CaptJodan wrote:
Guess that's why Earth still doesn't have FTL,
And those systems are alien systems with a USAF sticker slapped on the side. Recall how easily Vala started finding goa'uld standard crystals and similar on the Prometheus? Same with the hyperdrive on the 304; it was designed - and even said to have been - by the Asgard.
or that when Sam or Rodney uses quantum physics to solve a problem it never works,
We've actually seen demonstrations that QT isn't accurate. Foresight exists, thus, the uncertainty principle is indequate to explain known and observed phonomena. Carter simply had to be a stereotype 'disbelieving skeptic' in both of those occasions, because they assume it's an accurate theory, when she's been told it's fallacious. She certainly shouldn't have been the 'disbelieving skeptic' the second time; quite obviously QT is inadequate in these circumstances, and she ought to bloody know it.
or that they continue to NOT bring up QT every time it's a multi-universe situation Oh wait... Your argument is basically that Earth scientists are not using advanced Tollan theories, but rather still using quantum theory,
My argument was that the human understanding of the technology they use is probably woefully incomplete, and they shouldn't be dicking with stuff on the assumption they fully understand it. Right now, what they need to do is get, not just the technology, but the
science. At least the goa'uld
understood their stuff, for all they might have stolen it. For the Tau'ri to progress, they need to work on establishing the proper education to make use of what they now have.
By primarily gaining alien technology to use for themselves. The team went to the Nox homeworld precisely for the purpose of securing one of the animals they thought had natural cloaking abilities (this is one of many, many examples). The acquisition of new technology for defense has been one of the highest priorities in their mission statement since the beginning.
Your argument was that the stargate program's continuing justification was to bring back technology. Right now, they have the complete knowledge of the Ancients and Asgard available to them. Aside from their distant, out of range, technologically inferior enemies, they have no real defence issues to worry about. The program can no longer justify itself based upon technology it brings back; the planet is safe, and it's holding back a massive amount of technology (and education needed to use it) from the public. With what they have, they could start working toward making people
freaking immortal and immensely more prosperous.
The stargate program cannot justify itself on the technology it's bringing back, if that technology never sees the public domain. There's no pressing need to try and find new weapons right now - they
have all the knowledge they can use.
That doesn't mean there's no role for the stargate: of course it would continue to be useful, but they have no pressing need to find new technologies. They have an in-box of new technologies that's bulging at the sides. It's time to go public, so that the technologies and knowledge they
have got can begin to be exploited, and for the Stargate's use to be geo(stellar?)political engagement with the other governments of the galaxy, and continuing operations against existing enemies in the form of the Wraith. The wars in the Milky Way, are over; there's no rational reason to think that anarchy would break out if it went public. Protection from the Wraith would be best achieved by using resources available to a public program to expand Pegasus operations.
*As an aside, to be fair to Atlantis, it has, on the whole, kept the Ancients as the overall pinnacle of tech in the Pegasus galaxy. With SG-1, there was a constant one-ups-man-ship going on between Goa'uld, where Apophis was bad, but then we have this Goa'uld who has better tech, then he's trumped by Anubis, who is is then trumped by the replicators which are more powerful who are then defeated and replaced by Baal, who is trumped by the evil Ori, the most powerful of powerful, etc. The wraith have remained relatively consistent in their tech, and any advancements have generally been with the help of Ancient tech itself, not some new super race that is "even better than the ancients". Even the Asurans were ancient based, as were the 2 episode "Assgard". I've always counted this as a positive in Atlantis' favor, for I was getting sick of the constant one-up behavior of SG-1. We just needed an enemy from the start that was more powerful or more capable than we got.
That's true.
Frankly, I'd like to see something like the 'Foothold' aliens (re-designed somewhat) as the main adveseries in the next series. They didn't need shiny super technology to be a threat; they were smart. An enemy doesn't even need much better-than-human technology to be a serious threat, they simply need to be written as being as smart and resourceful (or more so) as the heroes. This is part of why I like the Asurans so much; until
Be All My Sins, those guys were universally depicted as smart and committed, you didn't want to mess with them. Their response to an attack on their world was immediate, and
killed a main character.
As I believe I mentioned on SDN, I expected Todd to steal at least bits of the Asgard Core when he was on board the Daedalus. And I was also hoping for the ship to be destroyed. The problem with Atlantis, to my mind, has been that the adversaries never seem to win; and are simply out-classed by the heroes in most encounters.