Commentary on StarWarsStarTrek v. 2046

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Re: Commentary on StarWarsStarTrek v. 2046

Post by Picard » Tue Jan 18, 2011 8:05 pm

Now, I know we're not supposed to actually reply to their arguments directed at each other, but these were so... funny, that I had to do it.

[spoiler]
StarWarsStarTrek wrote:The way you interpret that quote is that the EU is a separate universe. For this debate, that's agreed upon. However, a reference guide; yes, that would include the ICS's, that's about the movies, obviously isn't another universe, because it's about the freaking movies. This is quite simple stuff. If there was an essential guide to the Attack of the Clones, that's obviously referring to the movie, not to some alternate world.
EU is separate universe and ICS is part of EU. ICS is not made by Lucas, dictated by Lucas or even controlled by Lucas, and Lucas has no interest in it (except in profit it creates him) so, yes, it is pretty much part of EU.

It is same thing as with Star Trek Technical Manuals - it might be guide to work of canon, but itself, it is still non-canon.
It's about the movie, and it not any new universe.
It is supposed to be about movie, but EII ICS, at least, is published before Episode II even came out.
Star Wars has millions of planets.
Million systems. One million, and no mention whether these are inhabited or not. Also, 2000 systems seceding was a big deal.
Star Wars hyperdrive speeds and their capability to travel across large portions of the galaxy within a day
Source? Boast of one pirate?
The construction of the Death Star 2 in only 60 months to 60% completion shows a staggering level of industrial might. Based on the 900 km diameter estimates, this would translate to about 900 trillion star destroyers, or several million per second.
1) Proof it is not constructed alongside DSI?
2) It is 160 km wide, not 900.
As for ship counts, the Battle of Coruscant. It shows huge fleets rivaling the dominion wars in size. Even more impressive, these two fleets would have been gathered almost on a whim, because it was a surprise attack. Had the Republic had time to prepare, they likely could have brought a larger fleet.
It could also be hundred-or-so ships for each side in total.
It's about e23 joules, very close to the AOTC and ROTS ICS claims! So we have energy.
Except Death Star and ISD don't use same kind of sublight drive, so it is not very accurate.
What confuses me is why you use vaporization, even though one of the crew members expected fragmentation.
They expected incomplete vaporization. It is quite different thing than fragmentation - but it still leaves fragments.
In the Breen attack on Earth, more than one photon torpedo was obviously used, yet the devastation was to the San Fransico Bay area, and did not cause a nuclear winter.
Star Trek has planetary shields, you know that?
With hyperdrive, Star Wars gets an almost instant win advantage.
Not quite.
http://startrek-vs-starwars.freeoda.com ... drive.html
http://startrek-vs-starwars.freeoda.com ... drive.html

And most important Federation planets have defences which, even if outdated, probably should be able to ruin day to any SW fleet.
Take your pick.
3. They don't use them when not useful, or not advisable.[/spoiler]

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Re: Commentary on StarWarsStarTrek v. 2046

Post by Admiral Breetai » Wed Jan 19, 2011 1:30 am

sonofccn wrote:
StarWarsStarTrek wrote:I made my opening arguments in the debate. Pretty long by my standards, although the Mike Wong vs darkstar debates were frighteningly long.
If you'll allow me to be honest, and by honest I mean devestating, your opening post covers too wide a range of subjects which almost kills any chance of meaningful debate happening, and consisted almost entirely of your raw assertions with little if any supporting evidence presented. Sorry but that's my two bits.
I tried to point that out to him..but it went over his head

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Re: Commentary on StarWarsStarTrek v. 2046

Post by Airlocke_Jedi_Knight » Wed Jan 19, 2011 8:09 am

Picard wrote:If you can't defeat him... try to shoot down his credibility. That is how warsie part of SDN works, and they seem to try that on other forums they visit too.

EDIT:
StarWarsStarTrek to Darkstar wrote:Woah...you're saying that a reference guide that's specifically about a movie made by Lucasarts is not part of the same universe?
It is not, beacouse Lucas said that. No one knows what Lucas thinks about his universe aside from him, and he keeps repeating that EU is separate universe and that Star Wars canon policy is based on that of Star Trek - EU is not canon, it is separate universe, and only on-screen evidence, novelizations, radio plays and TCW are canon (novelizations, that is, movie novels).
The movies, novelizations, etc. are used.
The EU is allowed as long as it does not contradict any of the above.
Neither Star Trek nor Star Wars EU are canon so debate can be canon only, EU only, canon+EU, but for both sides.
Wait...Did you just associate me and SDN? BAHAAHAHAHA!

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Re: Commentary on StarWarsStarTrek v. 2046

Post by Admiral Breetai » Wed Jan 19, 2011 9:51 am

you know honestly Wong's buddies trying to discredit this guy like that does not surprise me the blatant distorting of DS quote and worse still the bs SDN version of the account is so widely believed even us Comic debaters heard about it discrediting DS on forums he never even contributed too..he's not the only one though Wong once had a debate with a CBR poster known as crossovermaniac where he legitimation tried to claim that Jedi precog could allow obi-wan to intercept an oncoming attack from the flash

when proven wrong and pointed out how really bad conclusion was the other participants in that thread went to great lengths to discredit the dude after the fact

then of course theres the supposed fall out of mud slinging attacks from the famous Yoda vs God debate

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Re: Commentary on StarWarsStarTrek v. 2046

Post by Picard » Thu Jan 20, 2011 2:04 pm

Airlocke_Jedi_Knight wrote:
Picard wrote:If you can't defeat him... try to shoot down his credibility. That is how warsie part of SDN works, and they seem to try that on other forums they visit too.

EDIT:
StarWarsStarTrek to Darkstar wrote:Woah...you're saying that a reference guide that's specifically about a movie made by Lucasarts is not part of the same universe?
It is not, beacouse Lucas said that. No one knows what Lucas thinks about his universe aside from him, and he keeps repeating that EU is separate universe and that Star Wars canon policy is based on that of Star Trek - EU is not canon, it is separate universe, and only on-screen evidence, novelizations, radio plays and TCW are canon (novelizations, that is, movie novels).
The movies, novelizations, etc. are used.
The EU is allowed as long as it does not contradict any of the above.
Neither Star Trek nor Star Wars EU are canon so debate can be canon only, EU only, canon+EU, but for both sides.
Wait...Did you just associate me and SDN? BAHAAHAHAHA!
My comment wasn't about anyone in particular. But I know that some warsie posters from SDN visit SpaceBattles and Factpile, and they continue their standard way of behaviour there.

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Re: Commentary on StarWarsStarTrek v. 2046

Post by 2046 » Sat Jan 22, 2011 7:39 pm

In the debate thread, I just told him to start over because I finally realized how ridiculously long and non-narrow he'd been, in violation of the terms. I mentioned there that I'd gone through like a whole section before realizing there were like 99 more.

Here's my response to that section, raw and unpolished (no links in it yet, for instance), and since he'll be starting over this is not part of the debate. That's why I feel okay posting it in that state. And, hopefully it'll give him some pointers on how to proceed and how not to proceed, the biggest being "SHOW YOUR SOURCES!!!!":

StarWarsStarTrek wrote:Ok, my opening arguments.

Canon Policy

We've already had a semi agreement on this for this debate,
Then it was a waste of your time, my time, and the readers' time to discuss it.

But as long as you have:
the ICS's, that's about the movies, obviously isn't another universe, because it's about the freaking movies. This is quite simple stuff.
My site's about the movies. So what?

Now, on to the meat:
Size, Industry and Numbers

Star Wars has millions of planets. The Federation at its peak has; what; 1000 at most? This is staggering number difference, one that is very rare to be found in a conventional war. It's like the industrial disadvantage that the Axis had, but times several hundred. And that's not taking into account other things.
I certainly concede that the Empire has more planets than the Federation, though I imagine the Federation has more than a thousand. But that's neither here nor there at the moment. In any case, as I put it on my site years ago, the Federation is, by comparison to the Empire, a rounding error.

However, that does not necessarily demand that there be an industrial advantage in regards to military needs. It wasn't that long ago that China had far more people than the United States but far less industrial output and even-more-far-less military industry output. So, although I suspect you are correct, we do not know that for sure.

After all, as noted in "Pursuit of Peace"[TCW3], a relatively small military increase (when compared with the population of Coruscant) is sufficient to virtually bankrupt the Republic, seemingly due to the government's funding of the population's basic services (which had already been curtailed by war funding).

Although we don't have great insight into the general economics of the Republic and Empire, it is safe to say that they seem to have a rather inefficient system in regards to military economics. That is, if they can't field a force of a few million clones without going bankrupt, then leaping to the conclusion that their war industry output would swamp the Federation's is questionable at best.
Star Wars hyperdrive speeds and their capability to travel across large portions of the galaxy within a day
Evidence, please.
You might point out that hyperdrives need hyperlanes to travel. However, G canon points out that hyperlanes are not necessary for hyperdrive travel. Obi Wan traveled to Kamino, which was a virtually unknown world and therefore almost certainly had no hyperlanes to it.
"A galaxy divided! Striking swifty after the battle of Geonosis, Count Dooku's droid army has seized control of the major hyperspace lanes, separating the Republic from the majority of its clone army. With few clones available, the Jedi generals cannot gain a foothold in the Outer Rim, as more and more planets choose to join Dooku's Separatists."

That's from the opening to the TCW film. So yeah, you might be able to travel without a hyperlane, but it is clear that the lanes are so tactically and strategically significant that, militarily speaking, you're screwed without them.

Possibilities for their utility include extra velocity, extra efficiency of transit, safety concerns, temporal distortion concerns, and a wide variety of other possibilities more wild and more mundane. But whatever the cause or causes, not having access to them is obviously enough to lose a war over.
And he still did it likely within a day.
I'm not aware of any such timeframe being required.
The construction of the Death Star 2 in only 60 months to 60% completion shows a staggering level of industrial might.
Where do your "60" figures come from? The month one is not awful, but it's awfully specific. We have no clear date for RotJ, because TESB's duration is not known. And, the RotJ novel implies a significant passage of time between the end of TESB and the beginning of RotJ. See http://www.st-v-sw.net/archive/TA-SWchron.html

As for percent completion, we are told in the novel that it was half complete ... if we're told 60% somewhere then I have forgotten.

In any case, we are given no clear date for the beginning of DS2's construction. If we assume it to have begun at the destruction of the first Death Star, and if we further assume your five year figure, then given the sizes provided we are only looking at a five-fold construction rate increase by volume.

That is, if you take the volume of DS1 (about 9.05E14 cubic meters) and half the volume of the complete DS2 (about 10.72E14), then you're only looking at a ~20% increase in volume. And given the 20+ years of DS1's "long years of secretive construction" versus the five years we're assuming, then it's a four-fold increase before we count the volume difference, and only 4.8 fold if we do.

Frankly, going from secretive construction to non-secretive construction will provide that sort of improvement, so I don't really see that the DS2 construction time proves some massive increase in output.

And, we don't know how much output is involved, but we can guess. Given the fleet sizes indicated in the canon, the general military budget and shipbuilding capacity must be tiny by comparison to the Death Star's needs.
The Construction of the Death Star 2 is one of the most impressive industrial feats in Star Wars, and one that has not been replicated by the Federation
True enough, the Federation's never built something so big.

But, I would love to know how long it takes Starfleet to build one of the Starbases of the SB-74 type, which is over five times the size of the Executor.
You know Coruscant? The EU suggests a number of about 3 trillion,
The Republic has "trillions of common folk" per AotC Ch. 5, and per RotS Ch. 15 Coruscant has "a trillion beings on this planet alone".

My previous estimate for the Empire was 200 trillion persons, but now that we've seen some of the other worlds I'm thinking that should be revised downwards.
The density of New York City’s population is about 10,000 people per km^2. The surface area of Earth is about 150 million km^2. That’s about 1.5 trillion people.
Good estimate . . . only 50% off from the canon figure.
The densest city in the world is Manila, with about 43,000 people per km^2. Using this, that’s about 6.45 trillion people. Woah.
Uh-oh, getting colder . . .
that’s about 30 trillion people.
. . . colder . . .
which bumps up our number to over 150 trillion people.
. . . frigid! . . .
That outnumbers the entire Federation. On one planet.
Nah, the Federation has twice Coruscant's population, at least, and probably significantly more.
Seizing and maintain control of such a populous planet would require hundred of billions to trillions of troops, ground troops in the level that the Federation doesn’t have. They’d need to recruit the vast majority of their civilian population just to have the ability to occupy Coruscant.
The invasion of Iraq, with a population of 31 million, was accomplished with a force that topped out at ~300,000, and the occupation topped out around half that figure.

Using that for Coruscant, we'd be looking at an invasion force that would have to be 1/100th of the population size, and an occupation force 1/200th.

Or, the Federation would need one billion troops to invade Coruscant, and 500 million to hold on to it.

Does the Federation have a billion troops? There's a chance they could, but I rather doubt they do . . . I estimate low tens of millions.
As for ship counts, the Battle of Coruscant. It shows huge fleets rivaling the dominion wars in size.
The battle to retake DS9 featured 1,800 total warships on both sides. I'm not aware of any indication that the Battle of Coruscant featured that many ships. Not that they couldn't have, mind you . . . I estimate the later Empire's fleet count to be about twice the Federation fleet count . . . but I just don't know of any evidence.

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Re: Commentary on StarWarsStarTrek v. 2046

Post by Mike DiCenso » Sun Jan 23, 2011 3:47 pm

StarWarsStarTrek wrote:In Voyager Resistance, a group of soldiers in what appears to be body armor armed with phasers gets the drop on the protagonists.
When did this happen? Under what circumstances? There is no provided context, nor relevance. In fact, the protagonists in this situation were Janeway, Tuvok, and Torres who had been assaulted before the episode began while attempting to peacefully trade for supplies on the planet in question. Cut off from Voyager, with Tuvok and Torres captured, and without any equipment, Janeway with help from the local resistance cell manage to break into a maximum securtiy facility to rescue Tuvok and Torres without any equipment or large scale deployment of actual Federation troops.
Rebel soldiers that were well armed helping them
Well armed? They did not have any hand grenades, large shoulder-mounted weapons, only little blaster pistols, no sensor gear, and nothing other than R2-D2 in the way of hacking gear. The Rebel commando team also numbered less than a dozen people. Hardly numbers that could make a difference in such a supposedly large-scale battle. Also note that Imperial sensors failed to detect the large presence of all those Ewoks so close to their base, or the myrid number of traps they'd gone to great lengths to set up.
The protagonists, outnumbered, proceeded to beat up the baddies by using hand to hand combat. Wow.
Where? When? What was the context? You mean like in Star Wars where we see Han Solo beat up an Imperial scout instead of shoot the guy with some kind of special silencer weapon? Or Ewoks with rocks batter Imperial troops to death in hand-to-hand combat?
The klingons use knives to fight their opponents and actually win.


So? The Klingons are shown to use disruptor pistols in ranged combat as well, such as the battle on Deep Space Nine's promenade deck in "The Way of the Warrior", and they used the Bat'leth swords and some knives in melee combat. That makes them pretty damn scary, actually, since they can shoot you pretty well at range, and if you try to nullify that by getting in their face, they'll stab you, or shoot you. That was close-quarters inside a space station. In "Nor the Battle the Strong...", Dr. Bashir and Jake Sisko are shot at with small mortar-sized artillery of some kind, and Bashir is almost killed. Kirk in "Arena" uses the photon grenade mortar. The MACOs (dedicated military troops) of ST:ENT used a variety of stun and hand grenades.
For example, when traveling into a dark cave, the Voyager chooses a freaking engineer to go in with them. Then, they equip them, with flashlights. Really? Do they not have night vision?
What was the episode? What was the context of them going into this cave with an engineer, who may have been needed for something very important, like miniing a critical element for use on their ship, which was stranded in a remote part of the galaxy without Starfleet support. When Leia, Han and Chewie go outside the Falcon in TESB, they do not take any nightvision gear in a gigantic and dark cavern, and get taken by suprise by a whole swarm of Mynocks that luckily aren't anything dangerous to them, as no one among our heroes brought any sensor gear with them. The fact that the Falcon's sensors did not record the presence of the Mynocks, nor the fact that it was parked inside a gigantic space worm really shows how pathetic SW sensors really are.
automatic weapons
Huh? When you can hold down the trigger on a phaser and it makes a continous beam and get be swept around, that's pretty impressive. In DS9's "Blaze of Glory", Sisko uses a phaser in "automatic" rapid fire mode to wipe out a squad of Jem'Hadar waiting cloaked in ambush. In TNG's "The Arsenal of Freedom", Tasha Yar and Data use their phasers on continous fire mode to trap and destroy one of the Echo Pappa drones. In TNG's "The Game", Wesley sets up a small hand phaser as a diversion by putting it on automatic rapid fire.
vehicles
You mean like the souped up, armed dune buggy that Picard, Data, and Worf drive about in ST:Nemesis? You mean like the numerous mentions of various Cardassian and Klingon mechanized infantry vehicles? You mean like that robot-thing and other vehicles shown in Quark's holosuite weapons demonstration in "Business as Usual"?
grenades
Why in most of Trek, which is about peaceful space exploration and contact, would landing parties be carrying something like that with them? Photon grenades are mentioned as possible weapons several times, most notably "Legacy" and "Year of Hell, part 2" and possibly shown in "Arena".
heavy weaponry
Like the photon grenade launcher in TOS' "Arena"? Or the bazooka-like Isomagnetic Disintegrators from ST: Insurrection? Or the Klingon and Jem'Hadar artillery we saw in "Nor the Battle the Strong.." and "The Ship" respectively? Speaking of such things, when have seen in the SW OT hand grenades? Even in the PT, hand grenades appear very rare and we seldom see STs carrying heavy hand-held weapons, much less actually make use of them, even when it would be highly useful, like the Battle of Endor.
You might point to the weak performance of stormtroopers in ROTJ. However, although this showing is canon, it's supposed to symbolize the prevalence of tactics over technology and was a one time occurrence.
Symbolic or not, it's a very, very poor showing of SW tactics and weapons. Period. This isn't the first time, either. In AoTC and throughout TCW, we often see rather horrible Napoleonic style infantry line up and charges. We see on Ryloth the Twi'leks people riding around on dinosaur-like critters, the same with the Gungans on Naboo, who line up without rifles or canons to be slaughtered by a bunch of crappy droids. Where is the alleged superior SW tactics and and weapons?
I've been rewatching many Star Trek episodes
I seriously doubt it. More like a bunch of cutting and pasting from other people's websites in the desperate hope no one will call you out on it. Also I note RSA's compaint that you have violated the agreement for the debate between you two by going broad focused instead of narrow focused on issues.
-Mike

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Re: Commentary on StarWarsStarTrek v. 2046

Post by Kor_Dahar_Master » Sun Jan 23, 2011 4:42 pm

What was the episode? What was the context of them going into this cave with an engineer, who may have been needed for something very important, like mining a critical element for use on their ship, which was stranded in a remote part of the galaxy without Starfleet support.
Does he mean engineers like Torres a half Klingon terrorist?, or O'Brien a guy with loads of combat experience and who at worfs trial was considered a expert BY a Klingon, or gods forbid the tartan terror who regularly had command of the TOS enterprise in combat while kirk was away and went hand to hand with Klingon's in the tribble episode.


Perhaps the deadliest and most cold blooded individual in any trek was Garak the former obsidian order uber spy and assassin O'Brien took him out in a fight on terok nor while Garak was infected by a drug to make him more psychotic.

Engineers in trek are normally noncoms and tend to have bags of combat XP and the engineering skill to boot that boost their ability.

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Re: Commentary on StarWarsStarTrek v. 2046

Post by Mike DiCenso » Sun Jan 23, 2011 5:40 pm

The context is more important than anything else, regardless of whether or not Starfleet engineers have uber-combat abilities.

Oh, and for the record, most of the engineers we've seen so far in Trek have been commissioned officers, with only one of them, Chief O'Brien, being a noncom.
-Mike

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Re: Commentary on StarWarsStarTrek v. 2046

Post by Kor_Dahar_Master » Sun Jan 23, 2011 6:54 pm

Mike DiCenso wrote:The context is more important than anything else, regardless of whether or not Starfleet engineers have uber-combat abilities.

Oh, and for the record, most of the engineers we've seen so far in Trek have been commissioned officers, with only one of them, Chief O'Brien, being a noncom.
-Mike
I suppose it is although the full title is "Chief engineering officer" and if you think about it in most situations Data regularly takes orders from Geordi La Forge in engineering contexts, even though as the second officer Data outranks Geordi in absolute terms, a chief engineer is also a member of the senior staff regardless of their actual rank.

In starship down O'brien points out that the engineers are notofficers and have never been to the academy ect so i suppose you can be both or either, geordie was both, O'brien was a noncom and others may have been either but the rank of chief engineer over rode all but first officer and captain in some situations.

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Re: Commentary on StarWarsStarTrek v. 2046

Post by Admiral Breetai » Mon Jan 24, 2011 9:02 am

Kor_Dahar_Master wrote:[
Does he mean engineers like Torres a half Klingon terrorist?, or O'Brien a guy with loads of combat experience and who at worfs trial was considered a expert BY a Klingon, or gods forbid the tartan terror who regularly had command of the TOS enterprise in combat while kirk was away and went hand to hand with Klingon's in the tribble episode.


Perhaps the deadliest and most cold blooded individual in any trek was Garak the former obsidian order uber spy and assassin O'Brien took him out in a fight on terok nor while Garak was infected by a drug to make him more psychotic.

Engineers in trek are normally noncoms and tend to have bags of combat XP and the engineering skill to boot that boost their ability.
yeah he's tried to pull this bit about engineers with me and it really shows he has never seen a single St episode in his life and is just parroting the hard work of others.

oh regarding O'Brien the man was even given respect by Jem'Hadar shock troops that kinda says something about the level of combat experience this man has and his competence.

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Re: Commentary on StarWarsStarTrek v. 2046

Post by Kor_Dahar_Master » Mon Jan 24, 2011 11:37 am

Admiral Breetai wrote:
yeah he's tried to pull this bit about engineers with me and it really shows he has never seen a single St episode in his life and is just parroting the hard work of others.

oh regarding O'Brien the man was even given respect by Jem'Hadar shock troops that kinda says something about the level of combat experience this man has and his competence.
Still when you can do this with a bomb ground troops are really just a bonus :).

TOS: OBSESSION.


BEFORE BOOM A NICE EARTH TYPE PLANET:

http://img822.imageshack.us/img822/2332 ... eblast.jpg

AFTER BOOM INCLUDING CRATER:

http://img843.imageshack.us/img843/1631 ... rblast.jpg




All with a bomb the size of a football :).

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Re: Commentary on StarWarsStarTrek v. 2046

Post by Mike DiCenso » Mon Jan 24, 2011 2:15 pm

Kor_Dahar_Master wrote:
Mike DiCenso wrote:The context is more important than anything else, regardless of whether or not Starfleet engineers have uber-combat abilities.

Oh, and for the record, most of the engineers we've seen so far in Trek have been commissioned officers, with only one of them, Chief O'Brien, being a noncom.
-Mike
I suppose it is although the full title is "Chief engineering officer" and if you think about it in most situations Data regularly takes orders from Geordi La Forge in engineering contexts, even though as the second officer Data outranks Geordi in absolute terms, a chief engineer is also a member of the senior staff regardless of their actual rank.

In starship down O'brien points out that the engineers are notofficers and have never been to the academy ect so i suppose you can be both or either, geordie was both, O'brien was a noncom and others may have been either but the rank of chief engineer over rode all but first officer and captain in some situations.

Um, Geordi was a Lieutenant, later a Lt. Commander. Scotty was a Lt. Commander, and in the pre-Federation days Trip Tucker was a full Commander. Other engineers seen in the series, senior or otherwise were all ensigns or lieutenants. So whatever O'Brien is talking about is something completely different with regards to a particular group of engineers.

But that's neither here, nor there. The real issue is that SWST did not provide any context, nor reference for his/her example.
-Mike

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Re: Commentary on StarWarsStarTrek v. 2046

Post by Admiral Breetai » Mon Jan 24, 2011 6:30 pm

Kor_Dahar_Master wrote:[

Still when you can do this with a bomb ground troops are really just a bonus :).

TOS: OBSESSION.


BEFORE BOOM A NICE EARTH TYPE PLANET:

http://img822.imageshack.us/img822/2332 ... eblast.jpg

AFTER BOOM INCLUDING CRATER:

http://img843.imageshack.us/img843/1631 ... rblast.jpg




All with a bomb the size of a football :).
see I'm not math expert but when some one sits there and tells me that ST fire power does not even exceed that of modern nukes and that the Fed's are idiots for not having a proper army by our understanding then I go and look at a crater like that and think "umm what?" on both counts because both seem really silly to me
Mike DiCenso wrote:[

Um, Geordi was a Lieutenant, later a Lt. Commander. Scotty was a Lt. Commander, and in the pre-Federation days Trip Tucker was a full Commander. Other engineers seen in the series, senior or otherwise were all ensigns or lieutenants. So whatever O'Brien is talking about is something completely different with regards to a particular group of engineers.

-Mike
but in the context of the chief himself did he ever hold any officer rank until the end of the series when he took over at SFA or where ever?

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Re: Commentary on StarWarsStarTrek v. 2046

Post by Kor_Dahar_Master » Mon Jan 24, 2011 6:34 pm

Admiral Breetai wrote:
Kor_Dahar_Master wrote:[

Still when you can do this with a bomb ground troops are really just a bonus :).

TOS: OBSESSION.


BEFORE BOOM A NICE EARTH TYPE PLANET:

http://img822.imageshack.us/img822/2332 ... eblast.jpg

AFTER BOOM INCLUDING CRATER:

http://img843.imageshack.us/img843/1631 ... rblast.jpg




All with a bomb the size of a football :).
see I'm not math expert but when some one sits there and tells me that ST fire power does not even exceed that of modern nukes and that the Fed's are idiots for not having a proper army by our understanding then I go and look at a crater like that and think "umm what?" on both counts because both seem really silly to me
A football sized device leaving a central crater the diameter of north America does leave a lasting impression....:).

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