Winston Blake wrote:I think this is the misunderstanding. The way i see it, the idea here is adding to current applications of technology rather than outright replacing them. Much of the tech we see in ST was probably discarded ages ago, but it's not as if Trek's going to follow the exact same path of technological evolution as the SW galaxy did. No doubt at some points in history, ST cultures have had to further develop some tech to the point of usefulness where SW adopted a newly discovered better method. It's just that with an entire other galaxy of variations, developments and scales, the SW galaxy could add the more unique examples of treknology to its knowledge base. The isolation of factions due to the sluggishness of warp drive would have contributed to this rich variation. All the skills and knowledge in working with such primitive technology that have fallen out of use for thousands of years could offer new insights into niche applications or give a corporation a competitive edge.SancheztheWhaler wrote:In a nutshell, what I'm saying is that weapons systems are designed for specific purposes. By suggesting changes to existing Imperial technology, you are all sugguesting that there are flaws in that technology, and I don't agree that the flaws exist.
In your earlier analogy of the Spaniards adopting obsidian-tipped arrows, bullets and arrows are basically the same thing. Obviously TLs aren't going to be replaced by phaser strips, but maybe engineering hurdles that the SW galaxy never had to leap regarding NDF tech could revitalise the mining industries? There's an entire galaxy that's just been conquered.
Well then they should already be using them. AFAIK nothing like transporter tech has ever been even mentioned in SW (except Luke's whimsical 'teleport me off this rock'), so i guess it's possible the principle was lost in the mists of time or even never saw application. Perhaps transporter tech is a mere Imperial lab curiosity which is considered totally impractical simply because it wasn't economic enough to ever fund. Or then think of all the shipping corporations and transport ship manufacturers who would kill to maintain the status quo.The only technology that doesn't seem to have some parallel in Star Wars is transporter technology, but given the semi-religious hatred of clones in the Star Wars galaxy, perhaps there are philosophical reasons why this isn't used or wasn't developed. Assuming there are no philosophical reasons, I don't see any reason why the Empire wouldn't adopt transporters for moving cargo around.
I hear what you're saying, but I just don't agree. You dismissed the Aztec/Spaniard analogy by saying that arrows and guns are the same. Well, their function is the same (kill people), but the approach is completely different (chemical reaction propelling a projectile vs. human powered projectile).
Also, you'd have to show that there wasn't something that was already better in SW Universe, and I have a hard time believing that any military applications of Star Trek technology haven't already been utilized (and discarded?) in the natural course of technological development in the SW Universe.
As far as revitalizing the mining industries, SW can build particles from (at least) the sub-atomic level. Remember the droid manufacturing plant in Attack of the Clones? Droids were being assembled in a very quick process that can only be achieved by manipulating the matter that is being assembled. It was no normal production line, in other words. Given this capability, why wouldn't the Empire be able to effeciently mine every last resource from its planets and solar systems? Why would they need Federation technology 20,000 years less advanced?