

Bio neural gel packs = teh suxor.
Moderator: Vympel
"Get that cheese to sickbay!"Stark wrote:
Bio neural gel packs = teh suxor.
And twice the yield, no?The quantum torpedo is just a prettier color.
Again, greater firepower. A phaser array is many phaser banks operating in parallel.Phaser technology hasn't improved at all, it's gotten worse. SF made the change from "bank" to "strip", and I don't know of any advantage an array has over a bank.
There were androids in TOS that seemed just as capable as Data. See "What Are Little Girls Made Of?", or "I, Mudd".Castor Troy wrote:I'm not disagreeing with you or anything, but what about developement in term of robotics? Data as an example.
I was referring as much to personal weapons as I was shipboard weapons. I see your point about strip phasers and their improved firepower. Conceded. But what of the personal phasers? I can't see any improvement in their firepower, just the ability to widebeam. And that depletes the power cells rapidly, IIRC.Spacebeard wrote:Again, greater firepower. A phaser array is many phaser banks operating in parallel.
We do see a steady improvement in firepower, just like we see steady small increases in warp speed, but the base technology remains mostly the same. Any qualitatively different weapons we see, such as the Breen magic energy sink, seem to be based on cheap technobabble tricks which are quickly invalidated by other cheap technobabble tricks. This seems to be where much of Star Trek's weapon development efforts are focused: an arms race between weapons optimized to penetrate specific designs of shields versus shields optimized to nullify specific weapons.
Someone in another thread said that the wide beam setting existed in TOS. He was a troll that got banned, though, so I don't know if he can be trusted on that.Ra wrote:
I was referring as much to personal weapons as I was shipboard weapons. I see your point about strip phasers and their improved firepower. Conceded. But what of the personal phasers? I can't see any improvement in their firepower, just the ability to widebeam. And that depletes the power cells rapidly, IIRC.
- Ra
Well, in all fairness being sidearms they don't need more firepower.Spacebeard wrote: I don't see any improvement in firepower either, for the personal weapons. The main site says that only apparent improvements are that the power cells are far less volatile and dangerous while providing the same power.
Designed by an alien race, and Data, unlike the TOS androids, can resist being crashed by humans acting illogical.Spacebeard wrote:There were androids in TOS that seemed just as capable as Data. See "What Are Little Girls Made Of?", or "I, Mudd".Castor Troy wrote:I'm not disagreeing with you or anything, but what about developement in term of robotics? Data as an example.
True. But Starfleet has never been able to reproduce Data, so for all intents and purposes he might as well have been designed by aliens too. As for the logic bugs, I don't remember that happening in "What Are Little Girls Made Of?", only in "I, Mudd", but I could be mistaken about that.Matt Huang wrote:Designed by an alien race, and Data, unlike the TOS androids, can resist being crashed by humans acting illogical.Spacebeard wrote:There were androids in TOS that seemed just as capable as Data. See "What Are Little Girls Made Of?", or "I, Mudd".Castor Troy wrote:I'm not disagreeing with you or anything, but what about developement in term of robotics? Data as an example.
Data was built with the established techbase of the Federation. The androids in "I, Mudd" and "What Are Little Girls Made Of" aren't.Spacebeard wrote:True. But Starfleet has never been able to reproduce Data, so for all intents and purposes he might as well have been designed by aliens too. As for the logic bugs, I don't remember that happening in "What Are Little Girls Made Of?", only in "I, Mudd", but I could be mistaken about that.Matt Huang wrote:Designed by an alien race, and Data, unlike the TOS androids, can resist being crashed by humans acting illogical.Spacebeard wrote: There were androids in TOS that seemed just as capable as Data. See "What Are Little Girls Made Of?", or "I, Mudd".
This thread is about Star Trek scientists, not their technology base (and not specifically Federation scientists, either). It doesn't speak well of these scientists that they cannot reproduce Data.Matt Huang wrote:
Data was built with the established techbase of the Federation. The androids in "I, Mudd" and "What Are Little Girls Made Of" aren't.
Otherwise, I could take an ISD from Star Wars, fly it into Federation space, and argue that it's indicative of the Federation's capabilities.
True, but technological developement and rate does reflect on the scientists in terms of performance, among other things.Spacebeard wrote: This thread is about Star Trek scientists, not their technology base (and not specifically Federation scientists, either). It doesn't speak well of these scientists that they cannot reproduce Data.
This is an example of the compressed summation of ST tech advancement arguments. How do we know the yield? Whoops, we FUCKING DON'T. We don't know proper numbers for ANYTHING. It just looks different. AI, robots, guns, jack.Spacebeard wrote:And twice the yield, no?The quantum torpedo is just a prettier color.
Yeah, I got that statement about quantum torpedoes from the main site, which in turn got it from the DS9 TM. I don't think the show gives us anything conclusive to either confirm that or contradict it; no numbers, like you said.Stark wrote:This is an example of the compressed summation of ST tech advancement arguments. How do we know the yield? Whoops, we FUCKING DON'T. We don't know proper numbers for ANYTHING. It just looks different. AI, robots, guns, jack.Spacebeard wrote:And twice the yield, no?The quantum torpedo is just a prettier color.
I know Spacebeard isn't one of these people, its just an example, please don't take it personally.
err, no. More like "on the hour after the third day, they think up the countermeasures to make it useless."Coalition wrote:You forgot:You'd have the Lensmen on crack. Triplanetary and First Lensman especially portray the cliche of "think it up one day, build it the next, arm the fleet with it on the third day."
And on the fourth day, they think up the countermeasure to make it useless.
What's scientific about 'We've found this completely new idea... Whoops, it completely fails to work. Eh-heh. More funding please?', precisely, that is not scientific about 'By using known physics and engineering principles, we've miniaturized this hyperdrive to a size suitable for usage on the TIE fighter', exactly?Castor Troy wrote:Well, here's my look at the different weapons designing "philosophies".
The Empire likes to improve their technology, and basically make their weapons more powerful. Superweapons equates to "the bigger, the better" and basically a huge industrial infrastructure to back it up.
The Federation, on the other hand, likes to find more "scientific" ways to design new weapons, and can also be considered adaptable.
Anyways, that's just my take, but please, correct me if I'm wrong.
What I meant was that the Federation would like to research new technologies. Again, this is just a generalization I'm making, and I didn't say it was any better than the Star Wars method.SirNitram wrote:
What's scientific about 'We've found this completely new idea... Whoops, it completely fails to work. Eh-heh. More funding please?', precisely, that is not scientific about 'By using known physics and engineering principles, we've miniaturized this hyperdrive to a size suitable for usage on the TIE fighter', exactly?