed of the W359 ships. Although I think I would rank it alongside the Cheyenne and Springfield...
 
Posted by Reverend (Member # 335) on :
 
Its definatly the best looking, for me. It just looks really tough and capable, more so than the Defiant IMHO. The Cheyenne would be a close second in my book.
 
Posted by Michael_T (Member # 144) on :
 
It is a very good looking background ship, too bad that it hasn't been seen since the mid 1990's though.
 
Posted by Dat (Member # 302) on :
 
quote:
The GCS was certainly not the first vessel of it's period. We already have evidence that the New Orleans was
around before the NX GCS was launched in 2353. All indications are that every GCS-like ship came before the GCS
itself. From the lowliest kitbash [Niagara, Challenger] to the more respectable kitbash [Cheyenne, Springfield
(without that lower pod if it turns out to be real), and New Orleans], to the recognizable Nebula.



And this is so because the Galaxy was designed first, but is also the largest of the family. All these other classes were based on Galaxy components but were smaller due to scaling down or removal of certain parts. These classes are smaller and even though designed after the Galaxy, they were completed prior to Galaxy. Hence seen before Galaxy and have lower regos. I'm just saying this is possible when Galaxy was designed first.

And the Chronology puts Setlik III at 2347 keeping in line with what I said earlier the earliest possible dates of when the NO class would be in service and when the Cardassian Wars took place.

Oh, BTW, Capt Garrett didn't seem to recognize the Galaxy class design when she saw it in "Yesterday's Enterprise" (and she came from 2344) so I would assume the NO class would come after that year.

[ January 03, 2002: Message edited by: Dat ]
 
Posted by OnToMars (Member # 621) on :
 
I'm of the philosophy that the NO and family were designed, built, and flown as precursers to GCS. The GCS is more than a new ship class, it is, like the TNGTM states, a revolutionary design and technology testbed. It is more logical to design smaller ships to make sure the technology and design are viable than to do it the other way around. It seems like putting all your eggs in one basket that way.

I also believe that Starfleet has a policy of building more than one ship to test new design theories. Take the Buran for instance. By my speculation, engineers hypothesized that placing the warp nacelles on dorsal and ventral elevations along the centerline would increase maneuverability. By warp (hyperdynamic, I call it) principles, they knew that this would also decrease it's stability, much as the principle in aerodynamics holds that the narrower the wingspan the more maneuvarable but less stable the air craft is. Ultimately, perhaps it was too difficult to control to be viable, but Starfleet engineering policy dictated that it be done at least twice to validate the data. Much like the scientific method requires any experiment to be repeatable in order to be valid.

Thus, you have a bona fide class of ships, but a reasonable explanation as to why they're not seen around. it also explains why one was hanging around Sector 001.
 
Posted by Reverend (Member # 335) on :
 
I think there's an echo in this place.
 
Posted by Ace (Member # 389) on :
 
About the maps and diagrams I was referring to in DS9, I meant like the diagrams and maps of where ships were and fleet movements. A good example would be the diagram of Operation Return showing the planned attack to recapture DS9.

It would be interesting to see a "historical" map of this type that you could say was made after the battles like in military reference books.

One question: how big in terms of content do you plan this book to be?
 
Posted by Mojo (Member # 536) on :
 
What episode was that map in? I'd like to take a look.

The maps and diagrams I'm planning on having are inspired by the ones often seen in National Geographic - they help set the scene for the story. It sounds like what you're talking about.

What is the scope of the book? Think of it as a Time/Life history of specific areas of the Star Trek universe. Right now there's a volume from Life magazine on the stands called "Our Finest Hour," a special look at WWII.

It's more or less my current inspiration.

Take a look at that, and you'll have a good idea of what UNSEEN FRONTIER is going to be like.

Just a lot more color!


Mojo
 
Posted by Veers (Member # 661) on :
 
Mojo: you can see the map of the fleet movements in "Favor the Bold," near Sisko when he's talking to Admiral Ross. It's also seen in a large picture near the beginning of the Deep Space Nine Technical Manual.
 
Posted by Harry (Member # 265) on :
 
I believe the maps and diagrams in question are of the type shown on Star Trek Dimension.
 
Posted by AndrewR (Member # 44) on :
 
Mojo - except for the simplest of maps - getting into maps might be a MINEFIELD - there are SO many wierd inconsistancies.

I wish each page was imbedded with a movable picture - so those Astrometrics pics could come to life and show us the maps in 3d. So many people (including myself) who try and map the Trek universe forget that we are dealing with THREE dimensions - which makes the map making VERY difficult.

Who was it that said they thought that the Federation would look like an amoeba with a nucleus - the core worlds - and then pseudopoda stretching out to encompass outer worlds - with large gaps inbetween and that the Klingons the Romulans, Cardassians, Talarians, Tholians, Gorn, Tzenkethi, Sheliak, Breen, Ferengi etc would intermingal with this large 'amoeba' on in all three dimensions!

I think though I have a rough idea in my head about DS9... OK picture this...

DS9 is in front of you the segment we see when the Defiant and Martok's ship are leaving in "Call To Arms"... look through this and you'd be looking towards Bajor and towards Bajor'a'heal or what ever the Bajor sun is called. on your right and up a tiny bit would be the wormhole. Past Bajor - in that direction you're looking would be towards the centre of the Galaxy. To your left would be The Cardassian Union and the Badlands would be to your left at about 10 o'clock. at 6 o'clock - looking AWAY from DS9 you'd be looking back to Federation Territory. to your left would be Klingon and Romulan Territory and now (seeing as we've turned around) to your RIGHT would be Cardassian territory - but at about 2 o'clock would be the beginning of the DMZ.

I'm sure I've lost everyone [Wink]
 
Posted by Reverend (Member # 335) on :
 
Sounds like you'd need a map to find your way around that map [Wink]

Mojo: I just read the Prologue from "Ashes of Eden" (by Shatner himself) and I think it is an excelent candidate for your book.
It depicts the honour guard arriving at Veridian III with Spock to pick up Kirk's body to be brought back to Earth. It also mentions the opperation to dismantle and remove the hulk of the Enterprise, I think both of these images would look really nice if you can manage it.

If you don't have the book I could probably to an OCR scan of the appropriate sections of text.

[ January 04, 2002: Message edited by: Reverend ]
 
Posted by Mojo (Member # 536) on :
 
I think I have 'Ashes,' thanks!

And that Star Trek Map page is awesome! A huge help! Thanks for the link.

The maps I include in the book are going to be to help the reader get a general idea of what's what - they are not meant to be cartography-accurate!
 
Posted by Reverend (Member # 335) on :
 
There's more about the Enterprise crash site in the 2nd book, "Return". Obviously the stories in these books couldn't possibly have a happened, but these aftermath scenes are quite plausable...

$-Book Spoiler-$

$
$
$
$
$
$
$
$
$

Except for the bit about the Farragut being destroyed in orbit.
 
Posted by Mojo (Member # 536) on :
 
I've heard some good arguments, but I'm still not convinced.

I'd like to hear more opinions regarding the "Did the Borg come from Decker-Ilia-V'Ger" concept.

It may have only been 75 years before Kirk, but as we have seen Borg tech moves at a very rapid pace. The cubes changed drastically between "Q Who" and Voyager, as did the look of the Drones and the interior of the cubes, so I'm prepared to buy that they covered a lot of ground and did the bulk of their assymilating during those years.

Unless, of course, I hear some good points to the contrary!

Pipe up!


Mojo
 
Posted by Sol System (Member # 30) on :
 
1.) Guinan suggests the Borg were in existence for thousands (if not tens of thousands) of years prior to "Q Who."

2.) The scary cobraish aliens from Voyager mentioned that they had Borg in their time, 900 years or so prior to that episode.

3.) Opinion! TMP and the Borg...arc, as it were, have almost nothing in common thematically. If we were forced to find a single theme for the Borg, it might indeed be the potential danger of technology, or, perhaps, the dangers of mob mentality, or what have you. None of which appeared in TMP. V'ger didn't act like the Borg. More importantly, it wasn't looking for the same thing out of life. V'ger wanted to find God and merge with it. (Perhaps V'Ger was a Sufi?) The Borg don't seem to have any particular interest in their origins. Or, rather, the origin of the Borg doesn't seem to inform their present actions in that way.

4.) First Contact suggests that the Borg were organic first, and then technological, rather than the other way around.

5.) Personally, I'm extremely apathetic to the idea that everything needs to be tied together anyway. Sure, there are good stories to be told by connecting previously unrelated events, and that can create a richer fictional tapestry. But shoehorning one plot into another can just as often come across as...hamfisted. There's nothing to suggest that V'ger and the Borg are related other than a half-joke made by Roddenberry many years ago.

6.) Lastly, and again personally, I favor the idea of the Borg being just like everyone else prior to their "unification" because it makes them more than just really mean aliens with a curious origin story. Human beings are never going to meet up with a giant living spaceship constructed around a Voyager space probe. But we may very well find ourselves transformed by technological progress in ways we can't yet imagine.

[ January 06, 2002: Message edited by: Sol System ]
 
Posted by AndrewR (Member # 44) on :
 
There's no way that the Borg came from V'Ger/Decker/Illia - as mentioned previously. I'd just like to add, that V'Ger's mission (or more specifically Voyager 6) was to "Learn all that there was to learn" - V'Ger accomplished this - and it had returned to it's creator - and as McCoy says there's nothing left for it to learn... except what humans can understand something else OUTSIDE the universe - other dimensions etc. It (V'Ger) could only move on by adding a human element... Decker.

Andrew

P.S.

And the only reason that there has been any change in Borg ships - is that the Producers wanted more shapes for more toys. Cubes do me fine - make the more mysterious especially when Data couldn't determine whether or not the Cube from BOBW was the same Cube they had encountered at System J25.
 
Posted by CaptainMike (Member # 709) on :
 
I consider it possible that Voyager6 might have been altered by the Borg in some way.. but the link has to end there.. to satisfy the bounds of the theme and story, VGer must grow and become sentient on its own, and the events of TMP couldnt and didnt have any backwash effect on the Borg themselves

1) assumption: The Borg planet was the machine planet in TMP
a) The Borg were already well established at this point. this can't be their origin, unless you involve time travel (ah, where were will and ilia going...?)
b) VGer was not assimilated, per se. Obviously there was no communication with the Borg after the probe contacted them, or inclusion into their group mind. VGer was alone, and the Borg remained ignorant of VGers actions.. its possible VGer was enhanced by Borg tech & nanoprobes & what have you, developed into a much more powerful probe,and struck out on its own
c) The 'evolution' of VGer had no effect on the Borg milieu. If VGer originated at Borg, it couldnt have gone back..

with all these outcomes to satisfy, the link between the Borg and VGer becomes tenuous but possible. But its very thin. I like to think of it this way though.
 
Posted by MinutiaeMan (Member # 444) on :
 
I used to like the idea of the Borg being the origin of the "machine planet" in TMP, but I realized...

Why would the Borg NOT assimilate Voyager 6?

In any case, the aliens/machines/whatever MUST have accessed Voyager 6's databanks and gotten its information, because they knew what the probe's mission was. Therefore they must have learned at least a bit about Earth.

And if the aliens that modified V'ger were indeed the Borg... then that would mean that the Borg knew about Earth and Humanity much, much sooner than we previously thought.
 
Posted by Mojo (Member # 536) on :
 
REQUEST!

I need good reference pics of damaged starships, preferably not framegrabs.

I found a really good one of a damaged Oberth class on Astris Scientia, but I could use more shots of models that have had 'battle damage' added to them.

I would appreciate any links!


Thanks
Mojo
 
Posted by Sol System (Member # 30) on :
 
http://www.ex-astris-scientia.org/articles/wolf359/princeton-model.jpg
 
Posted by Harry (Member # 265) on :
 
http://www.ex-astris-scientia.org/models/1701c-studio-top.jpg
http://www.ex-astris-scientia.org/schematics/neworleans/neworleans-mechanics.jpg
http://www.ex-astris-scientia.org/scans/voy-tyoh.jpg
 
Posted by Harry (Member # 265) on :
 
http://www.ex-astris-scientia.org/schematics/neworleans/neworleans-convention.jpg

Some very bad ones, but the spaceframe is interesting:
http://www.ex-astris-scientia.org/articles/wolf359/nebula-melbourne-top.jpg
http://www.ex-astris-scientia.org/articles/wolf359/nebula-melbourne-bottom.jpg

http://www.ex-astris-scientia.org/articles/wolf359/enterprise-trashed.jpg
http://www.ex-astris-scientia.org/articles/wolf359/enterprise-trashed_saucer.jpg

Not destroyed, but they do show the spaceframe structures:
http://www.stguardian.to/starbase/up.jpg
http://www.stguardian.to/starbase/up01.jpg
 
Posted by mrneutron (Member # 524) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mojo:
I'd like to hear more opinions regarding the "Did the Borg come from Decker-Ilia-V'Ger" concept.

Mojo



1. As established elsewhere, the Borg were around long before Voyager 6 was luanched.

2. The Borg aren't living machines, they're cybernetic organisms.

3. V'ger has memories of its home planet, but it doesn't have an inkling about carbon units or their functioning. Unlikely if it were of Borg manufacture.

4. Spock relates that he "saw V'ger's planet." He mentions "unbelieveable technology" but he apparently got not an inkling of biological life.

5. Although it's just his opinion, Spock says the machine inhabitants "made Voyager 6 into all this" which implies V'ger was made as we saw it, which is wayyyyy beyond Borg technology as shown. (V'ger's consciousness is another matter entirely.)

6. Borg behavior is inconsistent with what V'ger's planet did for Voyager 6.


Maurice
 
Posted by Mojo (Member # 536) on :
 
Thanks for the damaged ships links - they were perfect!
 
Posted by Mojo (Member # 536) on :
 
Thanks for the damaged ships links - they were perfect!
 
Posted by Mojo (Member # 536) on :
 
MOJO NEEDS IMAGE CAPTURE PRODUCTION ASSISTANT!

Ok, so maybe you're not a model builder but you still would like to help out with "The Unseen Frontier."

I need some serious help with screen captures from a whole bunch of episodes (mostly Next Gen & Voyager, some DS9). I'm using them to do the initial layout for the book, but right now I have so many other things to do, I can't find the time to sit with a VHS machine and grab frames.

If anyone out there is good at capping high quality images (640X480) and has good sources for the episodes (preferably commercially released tapes, but I'll take what I can get) please let me know if you're interested in helping the cause!

In return you will receive credit in the book and a free copy. I will also throw in a copy of Starship Spotter and a 2001 Ships of the Line calendar, which is impossible to find anymore.

I may also be able to pay a bit of money (a hundred or two) because I don't want anyone to work for free, but that depends on how many folks actually end up pitching in. I'd prefer to have one person do it all for consistancy's sake.

Please let me know!


Thanks
Mojo


PS: If it comes down to someone willing to do the work but they don't have the eps, I may be able to arrange for Pocket Books to loan them the tapes.
 
Posted by Mark Nguyen (Member # 469) on :
 
I'll do it in a heartbeat, but I live in Canada where international laws may be tricky for this sort of thing (being paid, that is). If we can work around that sort of thing, I'd be happy to help out.

And if I can't, I hope you'll grant me an "E" for effort. Can I have a free copy of the book anyway? [Smile]

Mark

[ January 07, 2002: Message edited by: Mark Nguyen ]
 
Posted by Mojo (Member # 536) on :
 
What the hell kind of law prevents you from doing freelance work???
 
Posted by mrneutron (Member # 524) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mojo:
For the new Romulan ship, I'm working with some of Trek's most seasoned designers (as will be the case with all new models).

Who, I ain't saying!



Well, it oughta be Andy "Warbird" Probert. [Smile] And I ain't saying that just cause he's my pal!
 
Posted by Mark Nguyen (Member # 469) on :
 
Ahh... If it's freelancing, it's probably fine then. I was confuzzling myself with more official work classifications, which have given friends of mine headaches in the past. You know I once had to become an employee of a high-school so I could do some design work for them?

Contact me, let's talk about it. [Smile]

[Oops, you already have. Thanks, man - let us wreak magic together]

Mark

[ January 07, 2002: Message edited by: Mark Nguyen ]
 
Posted by Reverend (Member # 335) on :
 
Mojo: I thought I should mention that your welcome to use my hopper design, if you like it, and it won't even cost you a dime! [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Harry (Member # 265) on :
 
^^ On that same note, you are more than allowed to use some of our ASDB stuff [Wink] .
 
Posted by AndrewR (Member # 44) on :
 
Some more damaged ships:

Ambassador
Constitution Refit
Defiant
Defiant 2
Defiant and Warbird
Defiant aftermath
Defiant First Contact
Jem'Hadar
Equinox
Excelsior
Odyssey
Klingons In Pieces
Miranda (TWoK)
Oberth (Hero Worship)

In 'The Continuing Mission' I think... there is a model pic of this with all the decks exposed.

Raven
Warbird and co.
DS9
Spacedock-Ent
Syndey

[ January 09, 2002: Message edited by: AndrewR ]
 
Posted by TSN (Member # 31) on :
 
Your Oberth link goes to the E-C pic.
 
Posted by AndrewR (Member # 44) on :
 
*Fixed*

Mojo... I had another idea - in the Art of Star Trek book there are a series of Story-boards by Andy Probert detailing a possible saucer separation of the E(Refit)... this could be something really cool to see with the actual ship - not just (hand) drawings.
 
Posted by AndrewR (Member # 44) on :
 
Mojo... Another idea - more of the beautiful Olympic class!!

[ January 09, 2002: Message edited by: AndrewR ]
 
Posted by Harry (Member # 265) on :
 
^^ The Olympic Class rulez! [Big Grin]

To boldy ask what no-one has asked before: which CGI models do you have at your disposal at the moment, if you are allowed/willing to tell us (spoiler-wise)?
I assume at least all the ones from the Spotter, and you have already named the the Ambassador, the Oberth and (some of) Franz Joseph's designs and the New Orleans (just wet my pants again).
I think it's a safe bet to say you also have access to the First Contact models (plus perhaps the Scout from Insurrection) and the ships from VOY. The Enterprise models are probably off-limits (for exclusiveness' sake).
Any more obscure ships in the docks? You said someone was reworking the Galaxy.. is digital kitbashing as easy as old-fashioned budget-saving kitbashing? Combining the New Orleans and the Galaxy you could probably throw together some more Wolf 359 shippies [Smile] . Messing around with Excelsior could give some of the DS9TM Frankensteins, although they are not quite anyone's favorite.
Whatever DID happen with that Norway mesh? We never saw it again after FC. Was it deleted? Lost? Did it went on strike? Did it quit it's job and started presenting quizshows
 
Posted by Mojo (Member # 536) on :
 
We never received a model for the Norway, so lost in the ether is stays.

We got the models of the Akira, Sabre and Steamrunner after FC, but the Akira was by far the only model really worth showing again (I'm speaking strictly technically - the quality of the model was worth bringing it back).

The list of models I have is quite extensive - technically, anything ever used in Trek is at my disposal, since I'm working on an official product. If I wanted, I could have the physical models dragged out of their crates so I could photograph them instead of doing CGI, but that would be very impractical and expensive. Those union guys get a lot of money for hauling those crates around!

The new models I have made will really come from what I need to serve the story. The ones I mentioned are needed not just for Wolf 359, but for other chapters I have planned where they need to be seen.

I should be getting my notes from Paramount tomorrow, so I'll know a lot more about where the book stands. Inevitably, they will ask for cuts and changes - it remians to be seen how extensive they are!

Keep your fingers crossed for me, folks!

Mojo
 
Posted by AndrewR (Member # 44) on :
 
Oh no the Norway is LOST!?! Who did you get the models off - was it the people who did FC? Was that ILM? This could be another major topic - the tracking down and retrieval of the Norway!!!!!!!!

Mojo, if you were given free range of stuff - were you given a list of what exists in crates!?! A list of the Frankenstiens from "A Call to Arms"!?! What the Deneva actually is!?!

Andrew
 
Posted by Mark Nguyen (Member # 469) on :
 
Fingers AND toes. [Smile]

Hmm... One wonders if anyone would mind if you put in an Akira or two in the background of whatever Wolf 359 images you'll be making. I'd love to see 'em there, and rationalize in at least ONE official source that it only makes sense for the Akira class ships to be around before Wolf 359...

Mark
 
Posted by Harry (Member # 265) on :
 
Akira's at Wolf 359 is a possibility, but not too much or too prominent, because the fleet looked like it had been put together very hastily from second-rate starships near 001.
Wow, the Norway really is gone. Yet another starship design dissapearing into the dark and mysterious vaults of Paramount [Smile] .
 
Posted by AndrewR (Member # 44) on :
 
Let's start a campaign to 'FIND THE NORWAY'.
 
Posted by Mark Nguyen (Member # 469) on :
 
Oh, that'd be perfect. Let's go storm ILM and rifle through all their units until we find the files of an minor ship that any number of qualified artists could do a better version of from scratch. [Smile] And look at the timing! They'll think that we're Star Wars fans looking for a scoop on Episode II, for chrissakes!

MArk
 
Posted by Harry (Member # 265) on :
 
I found it!
 
Posted by Reverend (Member # 335) on :
 
Hardy har har.
If only.... [Wink]
 
Posted by Harry (Member # 265) on :
 
BTW, Mojo, has Paramount already commented on Unseen Frontiers?
 
Posted by TSN (Member # 31) on :
 
Harry: I'm forced to wonder why the people who have that stuff would have their Windows set to display in Dutch. :-)

[ January 13, 2002: Message edited by: TSN ]
 
Posted by Sol System (Member # 30) on :
 
I'm just incredibly thrilled that Dutch for "cut" is "knippen." Best language ever.
 
Posted by Dax (Member # 191) on :
 
If anyone cares, my mother's Dutch. She's still good with the language too. Still got a whole bunch of relations up there as well.
(Damn typo)

[ January 15, 2002: Message edited by: Dax ]
 
Posted by TSN (Member # 31) on :
 
I suspect I still have some very distant relations in the Netherlands, too, but I don't know whether they're butch or not...
 
Posted by Shik (Member # 343) on :
 
"Uh, excuse me, sir? He specifically requested a couple of niggers? Well...to tell a family secret...my grandmother was a Dutch."
 
Posted by Reverend (Member # 335) on :
 
Dutch is nothing, try having relations who speak Welsh! It makes Klingon look like a mild throat infection. [Wink]
 
Posted by TSN (Member # 31) on :
 
I don't doubt that I have slightly-more-distant relations in Wales, too...
 
Posted by Mojo (Member # 536) on :
 
Sorry to interrupt this enlightening Starship discussion, but yes, as of today my outline has been approved by the good folks at Paramount and I shall be moving full steam ahead!

They even had some excellent suggestions...

Mojo
 
Posted by The_Tom (Member # 38) on :
 
Huzzah!
 
Posted by AndrewR (Member # 44) on :
 
Woohoo! (Are they Trek fans, or were they coming at it from a 'layman's' point-of-view!?! Congrats Mojo.
 
Posted by Mark Nguyen (Member # 469) on :
 
Indeed, this is a time of rejoicing. Much ass is going to be kicked by this book, and we're so grateful for a chance to contribute from the forums!

Mark
 
Posted by MinutiaeMan (Member # 444) on :
 
Yes!!! That's great news, Mojo! [Smile]

I am SO looking forward to this book......
 
Posted by Reverend (Member # 335) on :
 
If only we had been consulted on the DS9 Tech manual [Wink]
 
Posted by Mojo (Member # 536) on :
 
I found out today that the Franz Joseph designs, and indeed ANYTHING in his original tech manual, is owned by Ballentine books and cannot be used by the show or it's licencees.

So much for my Ptolemy class!

However, they cannot lay claim to basic starship design, so as long as I make them just a bit different, I'm OK (i.e. they can't say the Reliant is an infrigement on the Ptolemy just because it has 2 nacelles sweeping downward on either side of the dish).

Too bad, since I really wanted to pay homage to Mr. Joseph and the work that insipred so many.

In other news, I have people now working on models of the Sphinx workpod (which Mr. Probert was kind enough to send me full color sketches of) and the Centaur-Class ship.

Mojo
 
Posted by Masao (Member # 232) on :
 
Too bad about Ptolemy. But if it was shown on a computer monitor in a series or movie, isn't it fair game somehow (I doubt it, but just thought I'd ask)?

If Ptolemy can't be used, how about the USS Huron from the Animated Series?
 
Posted by Mojo (Member # 536) on :
 
If it's been onscreen in any way, shape or form, or used in anything published by Pocket Books, in theory I can use it!

Mojo
 
Posted by Masao (Member # 232) on :
 
Well, then, in the Kobayashi Maru simulation at the start of Wrath of Khan, FJ's schematics for a one-nacelle ship (not sure which) and Ptolemy appeared on computer monitors. I'm sure someone here can provide some links for you.
 
Posted by CaptainMike (Member # 709) on :
 
yeah, just pitch it as 'unnamed ship from ST:II computer screen backgound image' legal problems solved. i dance now
 
Posted by OnToMars (Member # 621) on :
 
What would you do without us, Mojo? [Smile]
 
Posted by pIn'a' Sov (Member # 293) on :
 
Mojo: here�s a link to my own screencaps of Franz Jospeh�s designs:
Ptolemy, Saladin, Hermes
 
Posted by AndrewR (Member # 44) on :
 
What is the difference between the Heremes and the Saladin!?!
 
Posted by pIn'a' Sov (Member # 293) on :
 
Basically it�s in their crewcomplement and armament. I don�t remember which is the bigger ship, though.
 
Posted by Woodside Kid (Member # 699) on :
 
The physical specifications are identical except for the mass; the Saladin-class destroyer has a mass of 95,000 metric tons, 500 tons more than the Hermes-class scout.

[ January 16, 2002: Message edited by: Woodside Kid ]
 
Posted by Shik (Member # 343) on :
 
Thus telling us that TOS-era photorp installations are 500 metric tons, for the Hermes ("Hermeses?" "Hermii?") are sans.
 
Posted by CaptainMike (Member # 709) on :
 
The Hermes has only one lower phaser emplacement and no torpedo launchers, while the Saladin has lower torpedo and forward phasers, and also an upper torpedo bay and port/starboard phaser banks
 
Posted by AndrewR (Member # 44) on :
 
So this miniscule difference constitutes (pardon the pun) a NEW class?
 
Posted by CaptainMike (Member # 709) on :
 
I've never agreed with that myself.. various of the later fandom that evolved from Franz' TM depict many other design differences to justify the separate class name... the closest ST universe parallel is the Miranda/Soyuz classes
 
Posted by Reverend (Member # 335) on :
 
Was the Entente dreadnaught ever seen onscreen?
 
Posted by TSN (Member # 31) on :
 
Nope.
 
Posted by Mojo (Member # 536) on :
 
WOO-HOO! THIS ROCKS!

Just got Andy Probert's design for a Starfleet Hopper. He sent me a bunch of sketches of the Sphinx in various configurations - one with an extended bed and one with an extended bed and a large... ummm... apartment on the back.

Definitely a Hopper!

I'm so excited I'm wetting myself! It's far better than the fan designs. Similar, but much more graceful and believeable.

AND YOU'LL GET TO SEE IT ALL IN STAR TREK: THE UNSEEN FRONTIER!!

Actually, you'll get to see the Sphinx model ahead of time in an upcoming Star Trek Magazine, but in the book you'll get to see it in action - most likely cleaning up some wreckage at Wolf 359.

Then going out for cokes.

Mojo
 
Posted by AndrewR (Member # 44) on :
 
I wonder, does Andy Probert have any sketches of what he thought the 'underslung' Ferengi ship on the Marauder looked like... It was sorta like a Marauder's own aerowing...
 
Posted by Mark Nguyen (Member # 469) on :
 
Mmm... Ferengi D'kora class ship picking through the Wolf 359 wreckage, and needing to be chased away by Starfleet recovery crews...

Mark
 
Posted by Reverend (Member # 335) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mojo:
WOO-HOO! THIS ROCKS!

Just got Andy Probert's design for a Starfleet Hopper. He sent me a bunch of sketches of the Sphinx in various configurations - one with an extended bed and one with an extended bed and a large... ummm... apartment on the back.

Definitely a Hopper!

I'm so excited I'm wetting myself! It's far better than the fan designs. Similar, but much more graceful and believeable.

AND YOU'LL GET TO SEE IT ALL IN STAR TREK: THE UNSEEN FRONTIER!!

Actually, you'll get to see the Sphinx model ahead of time in an upcoming Star Trek Magazine, but in the book you'll get to see it in action - most likely cleaning up some wreckage at Wolf 359.

Then going out for cokes.

Mojo

Oh Oh! Mojo, I wanna see! I'd like to know how close I got! [Smile] since I did base it on Probert's wonderful sphinx and all. [Big Grin]
 
Posted by AndrewR (Member # 44) on :
 
Mark... yeah I thought about that a while ago - your post jogged my memory - I don't think it would be too far-fetched... Something that I reckon they'd do.
 
Posted by mrneutron (Member # 524) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mojo:
WOO-HOO! THIS ROCKS!

Just got Andy Probert's design for a Starfleet Hopper. ... It's far better than the fan designs. Similar, but much more graceful and believeable.

One would hope so, given Mr. Probert has an Industrial Design background that most fans lack. [Big Grin]
 
Posted by The_Tom (Member # 38) on :
 
Mojo: Sorry to derail the thread again, but back to your comment on mapping. I spent the afternoon procrastinating and was a little surprised to find out that Geoffrey Mandel, scenic artist from ENTERPRISE and VOYAGER, and apparently also a legendary warrior of the fan-publication days of the seventies, is prepping the first "official" Trek mapbook for release from Pocket as well. (Psi Phi's listing, Mandel's website). One assumes these will be preeety diagrams done in the same 3D style as the various astrometrics displays.

I'm surprised on two levels: Firstly, that there has been zero buzz on this subject online from the tech-heads. And secondly, that Margaret Clark hasn't got you two sticking your heads together so any small little sidebar maps in UF could be pulled from Mandel's work. At the very least, I'm surprised that Pocket isn't asking that the two books be somewhat consistent with one another, especially since they look to be released at around the same time.

[ January 19, 2002: Message edited by: The_Tom ]
 
Posted by AndrewR (Member # 44) on :
 
This map book sounds like one BIG BAD IDEA. Can they map in 3d!?! Can they make heads or tales of what we have been doing 'round these parts for the best part of 6 years!?! The Cartography page is as thorough as you're going to get - and even THAT has a heap of problems trying to dig through all the canonical problems. Margret Clark just wan't more money out of us. I'll be buying Unseen Frontier WAY before (if ever) I by that map book. Best Map book out there (apart from atlases of the REAL world) is Karen Wynn Fonstad's Atlas of Middle Earth. A BRILLIANT publication.
 
Posted by Mark Nguyen (Member # 469) on :
 
I'd like to hear more about this map book, and perhaps see a sampler, before I go judging anything. *Any* Trek map book will not be perfect, but given the credits behind this one we may be plesantly surprised. Until I see evience to the contrary, I'll stay optimistic.

Mark
 
Posted by Phelps (Member # 713) on :
 
I'd only advise Mandel to research www.stdimension.de before nailing down the locations of fictional stars, because that's the best work on the subject to date, unless he's been as involved in map work as Chris.

Otherwise, I'm relatively optimistic about such a book, since the basic model of a small Federation between Rigel, Deneb, and Antares has been accepted by fandom ever since Star Trek Maps, a publication Mandel is likely to take into consideration. The locations of the real stars are easy to determine, while the fictional stars can be located anywhere you like within this radius, because one can't really use warp speeds to prefer one location over another -- they vary too much. Sure, some stars are more likely to be in certain places than others, but there's a great leeway within this basic 1000-ly diameter.
 
Posted by CaptainMike (Member # 709) on :
 
Um. didnt Mandel (or Drexler) originate that Spock's first name is Xtmprsnfwld? I dont expect him to verify shit.. hell just make up some not-so-likely stuff that will piss us all of. Avoid maps altogether.
 
Posted by Mark Nguyen (Member # 469) on :
 
Yeesh - Spock's first name is Lyle. Everybody knows that!

Mark
 
Posted by The_Tom (Member # 38) on :
 
quote:
Otherwise, I'm relatively optimistic about such a book, since the basic model of a small Federation between Rigel, Deneb, and Antares has been accepted by fandom ever since Star Trek Maps, a publication Mandel is likely to take into consideration
Well, considering Mandel wrote Star Trek Maps, I imagine so... [Wink]
 
Posted by Timo (Member # 245) on :
 
One reason Mandel's project hasn't attracted much publicity here is 'cause he's been contacting people directly by email. Yes, he's in cahoots with Chris R�hl from stdimension, and that's in fact one of the main sources he's using for the project (the facts and the speculation alike). I just got notification that he's got a beta-version almost ready, and that he might show it around before moving ahead...

It seems Mandel is basically doing a 2D map, with a Z coordinate given next to the star. The big empire borders and neutral zones and whatnot won't intermingle in a complex 3D pattern, then, but will be readable in a classic 2D overhead view.

Timo Saloniemi
 
Posted by AndrewR (Member # 44) on :
 
Is he giving the borders of the 'powers' amoeba like qualities... since at times some can boarder one another, but other can't etc.

I've found another "map"/"neighbour" situation - Watching Q2 [Voy] Which I finally saw last night... good ep - Author, Author was GREAT though.

Anyway - there was the "meeting" that Chakotay set Q's Son... it involved a Nausicaan (with a VERY yellow face) a Bolian, A Cardassian, a Ferengi, a Bajoran and a Romulan involved in a dispute over an asteroid's mining rights. I can't see any 'power' travelling very far for a single asteroid - it would have to be able to be 'connected' some how to the home 'regions' by supply and support. The fact that there were no Klingons there seems interesting.

Clearly Bajor and Cardassia are close together. I've always speculated that Bolarus IX (the Bolians) is nearby to DS9/Cardassia seeing as we've seen quite a number of Bolians serving on DS9 and a few more Bolian civilians than usual. We even had Chell in Voyager - a member of the Maquis (not saying much seeing as we also had klingons and vulcans etc.)

The Ferengi being there doesn't suprise me - they would be at most major deals like this. The Nausicaan said it (the asteroid) used to be in their space (I think) - I was going to suggest that Nausicaa was close by to The Cardassian Union - ahhhhh but Enterprise suggests that they were known even back then. Well before the introduction to the Cardies and the Bajorans. Even before the Romulans. I've got a sneaking suspicion that we might see Bolians - but they at the start of TNG - didn't seem to be a member of the Federation... anyhoo - one would suggest that at least the Bolians and the Nausicaans share a common boarder... that is not near the Romulan Neutral Zone, but is withing in acceptable distances to the Cardassians and the Bajorans... this makes it one big blood mess. Picture those little water-bomb balloons as different 'powers'. the get them all sticky and mix them up and squash them into a ball... this is sort of how I think the space around all these (including Feds, Klingons, Tholians etc) looks. At the same time there has to be neutral space (possibly the space between stars that doesn't connect directly to an adjacent system.) Oh, I'm sure the Tholians, the Klingons and the Romulans are locked in some sort of balancing act - as per "Reunion" [TNG] and "Homefront" [DS9]
 
Posted by Mark Nguyen (Member # 469) on :
 
Uh, guys? How about we keep this thread on topic, and move the map stuff to a new one?

Mark
 
Posted by AndrewR (Member # 44) on :
 
done
 
Posted by AndrewR (Member # 44) on :
 
Mojo I have a few questions about Wolf 359 and the Galaxy, I originally tapped it out over at this thread. Anyway, I've cut and pasted the relavent parts of my post!

I think there are some interesting Wolfie questions there - even if I do say so myself. ;o)

BTW, Mojo - this Galaxy that appears... I'm guessing not finished?? (would a Galaxy Class be
hanging around sector 001 - Picard did mention in "Conspiracy" that it was highly unusual for
a ship like the Enterprise to return to Earth! I'm guessing half built? Major Damage? Anyway -
maybe a good effect would be to not have too many lights on... (depending on how deep
into battle they are) I can't see these ships having many lights on... especially in the saucer
section. I hope we return to the "round" shields (if we see shields) Does your Galaxy model
separate!?! Although I don't think that it would have cause Picard/Locutus was fooled by
Riker in BOBW part II. What else is there that get usually overlooked in Trek about what
these ships would be doing in combat?? Phasers from turrets we never see get used (i.e. the
ones on the nacelle pylons on the Mirandas a la STII:TWOK. Photons... have we seen any
photons in still pics... could we have a few of those cool "shards of light" torpedoes that we
saw in the TOS movies... and again in "Flashback" - I loved them - they looked so much more
powerful than the 'blobs' seen in First Contact or the 'blobs with starry bits' seen in TNG.

Something else... did the fleet make MUCH of a dent on the cube? how long did the cube
take to regenerate in Q-Who? How long was the time period between The Battle of Wolf 359
and the next time we see the cube (cause we saw no battle damage)

Also someone asked a question in the other 'questions' thread about why did the Excelsior
Melbourne destruct/breakup so more quickly than the Saratoga... other than story/drama I
would say that maybe the Melbourne had been in battle a lot longer than the Saratoga?

ALSO Did the Melbourne ever get a new Captain!?! Riker was supposed to be the new
Captain... but he hadn't exactly REFUSED by the time of Wolf 359 - so did the Melbourne go
into battle with out an experienced Captain!?! Infact maybe this was a problem, maybe the
mad scramble for ships left many ships that might have been 'mothballed' with
skeleton/unexperienced/unqualified/untrained crewmembers!?! Maybe some of the
Engineers of UP/McKinley/SanFran/Luna drydocks offered to help to fill positions!?! Maybe
Academy students DID serve!?! Maybe only one ship - and maybe only final year cadets
and/or "Red Squad". They needed relatively experienced crew... that 'fleet' must have been
VERY rag-tag.
Andrew

[ January 22, 2002: Message edited by: AndrewR ]
 
Posted by Mark Nguyen (Member # 469) on :
 
quote:

What else is there that get usually overlooked in Trek about what
these ships would be doing in combat?? Phasers from turrets we never see get used (i.e. the
ones on the nacelle pylons on the Mirandas a la STII:TWOK. Photons... have we seen any
photons in still pics...
could we have a few of those cool "shards of light" torpedoes that we
saw in the TOS movies... and again in "Flashback" - I loved them - they looked so much more
powerful than the 'blobs' seen in First Contact or the 'blobs with starry bits' seen in TNG.

I'm guessing the blobs are the latest upgrade, and whatever torpedoes they used back then wouldn't even be carried...

quote:

Something else... did the fleet make MUCH of a dent on the cube? how long did the cube
take to regenerate in Q-Who? How long was the time period between The Battle of Wolf 359
and the next time we see the cube (cause we saw no battle damage)

I'm sure the cube took some damage, and was busy repairing it when it ran into the Enterprise-D for the Locutus abduction thing. We see that the cube had left a trail of ionic breadcrumbs in some direction - why would this be significant if the cube would have just packed it in and continued its beeline towards Earth? And what would cause it anyway? Again, probably battle damage.

It's most likely therefore that the cube had taken significant enough damage to warrant sticking around (or at least leaving the scene at impulse velocity) to fix itself up, finish assmilating people, packaging off a mini-cube full of new drones to the nearest transwarp conduit.. There's lots to explain why it hadn't warped away yet.

quote:

Also someone asked a question in the other 'questions' thread about why did the Excelsior
Melbourne destruct/breakup so more quickly than the Saratoga... other than story/drama I
would say that maybe the Melbourne had been in battle a lot longer than the Saratoga?

That would make sense only if the battle had been going on for a while by then, which I doubt. The intent of the script as written would most likely cement the Sagatoga as part of the first wave of ships... Thus, as I've posited before, I think the Borg were interested in getting something from the ship (hull samples, assimilated people, computer information, Jen Sisko's prize dafodills...) that they bothered to lock onto her, and hold her intact while Ben and the crew scrambled to escape.

quote:

ALSO Did the Melbourne ever get a new Captain!?! Riker was supposed to be the new
Captain... but he hadn't exactly REFUSED by the time of Wolf 359 - so did the Melbourne go
into battle with out an experienced Captain!?!

The Melbourne was described as "a fine ship" by Picard. This probably means that the ship was operational and had some history behind it. Odds are then that the ship simply had a captain who was retired or promoted, and Riker was offered the empty space. I'm sure that the Melbourne had an experienced crew aboard already, and it was probably simiply the XO that was in charge at the time - if the former Captain had even left before some tranferal ceremony. For all we know, some old guy was still in his chair when the Melbourne went up.

quote:

Infact maybe this was a problem, maybe the
mad scramble for ships left many ships that might have been 'mothballed' with
skeleton/unexperienced/unqualified/untrained crewmembers!?! Maybe some of the
Engineers of UP/McKinley/SanFran/Luna drydocks offered to help to fill positions!?! Maybe
Academy students DID serve!?! Maybe only one ship - and maybe only final year cadets
and/or "Red Squad". They needed relatively experienced crew... that 'fleet' must have been
VERY rag-tag.

The more I think of the fleet this way, the more I get to like the idea. Surely the majority of ships at Wolf 359 were of the finished and fully-crewed variety, but a fraction of them - no more than 6-8 ships (of 40) at the most, I'd say - could be from Utopica Planitia, the reserve fleet, the museum, or the Academy.

Usually when we see Starfleet go into battle, they're *ready*. At Wolf 359, while everyone who was there *felt* ready, nevertheless this is the closest we have to a chance at seeing what Starfleet looks like when it's caught with its pants down. I say go for it.

Mark

[ January 22, 2002: Message edited by: Mark Nguyen ]
 
Posted by Mojo (Member # 536) on :
 
Andrew: I think Mark pretty much answered everthing! Except I think I'm going to make MY Galaxy Class ship pink... with five nacelles... and the reg will be NCC-970-LOVE
 
Posted by Michael_T (Member # 144) on :
 
If you're going to do that you might as well make that astroid spacedock from the Art of Star Trek book into a CGI and have the USS Prometheus leaving it and say it's the Beta-Anteres Fleet Yards.
 
Posted by Mojo (Member # 536) on :
 
Hey I have to have an asteroid starbase in UNSEEN FRONTIER... In "Balance of Terror," they said the Starbase destroyed by the Romulans was under a mile of rock - what ELSE could it have been??

Mojo
 
Posted by AndrewR (Member # 44) on :
 
Mojo, I hope you were only being facaetious... for fun - cause I was just asking/giving "brain-storming" thoughts.

Anyway - I like the pink galaxy ;o) It changes colours based on the mood of it's captain ;o) Of course this Galaxy's captain is a Deltan ;o)

"This is the Captain... we're ALL going to DIE! I've destroyed my "oath of celebacy" record... let's PAR-TAY!!" [Wink]

Does anyone reckon the neutral zone bases were supposed to be secret bases then!?! being inside rock? Or that they are just OLD - Romulan War times old - and that was how they build space stations then? (On the frontier).

Oh and Mojo, a serious point, if you have two different ships that are of the same class, can they have different lights on... the two warbirds in last year's SOTL calendar looked a bit odd with exactly the same markings on each ship - (down to the bussard ramscoops) and every light that was on was the same.
 
Posted by Mojo (Member # 536) on :
 
Good news/bad news regarding the book, gang.

I finished doing the pencil sketches of the whole thing, and I am very pleased. It's shaping up nicely.

The bad news: There's only one shot of the new Defiant model!

That ship just can't get no respect...

Mojo
 
Posted by The_Tom (Member # 38) on :
 
Well, clearly, the only solution is to add war. Lots of war.
 
Posted by Mark Nguyen (Member # 469) on :
 
Seconded. Lots of war is good - and good for business.

OTOH, if this means we get to see more of the lesser known models we were dicussing a while back, than I think we can live with the tradeoff. We can always rewatch DS9 battle episodes!

Mark
 
Posted by AndrewR (Member # 44) on :
 
Maybe you could do a 'Where's Wally/(Waldo in the US)' and have the Defiant on every page ;o)
 
Posted by Mark Nguyen (Member # 469) on :
 
No, wait! The Defiant really IS there in every picture. It's just cloaked! Yeah, that's it!

Mark
 
Posted by Mojo (Member # 536) on :
 
folks, you have no IDEA how much war is in this book! There is so much phaser fire I think the book will be hot to the touch... It's just that these particular skirmishes don't involve very much Defiant action.

Mojo
 
Posted by MinutiaeMan (Member # 444) on :
 
:::drools::: [Big Grin]

Seriously, I don't mind in the least, based on Mojo's descriptions. I'd much rather see new (unseen!) ships than just more shots of the Defiant.
 
Posted by mrneutron (Member # 524) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mojo:
folks, you have no IDEA how much war is in this book! There is so much phaser fire I think the book will be hot to the touch... It's just that these particular skirmishes don't involve very much Defiant action.

Mojo

Of course, one "Unseen Frontier" you could haeve shown would be the yards where Starfleet is constructing various prototype Borg Buster ships, including the Defiant. Area 51 in space hee hee.
 
Posted by Reverend (Member # 335) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by mrneutron:
Of course, one "Unseen Frontier" you could haeve shown would be the yards where Starfleet is constructing various prototype Borg Buster ships, including the Defiant. Area 51 in space hee hee.

The Valient-Class lives! ;-)

You could use a bunch of conjectural/rejected sketch ships such as the U.S.S. Nova, complete with quasi defiant details and launchers, from before they made it into a science vessel. Or some of the other early defiant stuff, personally I liked the defiant painting that showed a pair of underslung intakes.

[ January 23, 2002: Message edited by: Reverend ]
 
Posted by The Mighty Monkey of Mim (Member # 646) on :
 
I know that the popular topic is more towards battles and wolf 359 and that sort of thing, and I realize that the contents of the book are probably pretty well thought out at this point, but I just had a really cool idea. (Wish I'd thought of it earlier.) [Frown]

What if you were to show a shot of the meeting of UFP, Romulan, and Klingon representatives form the first time at Nimbus III (from STV) in 2267? It would be so cool to see a shot of the planet, with a Connie, Bird of Prey, and D-7 in orbit, side by side. You could use (mainly) pre-existing cgi models since you have the TOS-style Connie and BoP, and the D-7 could probably be modified from the K't'inga. It would sooooooo rock!

-MMoM [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Reverend (Member # 335) on :
 
I'm pretty sure one of the old model kit boxes has exactly that illustration...
 
Posted by The Mighty Monkey of Mim (Member # 646) on :
 
Well, there was a kit that was a set of miniature Connie, D-7, and BoP models, and had a pic of the three of them on the box, but don't you think it'd be a cool addition to the book? (Or a book?)
 
Posted by Mojo (Member # 536) on :
 
It may not be exactly those ships, but I do have a shot in the book of a Federation, Klingon and Romulan ship working together...
 
Posted by AndrewR (Member # 44) on :
 
When things were much simpler - back in the hey days of TNG - I remember seeing "The Chase" for the first time - everyone had their distinctive 'main' ships and phaser colour and transporter pattern, ship colour and nacelle glow. I loved how we got The Enterprise, A Klingon Vorcha, Romulan Warbirds, Cardassian Galors and even a Yridian vessel! All we needed was a Ferengi ship!
 
Posted by Mojo (Member # 536) on :
 
Anybody with a Next-Gen style uniform live near Los Angeles or Las Vegas and want to be in the book?

Speak up.

Oh yeah, Klingons too!

Mojo
 
Posted by The_Tom (Member # 38) on :
 
If I may pipe up and attempt to smush people's hopes.

From what I've seen of photos of the dress-up-as-characters crew, even the most uber-hardcore fans who go all-out with the painstakingly hand-tailored replica uniforms and makeup and the like, have, in my experience anyway, always still looked a little lacking in the realism department. It strikes me as odd, Mojo, that you're demanding better-than-TV grade CGI models for the shippy goodness then turning around and asking for what will almost certainly be far-less-than-TV-grade human models.

I've heard that the staff Klingons at the Star Trek Experience have a half-decent makeup budget behind them. Mightn't you expect better-grade stuff there?
 
Posted by AndrewR (Member # 44) on :
 
Yeah, Mojo - I've never EVER seen a "good enough" fan costume - although some do GREAT jobs. Even the 'models' that model the purchaseable uniforms don't look right.

I'd get out those 'people' computer programmes first... what's it called "Poser" or something...
 
Posted by Mojo (Member # 536) on :
 
Sheesh, offer some people a fun opportunity and all I get is negativity! Where is the love?

Of course I'm well aware that most fan costumes suck. But, then again, you guys are commenting beore you even know what my planned usage is, so bite me :-)

Mojo
 
Posted by Timo (Member # 245) on :
 
So you are going to do a scene where the bodies of weird 21st century youngsters called "Trekkies" are discovered aboard a cryostasis satellite of the type we saw in "The Neutral Zone"? [Razz]

Or the bloody aftermath of a pitiful attempt by smooth-headed Klingons to infiltrate Starfleet Command, poorly disguised as Starfleet officers? [Razz]

Timo Saloniemi
 
Posted by AndrewR (Member # 44) on :
 
I saw a guy at a convention once, in a home-made silk, light blue tos uniform and those BIG Spock ears - you know the ones the go over the ENTIRE ear like the nerdy kid in Martin's "Refuge of the Damned" on the Simpsons ;o) Didn't look good. *shiver* ;o)

Maybe people could do a REALLY good job, but not your usual 'Trill' or 'Bajoran' or 'Klingon' - lets get some of those Aliens from TMP, TVH and TFF out ;o) How about photographing action figures!?! ;o)
 
Posted by CaptainMike (Member # 709) on :
 
Most fan uniforms are meticulously researched (or devised, because many come up with their own uniform schemes) but the main problems lie in the fitting of the clothing. The guys modeling the shirts look awful because they are just really expensive halloween costumes. If someone took in the waist a little, or made sure the sleeves werent a foot too long you might be able to work with it.

I am saying all this in denial of my knowledge of the second problem with fan costuming, the physique of the fan i question. I can offer no solution. (Except of course mine, which was stop eating fast food and move around a little and lost me 30 pounds or so, to where i can successfully disguise myself as a 'normal' person.. but that is kind of long term)
 
Posted by Harry (Member # 265) on :
 

 
Posted by CaptainMike (Member # 709) on :
 

 
Posted by Harry (Member # 265) on :
 


[Big Grin] [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Mark Nguyen (Member # 469) on :
 
Yeah, one of the things about the mass-production costumes is that they're essentially *shirts*. This was sorta okay for the TOS uniforms, but for everythign in the TNG era this just didn't make sense anymore. Half of them don't have shoulder pads, and the other half tend to have the epaulets that are too pointed.

Every fan gets an "E" for effort, though. [Smile]

Mark
 
Posted by AndrewR (Member # 44) on :
 
Mojo, you mentioned Andy Probert giving you the plans for the ?scorpion? work bee and something else a hopper or something? Is there any plan for you to do that cool looking shuttle with the door at the front? There are also a few other auxillary craft that would be interesting to see, there was the tiny little shuttle in Spacedock that we saw in "11001001" [TNG]

Andrew
 
Posted by Mojo (Member # 536) on :
 
Time to liven this thread up!

I'm working on rough drafts of the images for the book, and I spent a little too much time on this one... but be kind - it's still rough. I just thought I'd share :-)

As always, leave it here - no sending it around!


 
Posted by Mark Nguyen (Member # 469) on :
 
Man, that's sweet. Looks way more detailed than the cheapo McKinley model they used in the show (and no offense to the original model builder of course, but the McKinley model really wasn't all that great - especially with the GCS model sitting under it!).

Well done, Mojo!

Mark

[ January 30, 2002, 00:57: Message edited by: Mark Nguyen ]
 
Posted by pIn'a' Sov (Member # 293) on :
 
Great work Mojo! I always liked this type of spacedock more than the latticeworks one, like the one they used for NCC 1701 in st tmp.
Say Mojo, is that a launch-bay up in front?
 
Posted by Dax (Member # 191) on :
 
Very nice, Mojo. One small nitpick - the bussard collector on the Galaxy doesn't look quite right somehow. It's the only thing that still looks "fake" (obviously CGIed). Otherwise, I'm impressed!
 
Posted by MinutiaeMan (Member # 444) on :
 
[Eek!]

I love the detail on that thing! And I agree, I've always liked the McKinley Station design more than the old TMP drydocks -- they look much more interesting.

Very nice. If this is what you call a "rough draft," I'm going to have to be very careful when I finally get to reading "Unseen Frontier." Otherwise, I'll have a heart attack! [Wink]
 
Posted by Harry (Member # 265) on :
 
Server busy.... which was nice.
 
Posted by Mojo (Member # 536) on :
 
Yes the bussard collector looks a little off - never fear, that ENTIRE model is going to be replaced with the new Galaxy Class built by Andrew Bradbury (who made the new Defiant).

It's going to kick major ass!

Mojo
 
Posted by Dat (Member # 302) on :
 
Damn, I'll probably have a heart attack just holding the unopened book!
 
Posted by J (Member # 608) on :
 
Thanks... I need a new keyboard now!

Later, J
 
Posted by Mojo (Member # 536) on :
 
I'm in a giving mood! Here's a shot of our origial series Enterprise, built by Daren Dochterman:


 
Posted by Mark Nguyen (Member # 469) on :
 
Soooo.. What does it take to keep Mojo in a giving mood, huh? [Smile] Great stuff!

Mark
 
Posted by MinutiaeMan (Member # 444) on :
 
It'd probably help to keep up with the compliments... [Wink]
 
Posted by Masao (Member # 232) on :
 
Compliments, eh?
"Mojo is very handsome and probably has great personal hygiene."

I actually think that might have done more harm than good. Sorry.
 
Posted by Dax (Member # 191) on :
 
Very nice E-nil, Mojo. Daren also built the CGI E-refit from TMP Director's Ed, am I right?
 
Posted by Mojo (Member # 536) on :
 
Actually, Daren started the model, but most of it was completed by Lee Stringer and Rob Bonchune at Foundation.
 
Posted by Harry (Member # 265) on :
 
Mojo... you can look into that directory [Eek!] . Haven't opened any of the piccies, but I did have a peek at the filenames... The UF cover is there [Smile] . You'd probably want to avoid this 'leak'...

[ January 31, 2002, 05:49: Message edited by: Harry ]
 
Posted by The Mighty Monkey of Mim (Member # 646) on :
 
Nooo...I didn't peek... [Roll Eyes]

-MMoM [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Mark Nguyen (Member # 469) on :
 
You fools! Now Mojo's going to take off and leave us forever! [Razz]

Mark
 
Posted by Phelps (Member # 713) on :
 
"The man sighs in relief after a long repair night, looking at the sunrise, a thing of nature that has amazed us in all ages and all fictional realities. Yet how small is the sun next to the Enterprise, his ship, as he stands confident about the following day."

[ January 31, 2002, 17:58: Message edited by: Phelps ]
 
Posted by The Mighty Monkey of Mim (Member # 646) on :
 
Nice... [Smile]
 
Posted by AndrewR (Member # 44) on :
 
Mojo bloody bewdiful ;o)

Just two eency weency qualms... Firstly on McKinley... on the left-hand part of the station on 'top' against the background of Earth there is this round circle... it looks like a light - but it has a black ring around it - like it has been cut out from a black background picture... what is that thing?

And the second is the green running light on the Enterprise - well maybe the little red one too up near the bridge - you have these brilliantly lit lights, that don't seem to scatter any light onto the rest of the hull around them! They are in the shadowy part of the ship yet they are a bright light - but with no light cast on the surrounding hull...

Andrew
 
Posted by Shik (Member # 343) on :
 
I don't think it WOULD cast light anywhere. There are minimal if ANY diffusional elements in space. It's not like being in atmosphere.
 
Posted by Harry (Member # 265) on :
 
quote:
Just two eency weency qualms... Firstly on McKinley... on the left-hand part of the station on 'top' against the background of Earth there is this round circle... it looks like a light - but it has a black ring around it - like it has been cut out from a black background picture... what is that thing?
Look at the dome of the crab-station... another glow that has been cut off... I suspect the render had a plain black background, and that the ship and the station were cut 'n' pasted over an Earth photo...aka a "rough draft" (like he said).
 
Posted by Mojo (Member # 536) on :
 
You are correct, it was cut and pasted as a temp.

Although several interesting issues arise in an image like this. Theoretically, with a source as bright as the earth in the background, lens flares from the running lights and, in fact, the stars themselves would not show up on film, due to the reduced apeture of the lens (notice how you never see stars in any Nasa shots for the same reason). In fact, stars would probably never show up on film unless you did a long exposure, due to their limited brightness.

So, the question becomes, are we trying to mimic a scene that has actually been photographed by a camera in space, or are we simply presenting imagery, tailored as we see fit? This is actually a big debate in the world of CG. There are cleary plenty of arguments for both sides.

It even goes back to something I read during the 80s, when I read an interview with rotoscope animators who were putting sword and sorcery effects into the movie "Excalibur." The debate was whether or not to add lens flares into animation of very bright light sources (such as glowing balls or the clashing of two swords). Were they trying to make it seemed as if the event were captured by a movie camera, or just present the elements of the story, and thus making it seem more like a fantasy?

The answer usually is a little of both. If we were going for total reality in the McKinnley shot, we would see no stars, so running lights and no light coming from the windows on the ship (although you see them at night, do you ever notice the office lights inside a building during the day, in bright sunlight?).

If we did all those things, even though 100% realastic, the shot would look funny. If we didn't didn't try and match a few of the 'realism bits,' the shot would also look vaguely fake, so you have to carefully choose. If you choose the wrong bits, an audience will look at your shot and think 'that looks fake,' although of course they will not exactly know why they think that, they'll just know it looks wrong.

Thus describes one of the fine lines people in this business must walk.

I'll post a follow up later with some examples and more thoughts...
 
Posted by First of Two (Member # 16) on :
 
What would the human eye see?

I mean, we don't get lens flares and such, so if I was going for realism, I'd have left them out.

otoh, whatever makes the picture look coolest - I suppose the human eye would lose certain details in the glare... or not be able to see the ship at all, given how dark space is and how little illumination 'running lights' would actually provide - and can be finished on schedule. Must... have... book! [Smile]

[ February 02, 2002, 12:44: Message edited by: First of Two ]
 
Posted by Mark Nguyen (Member # 469) on :
 
To illustrate the poihnt, check this out:

http://www.aami-aviation.com/fahq/gallery/gundam/official/gallery09/gundam1.htm

It's what can be done to make giant, gawdily-coloured robots look good under "real" condidtions.

Mark
 
Posted by Phelps (Member # 713) on :
 
I think this picture needs more stuff, people, Sphinx pods, stations in the background. And the ship should at least have the beginnings of a name or a registry, to give it at least something of an identity. This way, it looks lonely, kinda like "Everybody else has gone out exploring, so what are you still doing here all alone?"

It's good, but isn't as artistically impressive as the sunrise picture from the calendar. By adding more detail you can take a chance and show what hasn't been seen due to budgetary/dramatic concerns -- a busier Earth space.

[ February 02, 2002, 16:08: Message edited by: Phelps ]
 
Posted by Mojo (Member # 536) on :
 
Phelps: IT'S A TEMP!!! Done in 15 minutes. Give a guy a break! I believe I said so in the original post...
 
Posted by Phelps (Member # 713) on :
 
Ok, ok, it's a temp. [Smile] How am I supposed to know what else you're planning for it, especially since you've also said you spent quite a bit of time on this in your original post? Just commenting on what I see.

[ February 02, 2002, 19:07: Message edited by: Phelps ]
 
Posted by AndrewR (Member # 44) on :
 
OK about the cut-and-paste - and I understand what you mean about lights and brightness etc... it's just the jarring thing with the 'running light(s)' on the Enterprise pic is that the green one at the front there (and the little red one up top) are IN SHADOW... so they should cast some sort of light - not necessarily into the 'surrounds' above it like if it was misty... but onto the actuall hull... like when you put the christmas lights near the wall and the colour is not and EXACT reflection - but you still get that colour of the light hitting the wall... It just doesn't look right - especially when that section is in shadow... the light should fall onto the hull plating - even if just a little... Otherwise it looks like it is sort-of a round 'solid object' floating in the blackness of space - with nothing near it.
 
Posted by Mojo (Member # 536) on :
 
Ok, before the rumors get out of hand, yes, there has been a delay with "Unseen Frontier."

I can safely say that any book you might see will be published well after the holidays.

At the moment I am resolving a few outstanding issues. Once I have some definitive answers, you can bet you'll be hearing from me!

Mojo
 
Posted by MinutiaeMan (Member # 444) on :
 
Nuts.

But while I'm disappointed, any delay can really only be a good thing for the book -- I assume that gives you some more time to work on it?
 
Posted by Peregrinus (Member # 504) on :
 
Since I live in Orange County, this gives me time to finish my TNG uniform.

On that subject, guys? A big part of the reason most fan-made unis suck donkey balls is that they're not even made from the right materials, tailoring notwithstanding. It can be a little expensive to make a proper (for example) TNG 3rd-season uniform from the correct wine-red-and-black suit-weight wool gabardine, moreso if you want to go even further with accuracy and make the sleeveless silk jersey undershirt.

But I'm one of those accuracy-nazis who like to make things more accurate than the prop, and all that's left for me is to figure out how the hell the waistband is meant to attach to the trousers... [Confused]

--Jonah
 
Posted by Peregrinus (Member # 504) on :
 
But back to the topic...

Mojo? As I am a local boy, what can I do to assist this project?

--Jonah

P.S. Between John Ordover and Margaret Clark, who's responsible for what at Pocket Books?
 
Posted by Mark Nguyen (Member # 469) on :
 
I think the best we can do is not to overdo the fanboy support thing, and just patiently wait it out. I'm sure Mojo's got it well in hand - if he needs something here, he's always asked for it and gotten it straight away.

Still, I think we need to give a lil' boost for Mojo right here. So, everyone:

GO GO MOJO!

Mark
 
Posted by Vice-Admiral Michael T. Colorge (Member # 144) on :
 
Wow, I spilled coffee all over myself when I saw the test shot for McKinley. Great job there.

Oh, what is up with the topics of uniforms anyway? Who started it?
 
Posted by U//Magnus (Member # 239) on :
 
Mojo wanted some Californians in uniforms to make an appearance of sorts. He's probably got it under control now, after seeing the true face of the fatass Trekkie in his cotton pajamas.
 
Posted by Wraith (Member # 779) on :
 
When is this coming out in the UK? I wish I'd got in on it earlier!!!!
 
Posted by Sol System (Member # 30) on :
 
I suspect the only way the fans can (or rather, could) ensure a speedy release of this book would be (or would have been) to purchase every copy of every Trek reference book since the TNG technical manual.
 
Posted by Peregrinus (Member # 504) on :
 
I have two of everything from Ships of the Star Fleet on -- one to keep on the shelf and look pretty, and one to mark the hell out of (no, not you, Mark...). I've occasionally also bought copies for friends who couldn't find them in their areas.

So I figure I've done my part. [Big Grin]

--Jonah
 
Posted by First of Two (Member # 16) on :
 
quote:
Ok, before the rumors get out of hand, yes, there has been a delay with "Unseen Frontier."
I can safely say that any book you might see will be published well after the holidays.
At the moment I am resolving a few outstanding issues. Once I have some definitive answers, you can bet you'll be hearing from me!

Oh, KRUNK! First the Decipher Trek RPG, now THIS!
It's bad having to wait for things you don't know if you're going to buy or not.
But it's worse having to wait for a guaranteed sale.

Mojo, even late, you rule.

quote:
I suspect the only way the fans can (or rather, could) ensure a speedy release of this book would be (or would have been) to purchase every copy of every Trek reference book since the TNG technical manual.
I already HAVE a copy of every Trek reference book.

I also bought and donated a copy of the Star Trek Encyclopedia to my local public library.

The delay's over getting people to appear???

Dood, didja see what they can do with CGI people now? I mean, Final Fantasy the Movie?

Who needs humans? [Wink]
 
Posted by AndrewR (Member # 44) on :
 
Mojo... take as LONG as you need. I will be waiting patiently, happy in the knowledge someone with your talent is out there doing something truely inspiring (for us fans). Any length of time - tack on another 6 months for it to make it to Australia. [Frown]
 
Posted by Wraith (Member # 779) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by AndrewR:
Any length of time - tack on another 6 months for it to make it to Australia. [Frown]

It'll take even longer to get through to Lincolnshire... [Roll Eyes] .
Once again you're looking at an assured sale here [Big Grin] . I guess I must learn patience.
 
Posted by 359mph (Member # 37) on :
 
Yes, lets all wait patiently. We don't want another "GIVE ME THE FUGGIN DS9TM KITBASH PICS!!!" incident... [Roll Eyes]
 
Posted by Mojo (Member # 536) on :
 
Thanks for the support, guys. You've all been a huge help through this entire project.

As I said, I am still working out some details that will determine the future of this and other projects. Sit tight and I promsise you'll be the first to know when I have something concrete to report.

Mojo
 
Posted by Vice-Admiral Michael T. Colorge (Member # 144) on :
 
If not, then Mojo can post up all the pretty pictures here so I can use one as a background.
 
Posted by Sol System (Member # 30) on :
 
Congratulations on your Digital Bits reviewership, by the way.
 
Posted by darkwing_duck1 (Member # 790) on :
 
OK, I'm REALLY late to this thread...what's up with a delay with Unseen Frontiers, and where did all the sample pics that people were referencing go?

Any new news? We might ask over at TrekBBS (the editors at Pocket post there)!
 
Posted by Mark Nguyen (Member # 469) on :
 
UF is meeting an unspecified delay. Mojo's on top of it, and asks that we sit tight. When the delay becomes specified, it'll be posted here.

I think that about covers it...

Mark
 


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