Firefox wrote:You missed where everyone has pointed out that it would take the Federation forever to learn and understand the technology to the point of even knowing how to use it.
Goddamn, for the third time
you don't have to know how a machine works in order to operate it. If your car broke down could you fix it? What about your computer? What about your TV? Most of the devices you use every day you probably would have no idea how to build and repair yourself, but you do know which buttons to push. That's the level of knowledge the Feds would need to run a
fully operational, mint condition Death Star (which, supposedly, they would get in two months if I read the OP correctly). It won't stay operational for long, but at least for a couple of months they'd be the most powerful race in the galaxy by virtue of owning it. I'm not saying they'd effortlessly learn how to operate it, but unlike learning how to repair or build it I don't see why simply learning what switches to throw is such a totally infeasable goal for them.
Firefox wrote:Negotiate surrender? To the crew of the Death Star? You understand how mind-numbingly stupid that argument is, don't you?
Depends, are they aware that their weapons, shields, and propulsion will be restored in two months? If they think they're permanently disabled in a strange galaxy they might find selling out to the Feds better than spending the rest of their lives stuck on the DSII in orbit of Earth.
Firefox wrote:Assuming they could capture them alive, get them to talk, translate Galactic Basic, comprehend what they're saying.....
Capturing some alive shouldn't be too hard, the Empire is fascists not religious fanatics or SST Bug type creatures who will always fight to the death. Learning the language is hard to say, although given the wanktastic powers of the universal translator (cannonically demonstrated to figure out alien tongues after a few sentences, yes I do know how ridiculous that sounds but we see it do that) it probably wouldn't be too difficult. Getting them to talk would likely be the hardest part, especially as the Feds probably wouldn't use very harsh methods knowing them.
Firefox wrote:And every single one of those combatants is well trained to man a space station 20,000 years more advanced than the technology they're used to?
No, there I was adressing the issue of taking over the DS, not manning it. You wouldn't use common boot soldiers to man the DS anyway, that's totally outside their area of expertise. I'd be like having spaceship operators take part in ground battles...oh wait, never mind.
I'm not saying learning to man (not build, not repair, not understand, just push the buttons) the DSII would be easy, but I don't see why it would be impossible.
Tribun wrote:That with the million crew is jsut a example of totally flawed tech books. Given the size of DS I (160km), it would need billions of crew.
Or possibly it was heavily automated. After all, in the long run giving it a good automation system is probably cheaper than paying the salaries of an entire planetary population's worth of sailors. Or possibly most of the mass of the DS is reactors, engines, and the superlaser, with only a very small part of it being habitable space.