Well, no, there's that colossal industrial advantage they have demonstrated in the movies. That's rather significant really.Disco Soup wrote:I'm curious about this. It seems that yes, the ships of the Empire are faster than those of the Federation, but from what we've seen on-screen, that seems to be the only edge that the Empire has.
And yet, their society mysteriously can persist even though we've seen that criminals and civilians can engage in time travel, nevermind the alien of the week (like the Krenim) or stuff like that. Saying "Time travel = I win" is patently stupid and comic book fanboyesque because you don't make any effort to analyze or measure the ability, or bother to consider the potential limitations, dangers, or risks inherent in such a technology.Consider:
-The Federation and its neighbors have demonstrated the ability to reliably engage in time-travel on multiple occasions. This includes an episode of TOS, Star Trek IV, Trials and Tribbleations and Endgame.*
Yes, so what? Is this supposed to be a gamewinnner as well?-The Federation has teleportation technology.
Based on what exactly? And if you say "replicators" I am going to flame you incessantly for not putting any thought into your answer.-The Federation and energy-to-matter conversion technology.
So? Cloaking devices are not be-all, end-all gamewinners either. There are going to be obvious drawbacks and limitations to cloaking devices based on simple logic, nevermind in-universe stufff. And this applies to cloaking technology on both sides, since both (for example) use reaction thrusters, have to dissipate waste heat, etc.-The Federation has cloaking devices and the means to detect cloaked ships. The Empire may have cloaks, as evidenced by Piett's line in ESB about cloaking devices, but it's certainly clear that the Imperial fleet does not use them, or they would have done so before the Battle of Hoth and that if they had the means to detect a cloak then Piett would have ordered them to do so when they lost the Millenium Falcon from view.*
Again, you make no effort whatsoever at bothering to putting any logic behind this, so you come off as just another fanboy with fanboy tactics. For one thing, what proof is there that they can weaponize it or deploying it as a weapon? Are we just supposed ot take your word on it because you say so?-An episode of The Next Generation showed an engineer who created a ridiculous method of space travel that made a "subspace wave" or whatever that went out of control. It was stated that the wave would have destroyed any planets in its path. The Enterprise came up with a way to dissipate the wave at the end of the episode. Any Starfleet capital ship would be capable of deploying and dissipating the wave as a weapon. That would easily take out or disable a Death Star.*
No math mentality. I could just as easily point out that you can't "incinerate" rock because it can't combust. you could of course incinerate the organic matter above it, but that's not neccesarily impressive on its own. Nevermind that you haven't bothered to address timeframe or anything.-The Enterprise from TOS is capable of incinerating the crust of a planet on its own. I believe the name of the episode where this is mentioned is "The Armageddon Factor." The Imperial flagship Executor was incapable of destroying the Hoth Echo Base from orbit. If you are thinking about the Rebel shield, see the next entry.
Oh, and you're so well versed in Star Wars Shield Engineering that you know WHY and what parameters do and don't influence shield penetration? Well damn, I guess I don't have anything to respond ot that.-The Hoth Echo Base shield is able to be penetrated by ground vehicles. Starfleet shields are capable of deflecting incoming attack ships. In the episode Preemptive Strike, the only way a small fighter was able to pierce the shields and get close to the Enterprise was that Enterprise allowed them in.
At this point I'm losing any interest in humoring you, because it seems like you've just amassed alot of "what if" speculation and expect this to somehow change things.
Uh yes it was. The movies explicitly mention ray shielding and particle shielding. The ANH novelization (which is canonical) also makes mention of shielding.-A point could be made that in regards to the Second Death Star's shield. That shield was delivered by a planet-based facility. If the Empire had the technology to equip the Death Star with its own energy shield then they would have done so, but neither Death Star was so equipped. The conclusion is that Starfleet shields are stronger and more economical.
Unproven speculation, and therefore meaningless.-The Federation defeated the Dominion in battle. There is no conceivable scenario in which the Federation would fail to demand and receive the Dominion's invasive transporter technology, which is capable of beaming through shields.
And what sort of advantage do you suppose this technology brings against the Empire, and what is the proof of those capabilities?-In Endgame, Voyager comes back home with advanced technology that allows them to destroy Borg ships with little effort. Such technology is only 20 years ahead of Voyager's time so there is little doubt that if the crew of Voyager could adapt it to their own ship so quickly, then Starfleet would waste no time in upgrading the fleet.
No, its not. They did not build the Death STar like some "to scale model" where the parts come pre-formed and you only have to fit the tabs into the slots or something silly like that. They had to move immense amounts of resources to a specific location, and shape/refine the materials inot an actual structure. That is not a trivial feat. That same amount of mateiral can be applied in quite a few other ways, particularily since the Death STar itself was quite obviously built without any sort of shipyard infrastructure.-Yes, the Empire has Death Star technology. However, the Empire only has ever had one Death Star at a time, never a fleet. As the Death Star would be vulnerable to the subspace wave above, the point is moot.
And we're just to assume that these "people" somehow have the clout and authority to pull off all the wonder tactics you just claimed they can do? Or that noone is going to oppose them?*The asterisk-marked entries are all illegal in the Federation. However, Star Trek VI, Star Trek Insurrection and the episodes The Drumhead, Homefront and Paradise lost all show that Starfleet has many people in it's chain of command who are perfectly willing to contravene existing laws for the sake of victory in battle.
Frankly, I don't care what oyu like. You've assembled a large mass of pointless speculation and "game winning" comic books trategies with zero thought or zero substance behind him. This is the exact sort of BS I saw throughout vs debating on both sides, and its the sort of thing I've come to actually LOATHE about it. And to put it bluntly, you've done absolutely nothing to back up your claims. Frankly, why the hell should anyone believe you?I like both Star Wars and Star Trek. I'm simply puzzled over the fact that many people assume that the Empire would destroy the Federation when the Federation clearly has superior technology.