vakundok wrote:Oh boy! My answer is lost to the daily backup.
I agree on the savings it can be canon without much problem. However the question was whether they were automatically canon, since they did not have the 'Infinite' logo and did not directly contradict with the movies. The set-up time of the ion cannon or the stormtroopers having a lightsaber in their utility belts are maybe better examples. 'have SOME STANDING' is not an exact category especiallly if it is up to the lowest level fans to decide about it.
Personally, I think in terms of "accepted" in this case and "unaccepted." Only when there's a hierchary clash do I even remember the hierchary. And never reply at or near 1000GMT (6PM my time at +8) - its asking for trouble.
vakundok wrote:It is not that easy. The Imperial is a multi purpose ship whereas the Imperator is a pure naval vessel with minimal security / boarding troops. So that difference changes the function of the vessel which is (in my opinion) far more important than the size, engines or weaponry numbers.
I think the extra stuff is more a product of the new length - there's room, might as well add some multi-role capability.
vakundok wrote:It is OK, but if you even question a higher level material based on a lower level material (or on the lowest level fan feelings), you will throw out the (importance levels set in the) canon policy and the analyzing method of going top to bottom.
Actually, no one is actually questioning the higher level material. I agreed most people in the SW galaxy termed the class as Imperial, remember? I think not even the most fanatic Saxtonite would try to defy this one. In other words, we nod and we try to get around it, which is acceptable as long as the Canon Seal is not 100% (which is why Hobbie lives.) Whether that corresponds to Terran convention. Well, it is one step later...
vakundok wrote:I have to disagree.
1, Naming the class of a beginning imperial era as 'Imperial' is not that stupid especially if the ship is designed and destined to be the symbol of that era.
There are lots of better things to call it, like Empire. I'm afraid our tastes don't correspond.
2, As you wrote, it (naming the class after the first ship and the names within a class are usually logical and similar) is a terran convention at most. If the SWU does not apply that it will cause only a terran brainbug, but will not cause any problems to an SWU being.
SODwise, you could be correct. UN-SODwise, we are pretty sure how this one came about. As I said, it is like Voyager episodes - we really know that a lot of the stuff is really due to writer idiocy rather than intelligent and we complain anyway even while trying to rationalize their idiocy.
3, I see no reason why the class names of an assault transport, a cruiser/destroyer and a command flagship would need to be similar. (Yes, Los Angeles and Ohio are similar, but Nimitz and Guam are not and they do not cause any brainbug.)
Actually, our main argument is closer to the need for ships to match their classes with their nameships, and that it was originally called the Imperator-class, then the generic Imperial Star Destroyer, then some moron started translating it into Imperial-CLASS Star Destroyer, and everyone followed suite. The nameship = class name seems to be a worldwide Terran thing. The fact that it was a tradition until the Sovereign and Eclipse were build to call large ships with names ending with "-or" is just icing on the cake.
Imperial is very stupid as a ship name. Even if you can chow down a ship called America and one (never built) called Sovietsky Soyuz, can you choke down a ship called American or Nihonjin (Japanese) or Zhongguoren (Chinese)?
Try saying "The Imperial Star Destroyer Imperial conducted a Base Delta Zero today." Wierd, no?
But then, County is not that good as a ship name, yet as a designator for a class, it is adequate. Which is why I'm willing to accept Imperial as such a slapper.
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Now that I'm done ranting non-SODwise, let's do SODwise, since it is canon that most people call it Imperial. No doubt, of course, that even if it ultimately became the "Imperator-class" on the canon level, the "Imperial-class" designator is too deeply ingrained. It'd stay on as the far more common slang, or alternate name.
I think it is a matter of translation from the original Basic. Some translators translate closer to the language, and some translate more to their own protocols. Saxtonites want them to translate more to our protocols - the SW authors obviously think otherwise.
A very common Terran example comes in translating Russkie ranks. You see a lot of novels retaining the "Captain 1st Rank --> Captain Lieutenant" Rank Structure that is the true Russian structure (check a Russian transliteration.) Then you see a lot of novels that will convert it into "Captain --> Lieutenant Commander" and "Captain Lieutenant" seems to quietly disappear. Just a matter of approach, though I prefer the former in this case.
Going overboard might be when a particular author decided that because the Chinese language does not really differentiate between Naval Captain and Army Colonel (both of them are
shangxiao,) he went right out and wrote "Colonel" for a Chinese captain's rank (of course, his ship was later destroyed by the Americans.) The wierd thing is, IIRC Chinese Generals and Admirals also have one designator, and he doesn't integrate them on that level. Anyway, back to our topic.
It just goes right along with our wishes for ranks to be translated into more "proper" English. A common subject of much derision is the rank Commander, which is often placed between Colonel and General. To be absolutely fair and objective, for all we know, the original word for the rank might be like "Shireikan" (Japanese Romaji: literally "Commander") and the author (which SODwise is supposed to be a mere translator) might have struggled for a long time before deciding to translate it literally. A true Saxtonite, of course, does not like this, automatically associating the word with Naval Commanders and Brit Wing Commanders