Many meteorites you see in the sky are little bigger then a grain of SAND and yet can light up a good portion of the sky.

Moderator: Vympel
I have always been of the opinion that the Borg "queen" exisits as long as any borg exist...ie: She is the collective given formMutant Headcrab wrote:Not necesarily. Remember, these Borg are in the past, before the Queen was "killed." (I use quotation marks, because I myself have not seen any evidence shes dead for good.) They more than likely are connected to the collective of that time frame. That would be just another blow to continuity, because it would point out the Earth to the Borg many, many years earlier than they are supposed to.Raxmei wrote: The Borg Queen *vomit* is dead, so they shouldn't be acting normally. It'd either be braindead robots or something like the Borg Cooperative.
Thanks for taking a look, Necron. I was going to do this but I am simply wasted at this point...the Almighty Stiff-Legged Deadlift always leaves me a mess.NecronLord wrote:I've just taken a look at the sphere explosion in FC. Actually serveral large pieces of the hull survive the explosion.
Ok so now we have a confirmed "Columbia" situation. Anything living on these peices will be instantally incinerated!NecronLord wrote:I've just taken a look at the sphere explosion in FC. Actually serveral large pieces of the hull survive the explosion.
Well obviously for whatever reason it didn't happen, just put it down to Borg technology, after all it isn't like trek tech even notices physical laws let alone obeys them.Isolder74 wrote:Ok so now we have a confirmed "Columbia" situation. Anything living on these peices will be instantally incinerated!NecronLord wrote:I've just taken a look at the sphere explosion in FC. Actually serveral large pieces of the hull survive the explosion.
I think you are really underestimating Borg nanotechnologyIsolder74 wrote:Ok so now we have a confirmed "Columbia" situation. Anything living on these peices will be instantally incinerated!NecronLord wrote:I've just taken a look at the sphere explosion in FC. Actually serveral large pieces of the hull survive the explosion.
In ST, some bioweapons can surive reentry. Prehaps they simply drifted down very slowly or were protected by a chunck of debris. Also, it could have hit a small space body in orbit and difted down with it. It is even possible that a small craft could have been launched and simply failed to make it. Bad, really bad navigation could have sent tham way of course and forced them to lock on to the debris field, but just had too much damage to make it in in one peice.Isolder74 wrote:No, They would be the first thing that would melt because they are so small. The Chance of any living thing surviving those temperatures is so small that only one species of bacteria could even possibly survive is one that is adapted for life in volcanic vents. The Heat of Re-entry would incinterate both the drones and the vaunted nanoprobe with them leaving only small pieces of slab reaching the surface. Also the sphere was destroyed over Montana the pieces would fall to the west of there not to the north!Icehawk wrote:Im no trekkie but for continuity purposes could it not be possible that the nano probes survived reentry and then somehow found a host on earth?
I agree, but only a little. There are large inconsistencies.Batman002 wrote:I think some of you guys are reading a it too much into this ep.
Considering their size, and possible composition, I would agree with this. I'm no physics OR chemistry expert, but there's no way of deciding this without knowing the exact composition and melting point of the material in question, right?Batman002 wrote:First: The nanoBrobes could have survived because we don't know what they are made of.
From what I saw they were still "within" the ship, or what was left of it. The wreckage was all around them and possibly underneath too. So I think it's possible they were deep inside the ship, but we'll never know.Batman002 wrote:second: The Borg could have survived by being somewhere in the center of the ship and as it burned up and disentigrated the borg fell out the ship as it hit the ground, they were buried in the ice afterall.
The radiation wasn't supposed to affect Phlox, that was an undesirable consequence. Phlox said the radiation was supposed to disrupt the actual functioning of the nanoprobes, so it should work for all species.Batman002 wrote:Third: The radiation might only work on Phlox at least his race,he was the only one that had the procedure done.
Okay, Kirk, fuck knows. The Hansens (Seven's family) were independent researchers, right? As for Picard, he should've known if Archer did, they speculated that the "invasion" was coming "sometime in the 24th Century" so I would've expected captains of the 24th Century to be educated about them, classified or not.Batman002 wrote:Fourth: Kirk might have known about them, what purpose was it in any of his time to mention them since they were 200 years from reaching Earth or Federation Space, besides Howmany Goverments do you know tell all they knw about something Dangerous or Deadly to the public. They did after all have a Science team working on Intel on them thats why 7 of 9's family was out there investigating them and how they knew about them before Picard and the Enterprise-D first saw them. (Non Cannon) "The Weapon Kirk fought in "The Doomsday Machine" was said in a Novel called "Ventetta" it ws created to fight the Borg. I know until it's said on screen it's not CANNON but that might be what B&B might have been aiming at.
Someone, including me, already said this.Batman002 wrote:Fifth: The Deflector dish was only powering up they did not transmit anything by the time Worf Blew it to hell. I think it was great way to explain why the Borg made thier first appearance in "The Neutral Zone" Instead of just being there. ( Remember the holes where the Fed and Romulan out posts used to be.)
And mine.Batman002 wrote:Thank you, just my two cents.
Even if by some miracle the Borg nanoprobes did survive, the rest of the Borg would not. After all, they cannot live without their biological pieces parts and unpowered entry into the atmosphere combined with slamming into the ground at orbital speeds would quite thoroughly destroy their biological parts.Batman002 wrote:First: The nanoBrobes could have survived because we don't know what they are made of.
Ah, so inertia need not apply? Tell me what slamming into the ground at orbital speeds would do to someone. Besides, the Borg were out in the open, they weren't in any containers that would protect them from superheated ionized gas that you get with entry into the atmosphere.second: The Borg could have survived by being somewhere in the center of the ship and as it burned up and disentigrated the borg fell out the ship as it hit the ground, they were buried in the ice afterall.
Ah, because we know that radiation cares what species something is right? Phlox is made of flesh and blood like anything else, to the point that they can eat and draw nutrition from all the same foods as humans. There is no reason why radiation should effect him any different. It wasn't so high powered a dose that it seriously hurt him, as he was walking and talking and on the job that day.Third: The radiation might only work on Phlox at least his race,he was the only one that had the procedure done.
We have know idea how or where they were when they hit, they might have been protected some how, besides they looked pretty fucked up to me and the scientists said they were regenerating.Even if by some miracle the Borg nanoprobes did survive, the rest of the Borg would not. After all, they cannot live without their biological pieces parts and unpowered entry into the atmosphere combined with slamming into the ground at orbital speeds would quite thoroughly destroy their biological parts.
Thearitical Science is basically saying "WE DON'T KNOW" That is after all what this debate is, and since we Don't know ( cop out or not ) they could be made of material that was unaffected. The radiation that destroyed the nanobobes were directed at them directly, besides they could simply be shut down and not destroyed. There could be materials that aren't found here on Earth.Besides, the "we don't know!" cop out doesn't fly here. There is a remote possiblity that they could be made of ubertanium that even a small quantity of it could survive intact even when exposed to thousands of degree heat, but chances are they aren't. Besides, the nanoprobes were destroyed by radiation that didn't even serious harm a flesh and blood humanoid, what the hell do you think superheated ionized gas that needs heavy ceramic shielding to prevent it from vaporizing your shuttle is going to do to them.
perhalps thier personalshields protected them from most of the heat and radiation and as well as the impact, the version of the movie I saw never showed them alive or dead or deactivated.Ah, so inertia need not apply? Tell me what slamming into the ground at orbital speeds would do to someone. Besides, the Borg were out in the open, they weren't in any containers that would protect them from superheated ionized gas that you get with entry into the atmosphere.
I didn't say that, phlox was is a humanoid not human. The same dose might kill a person from Earth, besides he was suposed to be in bed.Ah, because we know that radiation cares what species something is right? Phlox is made of flesh and blood like anything else, to the point that they can eat and draw nutrition from all the same foods as humans. There is no reason why radiation should effect him any different. It wasn't so high powered a dose that it seriously hurt him, as he was walking and talking and on the job that day.