View Poll Results: Who shall win?
The Galactic Empire 23 38.98%
The coalition of the willing, Milky Galaxy 7 11.86%
Haha! Babylon5 ownz u! 16 27.12%
The Banana Collective. 13 22.03%
Voters: 59. You may not vote on this poll

 
 
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Old March 26, 2003, 04:08   #61
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Who needs mentats when you have computers that are not melange-relient?
Just remembered that mentats aren't melange-reliant, so another one of your points bites the dust!
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Old March 26, 2003, 07:15   #62
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Quote:
Originally posted by Frankychan
Star Wars has 'The Force'.

All the Jedi/Sith have to do is take over the minds of their opponents or choke 'em to death to win.
That's true. But the Federation Wooden Admirals(TM), despite not having 'The Force' would never allow Palpatine to take the political control, and the Enterprise officials (any of them) would know about the conspiration much more sooner than it would be a real danger.

Not counting Section 31...
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Old March 26, 2003, 07:18   #63
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Quote:
Originally posted by nationalist

The Ferengi are supposedly Europeans
Never thought about that, but it makes sense.

I would picture the Ferengi as the Old Europe. Always complaining about the Federation but trying to take as much profit from them as possible.
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Old March 26, 2003, 07:23   #64
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Quote:
Originally posted by Kramerman
I remember when i had a rediculus arguement with a friend (treky, he is) over who would win, an Imp Star Destroyer or the USS Enterprise. I was sure he'd answer the Star Destoryer, i mean, how could it lose? But he didint! and for the longest time i had the nerdiest arguement in my life over what would win, an SD or the Enterprise (galactic-class, i believe it is, or somethn like that).
Why is it a ridiculous argument? It's clear you don't know Federation Captains enough!

If Riker alone was able to defeat a Borg cube, an Star Destroyer should be much more easier. Just give Data enough time to find one of its multiple weakness.
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Old March 26, 2003, 09:28   #65
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Quote:
Originally posted by Dr. A. Cula
I came here to find the answer to the old qurestion about who would win a confrontation between an Enterprise security team, who get killed on sight, and a squad of SW stormtroopers, who can't hit the broad side of an elephant in a corridor, or something like that.
Instead, I find people arguing about spaceships.
That's easy--the stormtroopers would win, hands down. Why? Because they only have trouble hitting major characters, and only when convenient for the plot. Otherwise, they're quite good shots. It was actually quite impressive for the trooper to hit Leia like he did in RoTJ from an off-the-hip shot. Aim isn't as easy as some people seem to think.
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Old March 26, 2003, 09:31   #66
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As the millenium falcon was too small to have a clocking device there is an implication that if it had one they wouldn't have been able to track it I would suggest infilltrating the imperial fleet with hundreds of Klingon and Romulan cruisers then de cloacking and taking them by surprise.
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Old March 26, 2003, 12:49   #67
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Quote:
Originally posted by TheStinger
As the millenium falcon was too small to have a clocking device there is an implication that if it had one they wouldn't have been able to track it I would suggest infilltrating the imperial fleet with hundreds of Klingon and Romulan cruisers then de cloacking and taking them by surprise.
This isn't precisely true...

In the Zahn trilogy, the Empire had the technology to detect cloaked ships. It was very expensive so relatively rare, but there's little doubt they would utilize it once they realized there were cloaked ships in Alpha Quadrant.

Keep in mind that the Federation can't detect cloaked ships without ridiculous work-arounds, and Needa's line from ESB implies the Empire would have access to such cloaking devices for their larger vessels. So the cloaking advantage would actually go to the Empire.
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Old March 26, 2003, 13:01   #68
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Originally posted by Static Universe
None of them stand a chance against the Kzinti.
Hand to hand...surely one of the best.

Overall, The Death Star sure would be hard to stop. Q beats all though.
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Old March 26, 2003, 13:02   #69
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The notion that Q would come to the defense of the Federation is laughable. He didn't do squat in the Dominion Wars, now did he? Or against the Borg?

Q and his race don't care diddly about the fate of the Alpha Quadrant. As far as they'd be concerned, the Empire's takeover would be an insignificant regime change, nothing more.
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Old March 26, 2003, 13:05   #70
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Quote:
Originally posted by Boris Godunov
The notion that Q would come to the defense of the Federation is laughable. He didn't do squat in the Dominion Wars, now did he?
Excellent point. Somehow I believe that Q would be there for Picard though.
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Old March 26, 2003, 13:07   #71
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He didn't need to. The Dominion were defeated.

There was an episode where Q claimed to have saved the Federation by making them aware of the Borg in advance of their arrival.
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Old March 26, 2003, 13:16   #72
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BC raises an interesting point. Where the Borg coming to the Alpha Quadrant anyway, so Q's actions alerted the Federation to a significant threat or did Q's actions alert the Borg to a problem they decided to take out sooner rather than later?

Quote:
, then Vader can go take out the Queen and end the problem for good.
you think so three dimesionally about it...
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Old March 26, 2003, 13:17   #73
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Originally posted by Lonestar
There are 12 heavy turbolasers and roughly 120 light turbolasers on an ISD1 (ref. SWICS). The heavy turbolasers are roughly 125 times bigger than the light turbolasers (which were seen vaporizing asteroids in TESB). If firepower is proportional to size (an unsubstantiated but not unreasonable postulate) then the sustainable power outputs of the heavy and light guns work out to 47 million TW and 375,000 TW respectively. Refire rates seem to be roughly 1 shot per 2 seconds, so the energy level of each individual blast would have to be 94 million TJ (22 gigatons of TNT) for heavy turbolasers and 750,000 TJ ( 179 megatons) for light turbolasers.

Now, let's look at some numbers for Federation phasers (and quantum Torps).

Phasers appear to induce some kind of chain reaction in matter. Against shields, they seem to be tactically equivalent to lasers in the range of 30,000 TW (7 megatons per second). Against dense armour, their effectiveness is much lower, in the 1-10TW range (1 kiloton per second). A typical starship has only a handful of phaser arrays

Their torpedoes are their heaviest weapons, with an upper limit of 64 megatons for photon torpedoes and roughly twice that for quantum torpedoes. In fact, some significant battles have been fought exclusively with torpedoes. They are capable of superluminal speeds when launched from a warp-driven starship, thus making them useful for long-range first-strike actions and surprise attacks. They have good acceleration and guidance systems, but limited maneuverability


The fact is, there are many, many incidents when Federation ships were less than a few kilometers away while missing.

Let's look at shields;

The TESB novelization described a "steady rain" of asteroids, and Anakin Skywalker: The Story of Darth Vader said that "turbolaser gunners blasted the largest rocks; those they missed impacted against the bow shields like multi-megaton compression bombs." We can see from the film that the ships were taking impacts at the rate of at least 1 asteroid per second if not more, and we know from the above quote that the asteroids were striking with several megatons of energy each. Some Federation cultists dispute this figure by stating that we saw some slow-moving asteroids in the films, but this is a false dilemma fallacy: the existence of slow-moving asteroids does not prove that all of the asteroids (<99.99% of which would have impacted >off-screen) would have been slow-moving, particularly since typical asteroid speeds in the Earth's solar system have been observed to be much higher than this. Furthermore, the bombardment must have continued for at least 1 or 2 days because Vader had time to contact bounty hunters, who travelled from their various homebases to the Outer Rim while the fleet stayed in the field. Therefore, each ISD might have absorbed as much as 3E20 joules of kinetic energy while in the asteroid field.

So, SW shields can probaly shrug off Federation weapons. Can Federation shields make the claim about SW weapons? No. .

Federation shield technology allows them to withstand multiple direct hits with high-yield nuclear weapons and prolonged exposure to stellar bombardment. If they can stay out of the firing range of our heavy dorsal turbolaser batteries (which unleash millions of TJ per shot), we will need to hit their vessels with more than 100 shots from our point-defense cannons to bring down their shields. With more than 100 turbolaser emplacements capable of firing once every two seconds, we should be able to accomplish this in a few seconds. If they do not find a way to improve their shield survivability against plasma weapons, it will be even easier; a single shot from a point-defense turbolaser battery will be sufficient to bring their shields down.

Our tacticians feel that the best method of attack will be to use our TIE fighters primarily to launch large numbers of missiles at the Federation ships from many angles as a diversion, while our capital ships attempt to target their vessels with the heavy dorsal cannons. This may prove to be difficult against the smaller, more highly maneuverable vessels like the "Defiant". Fortunately, their fleet is heavily biased toward large vessels rather than the small and highly maneuverable Defiant-class vessels.




IMO, the "First ONes" are wussies, and have low survivability rates.


(all SW vs. ST info shamelessly stolen from stardestroyer.net, mike wong. except no substitutes)
So these numbers are pulled out from somebody's rectum. Bah.

Faulty assumptions all around.
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Old March 26, 2003, 13:19   #74
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Quote:
Originally posted by Big Crunch
He didn't need to. The Dominion were defeated.

There was an episode where Q claimed to have saved the Federation by making them aware of the Borg in advance of their arrival.
The Dominion was defeated, barely. But Q and his kind didn't raise a finger, and there is no reason to assume they would have. So why would a race of omnipotent beings care if the Empire took over the Alpha Quadrant?

Q's boast was just that--a boast to try and prove the Feds should be grateful to him. There's no reason to suspect he introduced them to the Borg out of benevolent reasons. After all--that made the Borg aware of them, too.
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Old March 26, 2003, 13:20   #75
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Quote:
Originally posted by Urban Ranger


Where did you find these ridiculous numbers?
Considering he cited the source at the end of the post, I wonder about your reading abilities...
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Old March 26, 2003, 13:23   #76
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Quote:
Originally posted by Boris Godunov
Considering he cited the source at the end of the post, I wonder about your reading abilities...
"You" was used in a generic sense. Speaking about reading abilities
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Old March 26, 2003, 13:29   #77
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Quote:
Originally posted by Urban Ranger


"You" was used in a generic sense. Speaking about reading abilities
Riiiiight. Backpedal all you want, sure.

The numbers are provided by a physicist, who runs the site. And they are based on the same thing ST numbers are based on--observance of performance in canonical sources (films). ST numbers are also "pulled out of arse," if you want to go that route. It is Science Fiction, after all.

But if you read his calculations and the rationales behind them, I think you will find them quite sound.
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Old March 26, 2003, 16:19   #78
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I will restate that I think the Star Trek Universe will win, but now for a different reason. Wesley Crusher can stop time, and no doubt has all other sorts of ridiculous powers by now. Wesley Crusher will simply stop time and take out the entire Empire (slowly mind you, but he has as much time as he wants right?).

Also, I'm not trying to favor one series over another, but it does seem that those numbers in favor of Star Wars are pulled out of someones arse. At least Star Trek attempts to make some kind of a reasonable scientific basis for the futuristic tech. Star Wars doesn't focus on any of that, it's just a backdrop. For example, the cloak thing. Well... uh... in Star Wars we can detect cloak uh cause we can and they uh... have that. No one ever says, this is how we got or discovered this, they just have it.

Now lets ignore the fact that Star Wars doesn't bother trying to provide a basis for any of the tech they have and just say they have it. What happens when one of those borg nanoprobes (7of9 had 'em, there was the episode when they made the UberBorg guy from the future tech the doctor has in his holoemitter) starts assimilating the 'superior' Star Wars tech. I guarantee you a Borg Star Destroyer would crush an Empire Star Destroyer. Now all that 'superior' tech would just make the Empire's defeat that much worse. What do you think a Borg Death Star would do?
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Old March 26, 2003, 16:23   #79
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There's a simple way to sort this out; get yourself a copy of Star Trek: Armada, then download the Star Trek vs. Star Wars patch. Play as the Federation versus a hard Imperial opponent and see how hard it is.

The SSD can take out an entire base single-handedly, and is more than a match for an entire fleet of Borg ships.

Just my thoughts on the matter.
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Old March 26, 2003, 16:24   #80
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Quote:
Originally posted by Drake Tungsten

Just remembered that mentats aren't melange-reliant, so another one of your points bites the dust!
Ahaha! But they do need to drink the melange syrup stuff to do calcs!



And incidently, The Borg are the big guys of the Milky Way, they're also the ones with the fastest method FTL, and so the most likely to put up a fight.

Does that mean they could stop the Empire? No. As we saw in First Contact, a few Dozen Federation ships could inflict significant damage to a cube. Clearly, rumors of Borg adaptability were greatly exageratted. The sheer firepower of Imperial Capital ships would destroy most borg forces they came in contact with. If Species 8472 could do, so can the Empire.


Quote:
If Riker alone was able to defeat a Borg cube, an Star Destroyer should be much more easier. Just give Data enough time to find one of its multiple weakness.
"Allow me recomgulate the shields..."

Worf: "Captain! They are opening fire!"

:: Enterprise dodges shot, gets hit by other 60 light turbolasers. ::

Quote:
However, there is one way for the Federation to win. Time travel exists in our galaxy, and is available to the Federation, but is unknown in Star Wars. The Empire has no knowledge of temporal mechanics. So the crew of the Enterprise would have a good chance of using time travel to solve the whole thing, probably by closing the wormhole so that none of that ever happened. After all, even Bajoran terrorists can shut wormholes.
More Warsie goodness from Mike Wong of stardestroyer.net:

Time Travel
Ah, time travel. As a good Trekkie might say, "our last, best hope." I'm sure you've heard this argument before:

"The Federation would use time travel to jump into the past, and wipe out the Empire before it was ever created."
I left this for last because it requires a lengthy explanation. This argument is quite persuasive upon first glance, but upon reflection, a few obvious problems appear:
Why so rare? If time travel can be used as a panacea for every mistake, battlefield defeat, and ill turn of fortune, then why is it used so rarely on the show? Why were crushing defeats like Wolf 359 or the Romulan/Cardassian massacre in TDIC not reversed by time travellers? Federation law? Let's not be silly; if any ship with warp drive can use the slingshot, this opens up time travel to every half-assed starship captain in the galaxy.
Can they pull it off? We know starships can use the slingshot effect to travel several centuries into the past. However, this act requires fuel. It puts strain on the ship (serious strain, as we saw in ST4). So who's to say it could survive a much longer trip, say, a thousand years instead of a few hundred? What about ten thousand years? What about a hundred thousand?
What's the point? In the universe of Star Trek, there are an infinite number of parallel timelines (as seen in "Parallels" and "Mirror, Mirror"). When a ship performs a time-jump, it must create a divergent timeline (more on this later). It can wreak havoc in this divergent timeline, but why would its departure have any effect on its original timeline?
It may be helpful to list known examples of Federation time travel, all of which fall into a small number of categories:
Accidents
Too many to list. They usually involve some natural phenomenon, such as black holes, wormholes, or "temporal anomalies".
Assistance by outside forces.
Guardian of Forever: Seen in "City on the Edge of Forever". Not large enough for a starship, with a lower range limit of at least a few millenia. It cycles through a list of "permissible" destinations, generated through some unknown algorithm. Doctor McCoy inadvertently used it to go back to the 20th century.
Borg Sphere: Seen in STFC. Capable of moving entire starships, with a lower range limit of roughly three centuries. It sent itself back to the early 21st century in an attempt to assimilate Earth's past, and the Enterprise rode its "temporal wake".
Bajoran Orb of Time: Seen in "Trials and Tribble-ations". Capable of moving entire starships, with a lower range limit of roughly one century. It was used to send the USS Defiant 105 years back in time, as part of a failed assassination attempt against Captain Kirk. The use of this device, as with all of the Bajoran orbs, is presumably contingent upon the forbearance of the so-called "Prophets".
Atoz's time portal: Seen in "All our Yesterdays". Not large enough for a starship, with a lower range limit of many millenia, perhaps even millions of years. It was used on Kirk, McCoy and Spock, who all suffered loss of reasoning faculties when moved to a prehistoric era.
Timeships: Specialized time travel vehicles from the future or from alien civilizations. Seen in "A Matter of Time", "Future's End", and "Year of Hell". The latter two examples are Voyager episodes in which the writers' abuse of time travel finally reached the "ludicrous" stage, making TNG seem downright reasonable by comparison.
Slingshot effect.
The slingshot effect uses some horribly unrealistic pseudoscience to explain how one might use the Sun to travel backwards in time. It was used to send the Enterprise forward from the 20th century to the 23rd century in "Tomorrow is Yesterday."
A slingshot effect was used to send the Enterprise back to the 20th century in "Assignment Earth".
A slingshot effect was used to send a Bird of Prey back to the 20th century in ST4.
Transporters.
First seen in "Mirror, Mirror." A transporter accident (how many of these have we seen in Trek?) threw Captain Kirk into an alternate timeline. This timeline was visited again in the DS9 episodes "Crossover", "Through the Looking Glass", and "Shattered Mirror", again using the transporter.
Transporters were also used for time travel in "Time's Arrow", "Past Tense", and probably several other episodes, always to travel just a few centuries back in time.
As we can see, most Trek time travel has been limited to a few centuries of "temporal displacement". The small handful of long-range time travel incidents have involved technologies which can only move a person, not an entire ship (thus suggesting that movement through time is similar to movement through space; the bigger the object, the more difficult the move).
When we look through the list, we find that once we eliminate small-scale techniques and outside intervention, the only viable method of Federation time travel is the slingshot effect. This creates serious constraints. The slingshot effect places great strain on a starship, and long-range use of this technique has never been observed (or even attempted). The process consumes fuel at an undetermined rate. It places an undetermined stress on the ship. Given these problems, how can the Trekkies insist that there are no limits to the duration of time travel using the slingshot? How long must we suffer Trekkies who insist on assuming that every process is limitless and free unless proven otherwise?

In any case, even if they can somehow resolve the "how" part of the question, we must still wrestle with the "why" part of the question. It is widely assumed that problems can be "solved" through time travel, ie- if something went wrong, you can go back and make it "right". But does this make sense? How does time travel affect the timeline? This question affects the potential usefulness of time travel as a solution for problems, and it leads directly to the infamous "grandfather paradox."

The Grandfather Paradox

We've all heard about the Grandfather Paradox. You step into your handy-dandy time machine. You jump back in time. You murder your grandfather. Now he's dead, and he won't ever sire your father, who in turn won't sire you. This means that you won't be born. But if you were never born, then how could you go back in time and kill your grandfather?

This is an old question, pondered by scientists, philosophers, and anybody who watched "Back to the Future" or "The Terminator". One obvious solution is that time travel might simply be impossible, thus eliminating the problem. However, general relativity predicts the existence of wormholes, and wormholes would theoretically permit time travel. Stephen Hawking has suggested a sort of "cosmic censor" who acts as a universal timecop and ensures that causality paradoxes never happen. This timecop might kill you before you can kill your grandfather, or make him duck to tie his showlaces just as you pull the trigger, etc. And of course, those who optimistically predict the eventual feasibility of time travel tend to resort to the "many worlds" interpretation of quantum mechanics.

Now, I must preface this with the very important caveat that the "many worlds" interpretation of quantum mechanics has been widely discredited. However, if we are using suspension of disbelief, then we must assume that it is valid anyway, because the parallel universes predicted by the "many worlds" theory have actually been observed in Star Trek. Parallel universes were seen first in "Mirror, Mirror" and then more spectacularly in "Parallels", where hundreds of thousands of Enterprise-D's from parallel universes could be seen.

Now, how does the "many worlds" theory explain the Grandfather Paradox? Well, if an infinite number of parallel timelines exist, then the Grandfather Paradox can be explained quite easily. You step into your handy-dandy time machine. You jump back in time, but in the process, you create (or enter) a divergent timeline. You murder your grandfather, but this happens in the new timeline. Back in your original timeline, your grandfather was never murdered, so you still exist. In effect, you are an alien visitor to this new timeline, having come from a different universe.

This solution is not without problems. If you move from one universe to another, then mass/energy conservation laws will be violated because both universes will experience a mass/energy change. However, this can be solved if an equal amount of mass/energy goes the other way, to take your place. Interestingly enough, this is precisely what happened in "Mirror, Mirror". Kirk and his mirror-universe alter ego changed places, thus preserving symmetry. This symmetry is not seen in the TNG and DS9 time travel incidents, but that's merely another example of how TOS is superior to its bastard stepchildren. One could always rationalize it by saying that the return mass/energy was dispersed widely across space etc., but the symmetry shown in "Mirror, Mirror" is a better solution.

"Many worlds" in Star Trek

Some serious problems with Star Trek time travel can be solved once you accept the "many worlds" theory:

"City on the Edge of Forever": When Doctor McCoy jumped through the time portal, the other crewmembers on the planet's surface perceived the sudden disappearance of the entire Federation. Supposedly, he changed the past so that the Federation was never created. But that is impossible because the other crewmen still existed. They still had memories of the Federation. They still had Federation uniforms and Federation weapons. The "many worlds" theory neatly explains this problem: McCoy and all of the people on the planet's surface were all transported into a timeline (or parallel universe, whichever you prefer) in which the Federation never existed. The original timeline is not destroyed, thus explaining why they still remember its history, but they can no longer perceive it or return to it. When Kirk and Spock jumped back to "fix the damage", they caused everyone to jump into another timeline, in which the Federation was founded again, but with slightly different events surrounding Edith Keeler's death. This is not the same as "going home", but as far as they're concerned, it's good enough.

"Star Trek First Contact": When the Borg jumped into the past, the crew of the Enterprise perceived the disappearance of the Federation's entire history. This is impossible because they still exist, and they still retain all of their memories, equipment, history files, etc. Data suggests that they were somehow "shielded from the changes in the timeline", but he doesn't even attempt an explanation of how this is possible. The "many worlds" theory provided a neater explanation: they were dragged into a new timeline by the Borg sphere's "temporal wake", and when they stayed in the wake long enough to perform a similar jump, they ended up in yet another timeline. In this new timeline, they tried to "fix" events so that they unfolded more or less as they remembered (albeit with an orbital bombardment of Cochrane's launch facility which didn't occur in their original history). Note that the "many worlds" theory also explains the biggest conundrum of

STFC: why the Borg fought their way to Earth before performing the time-jump, instead of making the jump from the safety of their own territory. The answer is that a time-jump would move the travellers to a divergent timeline but it would have no effect on the original timeline. Therefore, it would do the Collective no good. You might ask why they performed the jump at all if this is the case, but the Queen's attack had failed and she was facing imminent destruction. A jump into a divergent timeline would not change history in her original timeline, but she may have found the prospect preferable to simply being destroyed by one of Picard's quantum torpedoes.

"Yesterday's Enterprise": History seems to change when the Enterprise-C appears two decades away from where it was supposed to be destroyed in battle. But the original timeline is not gone, and in the new timeline, Guinan can actually perceive that the Enterprise-C belongs to a timeline other than her own (she can even perceive some of the history of that timeline). This perception manifests itself as a disquieting sensation that something is "wrong", but that's an oversimplification. After all, how can a timeline be "wrong?" With countless timelines in existence as seen in "Parallels", why would one be more "right" or "wrong" than another? A better explanation is that Guinan perceived enough of the Enterprise-C's original timeline to know that she thought it was better than the one she was currently in. We jumped to a divergent timeline when the Enterprise-C arrived and we jumped to another divergent timeline when it departed.
Although the "many worlds" theory may have been discredited in real life, it seems to be the only way to explain Star Trek time travel as we've seen it on the show. It explains causality paradoxes in "City on the Edge of Forever" and STFC, and it also explains why time travel is not being used to solve problems, because it means that time travel doesn't really change anything. It only moves the traveller into an alternate universe where events unfold more to his liking. An interesting consequence of this explanation is that we've really been following a group of characters as they move from timeline to timeline, so we haven't stayed in a single universe throughout the series run of Star Trek.
Conclusion

We can now answer the original three questions posed at the top of this section:

Why so rare? This question can be answered by concluding that it probably is not so rare; it simply isn't perceived. There are probably countless time travellers, but each time a traveller leaves, he simply moves to a divergent timeline and disappears from his original timeline. Since we don't follow any timeline jumpers but the main characters, we don't perceive their activities. At best, we might perceive unexplained disappearances of starships, or mysterious "transporter accidents".

Can they pull it off? That's an open question. We know that the only viable method is the slingshot, and we have evidence that there may be range and durability issues. However, the evidence allows us to establish lower limits but not upper limits. This remains an open question.
What's the point? This is the real problem. The "many worlds" solution to the causality paradox leads us to conclude that a time traveller cannot change his original timeline. He can only move to a different timeline, in which events unfold more to his liking. For a soldier losing a war, it would be an act of cowardice since he would quite literally be running away from his defeat. That explains why they only use it when they've been moved to a different timeline against their will or by accident, since they can't get home but they can at least get to a timeline which they find preferable.
This appears to be a very long-winded answer to a simple argument. But the original argument is only simple because it deliberately overlooks numerous complexities affecting Trek time travel. When we take a more serious look at it, the time travel argument doesn't work.
-----------------

Incidently, I think this falls under the "Good guys always win" argument; silly.
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Old March 26, 2003, 16:25   #81
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BustaMike, Not to mention the fact that time travel was done several times in Star Trek. If you are losing, then go back in time and change the factors your loss is based on.
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Old March 26, 2003, 16:30   #82
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You are all geeks!!!

I think that the Federation would win over Star Wars. Why? Guided weapons, cloaking, warp speed, wormhole generation, cloak fields that can go into planets and the corona of the sun, teleporters to better invade ships, mind readers to detect and possibly battle jedi, Data, Journeymen (ah the return of Wesly), better medicine, better shields (that don't need a planet to generate), and no stupid clones.
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Old March 26, 2003, 16:40   #83
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Originally posted by BustaMike
I will restate that I think the Star Trek Universe will win, but now for a different reason. Wesley Crusher can stop time, and no doubt has all other sorts of ridiculous powers by now. Wesley Crusher will simply stop time and take out the entire Empire (slowly mind you, but he has as much time as he wants right?).

Then why didn't he intervene with the Dominion and the Borg?

Quote:
Also, I'm not trying to favor one series over another, but it does seem that those numbers in favor of Star Wars are pulled out of someones arse. At least Star Trek attempts to make some kind of a reasonable scientific basis for the futuristic tech. Star Wars doesn't focus on any of that, it's just a backdrop. For example, the cloak thing. Well... uh... in Star Wars we can detect cloak uh cause we can and they uh... have that. No one ever says, this is how we got or discovered this, they just have it.
Numbers are right, I've only given you the brief synopsis of the articles. The site is given, and I defy you to prove them wrong. Remember, we're "suspending disbelief" here, and, having done that, SW numbers repeatibly come out on top. Paramount regularly lets contradicting on-screen evidence appear. Lucas has a hoard of people whose express purpose is to make sure everything, from the comic books to the movies are consistant with each other.

Hell, in the very first Star Wars novel to take place after A"A New Hope" (Splinter of the Mind's Eye ) Lucas said in the introduction that novels were treated as canon except for parts directly contradicted in the movies.

Lucas has even pulled stuff from EU sources (Mostly Zahn's novels, which have been mentioned) for the prequels. Coruscant. Dual-bladed Sith sabers. The method of cloning.

Quote:
Now lets ignore the fact that Star Wars doesn't bother trying to provide a basis for any of the tech they have and just say they have it. What happens when one of those borg nanoprobes (7of9 had 'em, there was the episode when they made the UberBorg guy from the future tech the doctor has in his holoemitter) starts assimilating the 'superior' Star Wars tech. I guarantee you a Borg Star Destroyer would crush an Empire Star Destroyer. Now all that 'superior' tech would just make the Empire's defeat that much worse. What do you think a Borg Death Star would do?
Yeah, they assimilated Federation tech a while ago, and they were so well adapted to Federation weapons 120 Megaton bombs carved holes outta the cubes. Gimmie a break.

Imperial Nanotechnology may even be beyond that of the borg. Witness the World Devastators of Dark Empire

World Devastators(www.stardestroyer.net)

The World Devastators are unique superweapons which were first used by one of Emperor Palpatine clones shortly following the death of Grand Admiral Thrawn. Unlike the Death Star, World Devastators don't destroy planets; they consume them. Incredibly powerful tractor beams disintegrate planetary matter and draw it into huge elemental furnaces. In these furnaces, the planetary matter is broken down into its base elements and fed to the World Devastator's vast internal droid-controlled production facilities. These facilities could create hordes of "TIE/d" droid-piloted TIE fighters, starships, and even Star Destroyers and other World Devastators (ref. SWEGVV).

A World Devastator's internal factories also perform a secondary function; they augment and upgrade the World Devastator itself. As a result, World Devastators are not static; they grow as they consume planets, asteroids, and starships. Each World Devastator's computer core has a unique identity and creates these customized additions and alterations based on its own decisions. The result is that no two "mature" World Devastators are identical, and given enough time a World Devastator could potentially become large enough to dwarf even the largest starships (ref. SWEGVV).

The Silencer-7 was the largest World Devastator at 3,200m long and 1500m tall. It had a crew of 25,000 and it was heavily armed with 125 heavy turbolaser cannons, 200 blaster cannons, 80 proton torpedo tubes, 15 ion cannons, and 15 tractor-beam projectors. During the Battle of Calamari, it demonstrated the ability to consume heavily armed starships as well as planetary matter when it consumed the captured Rebel Star Destroyer Emancipator. However, it was destroyed along with the other World Devastators when the Rebels used a stolen control code to disable the massive war machines (ref. Dark Empire)

In conclusion, the World Devastators were a highly effective weapon because they combined industrial weapons-production facilities with planetary destruction capabilities. Emperor Palpatine discarded them in favour of the Galaxy Gun in Dark Empire 2, but their dual-role functionality makes them highly appropriate for an invasion force into Federation territory where we have neither mining facilities, shipyards, or existing recruitment programs. In such an environment, World Devastators can rapidly build vast droid-controlled fleets by consuming the Federation's worlds. This will allow us to build overpoweringly large fleets in Federation territory at minimal cost and effort to ourselves or our local shipbuilding programs.
-----------

Interesting thought on the Borg though, if, by some miracle the Borg began to win, don't you think everyone and his brother in the Milky Way would jump on the Empire's side, as they are the only credible force to fight the Borg in the ST galaxy?
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Old March 26, 2003, 16:43   #84
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Oh, come on. The Klingons are supposed to be the Soviets (their language takes all of the worse parts of the German, Russian, and other Eastern Euorpean langauages)

The Ferengi are supposedly Europeans
The Romulans are Russians!!! Mysterious.....powerful.......uneasy peace with the Federation.....

Ferengi are capitalists. Americans are capitalists. Nuff said
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Old March 26, 2003, 16:43   #85
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Quote:
Originally posted by PLATO1003
BustaMike, Not to mention the fact that time travel was done several times in Star Trek. If you are losing, then go back in time and change the factors your loss is based on.
Plato, already covered Time Travel.

Japher


Good reasons, now, you wanna respond to my refutation of them?


Something about teleporters I also liked:

In conclusion, transporters are a horrifying example of the ruthlessness of the Federation, and its willingness to disregard the issue of continuity of existence and consciousness, in favour of expediency. Some claim that the Empire is ruthless, but we do not expect our soldiers to willingly destroy themselves as raw fuel for a cloning process! The Federation is a plague upon their galaxy, and must be eliminated to free their people from horrors like the transporter.



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Old March 26, 2003, 16:44   #86
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Star Wars: Primary weapon is massive floods of drool from idiot fans.
Star Trek: Primary armament is clouds of unmitigated body odor from geek fans.
SW and ST battle results in mutually assured fan destruction. Environmental clean-up costs assessed against Roddenberry's estate and Lucas bankrupt the seemingly endless series of ever more vapid spin-offs and sequels. The world is saved!

Oh, and B5: Seems to have vanished in a puff of computer-generated smoke before the battle begins.

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Old March 26, 2003, 16:46   #87
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I never thought i would see such a discussion on Poly

"Well, the federation has type 10928509125 warp field generators than can fire 28375293 4930862-MT Pulse Cannons!!!"

"Oh yeah?! In Star Wars they have 92083096 Laser-Shooters that can go through 92036092836 Federation TypeIIIplate armour in SECONDS!!!!!"

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Old March 26, 2003, 16:48   #88
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Originally posted by Lonestar
"Allow me recomgulate the shields..."

Worf: "Captain! They are opening fire!"

:: Enterprise dodges shot, gets hit by other 60 light turbolasers. ::
That would probably stand for the end of a cliffhanger between seasons, but in the first episode of the next season we would learn that the shield were "recomgulated" automatically by the computer thanks to the Red Alert protocols that Lt Reed of the Enterprise NX-01 intoduced in Starfleet and that Enterprise D as a dign succesor also incorporates...
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Old March 26, 2003, 16:56   #89
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Originally posted by Tassadar5000


I never thought i would see such a discussion on Poly

"Well, the federation has type 10928509125 warp field generators than can fire 28375293 4930862-MT Pulse Cannons!!!"

"Oh yeah?! In Star Wars they have 92083096 Laser-Shooters that can go through 92036092836 Federation TypeIIIplate armour in SECONDS!!!!!"

You obviously have not been around 'Poly that long.
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Old March 26, 2003, 17:05   #90
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I'm right, so THERE! Pbthpbthpbth!
Quote:
Originally posted by Tassadar5000
The Romulans are Russians!!! Mysterious.....powerful.......uneasy peace with the Federation.....

Ferengi are capitalists. Americans are capitalists. Nuff said
No, it is clear from numerous sources (try reading the old "Making of" books, etc) that the Federation is the English-speaking democracies, Klingons are the Soviet (not Russian) analogues, the inscrutable Vulcans are the Japanese, the similarly mysterious and pointy-eared Romulans are the Chinese.

For ST:TNG races are not a analogous to specific nations, rather to character types. Ferengis are merely archtypical of capitalism gone amuck. Picture Bill Gates as the Grand Nagus and there might be a parallel…

Similarly, the Bajorans and Cardassians are not France and Germany, other than parallels to the behaviors exhibited during the Nazi occupation. Might as well say that Bajorans and Cardassians are the Bosnia-Herzogovinian Muslims and Serbs. The parallel is drawn the other way, from the fictional model to the real world behaviors.
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