StarWarsStarTrek wrote: Except that the Essential Atlas gives a figure of 120,000 LY in diameter, written with a 3rd person omniscient perspective, which trumps a 3rd person limited perspective in terms of reliability.
And the same source says the GFFA is smaller then 120,000 light years. Your source is self contradictory.
You need to prove your claim. Provide the quotes.
StarWarsStarTrek wrote: Ah, so you expect me to look through 7 pages of a thread to find these "pretty pictures" of yours?
I expect you to scroll down and go to the next page until you see and read the two or three posts with the big noticeable maps with flashing lines on them, but you really should just read the whole thread anyway. It is only 7 pages.
http://www.starfleetjedi.net/forum/view ... f=8&t=1478
StarWarsStarTrek wrote: Right, and a Federation force sub would involves years or decades just to get to Tatooine.
Would they? The maps show a galaxy only a slightly lager diameter then the UFP is long.
StarWarsStarTrek wrote: Such hyperdrive speeds are canon, and having a few planets being close together does absolutely nothing to refute it.
And how far apart are the planets used to calculate that speed?
What source says hyperdrives are that fast?
StarWarsStarTrek wrote: ...The Essential Atlas.
The Essential Atlas is a self contradictory source, and therefor an unreliable source.
StarWarsStarTrek wrote: Ah. Even as an absolute upper limit, it would have no more than a few years of construction time, which is the upper limit for the construction time of the Death Star 2.
Just find the quote, and post it along with the page number, and name of the book.
StarWarsStarTrek wrote: What; are you claiming that the Jedi Temple had less than 200 Jedi? Where is your evidence.
It's from the script, and scripts are G-canon last time I checked. The Temple is just where the Jedi go between missions.
StarWarsStarTrek wrote: I did not deny the 10,000 Jedi claim. What I was saying was that the Jedi Temple alone had more than 200 Jedi.
We don't know how many Jedi are there at any one time. I've never heard any set numbers for how many Jedi are normally stationed there.
StarWarsStarTrek wrote: Yet photon torpedos do not suffer from that problem...but the Federation still fired them at point blank range, despite supposedly having >100,000 KM effective ranges. The only possible explanation is that the Federation ships have crap range.
Even torpedos suffer from the fact that the farther away they are fired the more time the target has to react to them, and the Borg are perfectly able to adapt to torpedos.
StarWarsStarTrek wrote: To be honest, that wouldn't surprise me, given that Federation characters make mistakes like every episode.
You will provide examples. Quotes and Episode names. Basically you are claiming the UFP should not be able to navigate anywhere, and target anything with weapons.
StarWarsStarTrek wrote: ROFL what? Did you just claim that visuals are less reliable than visuals? Thank you for admitting that you are clearly desperate to win this debate. You try to refute the ICS by using visuals, and then turn around and claim that dialog trumps visuals. By that account, the 200 gigaton claim > all TCW visuals. Star Wars wins.
I said that dialog in Star Trek is more reliable then the visuals because they have odd mistakes. like ships changing size or design for no reason.
Star Wars has a very different canon policy then Star Trek like the novelizations being canon, and no source support the ICS 2 and 3.
StarWarsStarTrek wrote: Reversed; most trek combat takes place within a few KMs or even within a few hundred meters, but there are examples over over 10 kms.
Prove it.
StarWarsStarTrek wrote: And yet Federation commander regularly go within 1 km ranges; surprise, Federation commanders are morons!
Clearly the ships must be much larger then believed, or the VFX are wrong.^_^
You need to prove your claim.
StarWarsStarTrek wrote: Enlighten as to how they are. It's not my job to prove a negative, especially not to one as ridiculous as yours. I suppose that the United States' tanks are a sign of their limited air combat, eh?
So you can't prove Star Wars powers can fire on ground targets, and destroy those targets, and you can't show it is a standard tactic? That kind of means you are wrong. Heck there is very limited use of bombers and artillery in Star Wars.
If you can hit targets from orbit easily then you will not mass large numbers of troops out in the open without defenses that can protect them.
StarWarsStarTrek wrote: To occupy territory, smart one? This is basic military warfare.
To bad they use the same tactics even when the objective is simply to destroy a factory
StarWarsStarTrek wrote: And where does that energy come from? Magic?
From reactors that easily put out gigatons a second.
StarWarsStarTrek wrote: Ah, more examples of the Federation's vastly smaller scale.
Jumping to conclusions aren't you. The UFP has to train the crew, but there is nothing that says they couldn't just build all Galaxies if they wanted to. Why have fewer large ships at a time when you can have lots of smaller ships that meet you needs?
StarWarsStarTrek wrote: ROFL what? So during the dominion war and the various borg invasions they didn't need more galaxy class ships?
They were turning out Galaxies like candy along with smaller ships during the Dominion war.
YOu mean like the 5 galaxies that were waiting for the borg at the end of Voyager?
StarWarsStarTrek wrote: The TM and the new Star Trek movie suggest that they build them conventionally, and not using magi-tech replicators.
The TMs are contradicted by the TV shows.
We see them working on a ship on the ground, but we don't know what their doing.
StarWarsStarTrek wrote: "large" amounts that are absolutely nothing compared to the industrial capability of Star Wars.
To bad Star wars powers never make use of it, and you have yet to prove it exists..
StarWarsStarTrek wrote: Then how did he get the red matter at all?
You haven't seen the movie? He captured Spock who had it.
StarWarsStarTrek wrote: "just about anything" means basic materials. It does not in any way counter the huge industrial might of Star Wars.
Yes they can't make extremely exotic things like Red Matter. They have no trouble making things like phasers, armor, food, ... just about anything.
StarWarsStarTrek wrote: Details, please.
One ounce of anti-matter was used to blow off something like half the atmosphere of a seemingly Earth like planet, and made that huge crater seen in the screen caps on that page..
StarWarsStarTrek wrote: As in fusion, both Star Wars and Star Trek probably use some exotic form of fusion that we do not know about.
While I don't like to give a group tech they don't have, I see nothing wrong with with giving them what they are shown to have. If canon says fusion they use fusion even if they somehow get far more energy from it then they should.
Hypermatter came into being in the EU because some idiot got the moronic idea Star Wars was a hard sci-fi setting.
Besides there is real world hypermatter, but it would be matter composed of only Hyperons. I guess someone didn't think the name through.^_^
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hyperon
StarWarsStarTrek wrote: And yet they need matter to annihilate the anti-matter with to get energy. Therefore, they still need matter to get the energy, and thus your claim about them not needing matter is moot.
Matter is easy to get. Anti-matter is hard to make and store. The UFP has some cheap way to make anti-matter.
Voyager was always on the look out for hydrogen, but the Voyager crew are not exactly known for being the sharpest tools in the shed in the shed, but then again their ship was badly damaged from Episode one on, and they couldn't get it repaired properly so that might explain some things.
StarWarsStarTrek wrote: Please elaborate.
The Republic needed the fual on the planet to fight the war.
StarWarsStarTrek wrote: Nice goalpost move, because you originally claimed that they had large supplies of them.
They have lots of photon torpedos, and they have lots of ways that involve photon torpedos.
Voyager out in the mild of nowhere and short on supplies was able to produce planet/star destroying weapons on it's own.
StarWarsStarTrek wrote: Really? And how do you know that the Death Star shown wasn't the prototype?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GtJpg4d93-w
We see the blue prints to the Death Star seen in ANH.
The Death Star is made with proven technologies.
The Death Star seen at the end of ep3 did not look like any picture I've seen of the "prototype Death Star".
Word of god as I recall.
StarWarsStarTrek wrote: Do you seriously not understand the possibilities of such a device? Obviously the Federation is either too stupid to understand it or can't produce it. Make your pick.
When strong appear weak.
They among other reasons don't want to make their neighbor to nervous.
When would a Genesis device have been useful to the UFP that the scaled down slower and less threatening version could not meet their needs??
StarWarsStarTrek wrote: Oh, and THEY NEVER MASS PRODUCED THE STAR BUSTERS!
They never needed the star busters but knew exactly how.
They did mass produce gravimetric war heads, destroy a small planet or turn a star into a black hole.
http://memory-alpha.org/wiki/Gravimetric_torpedo
StarWarsStarTrek wrote: Then why did you make such a stupid evasion move that the war wouldn't even happen?
You mean use a senior where there is a wormhole sort of thing linking the two galaxies at a time about the same as Kirk and Picard's' era? The simple answer is that by the time the either group would have been able to meet under their own power the UFP would crush the weak Star Wars side, and that just isn't fun.
StarWarsStarTrek wrote: Eh, because they're a threat to their existence?
Canon says other wise since we know the future.
How would doing things like destroying star and planets help deal with them? The Borg would just be annoyed at best, and the Dominion would return in kind if not worse.
Strangely enough what you are suggesting was used on the tribbles. They went for total over kill.
StarWarsStarTrek wrote: Such prime directives are basically always violated when the fate of the Federation calls for it, which means that time travel spam is not an option for the Federation.
Except there is an entire movie that involves them going back in time to steal some whales with a broken down barely working Klingon ship.
StarWarsStarTrek wrote: Ok, thanks for showing that you have no idea what you're talking about.
So only the main characters are aloud to time travel even though every warp capable race can?
StarWarsStarTrek wrote: Ah, more double standards. You want me to show examples of good Star Wars security, yet refuse to give examples of borg computer security being good. Instead, you put the burden of proof on me to prove the positive of one side and a negative on another. If you want me to prove that the borg have poor computer security, you have to prove that Star Wars has poor computer security, you hypocrite.
You didn't both to actual read my post. The UFP has only been able to hack the Borg with the help of someone who was part of the collective, and even then it was only about one cube that was effected.
The neurolytic pathogen is a big unknown as we have no thing similar in the real world, and was only created after studying the Borg for years, and was used to attack the queen.
You make claims you need to back them up with evidence. You seem to be conceding that Star Wars has any form of computer security, and have yet to shown the Borg or any trek power has poor computer security.
You have yet to show the Borg or any Star Trek power has poor computer security.
Why is it that any droid can link into a computer and take it over if computer security is not bad in Star Wars.
StarWarsStarTrek wrote: You claim that there are invisible time travelers helping the Federation without us viewers ever knowing,
Canon states most of the time travelers try to keep a low profile, but we know for a fact they are there. You know this because you read the time ship page I linked to, and have seen the episodes.
StarWarsStarTrek wrote: that having a ground army shows inferior space forces,
You need to take your time and read more closely. I stated militaries like those in Star Wars can't exist if air or space forces can easily blast them.
You've made quite a few claims, but are very light on evidence.
StarWarsStarTrek wrote: Lucky, you're being completely dishonest with debating. Such hypocrisy is not good form, and it's not polite either. It's arguably even worse than blunt insults, just a lot more subtle. If you want me to prove good Star Wars security, don't turn around and deny that you have to prove the same for your side, or change your mind and suddenly want me to prove a negative for you side. It's not honest.
Then report it to the moderators, and give them all the evidence. It's rather pointless to get angry at me.
StarWarsStarTrek wrote: Your claim that visuals are trumped by dialog is more proof of your dishonesty, because in other debates you've tried to refute dialog with visuals.
For Trek yes because it's the only thing that makes sense when you look at the entire series and spinoffs.. Ships aren't consistently the same sizes for crying out loud. Visuals in Star Trek tend to just be made to look good. The simple truth is VFX artists are just that, artists. They care about what looks cool to them, and not what makes a lick of sense.
For Star Wars you have the movies, the novelizations of the movies, and SW:TCW to compare, they all show the same things. Add most of lower canon shows similar capabilities to the movies, and you have next to no reason to doubt the visuals in Star Wars.