Mr. Oragahn wrote:
Random posters being various journalists who wrote articles everyone would understand save perhaps you? Plus a video?
Show me an article written by a journalist that describes artillery fire as filling the sky.  And if you post a link to a random blogger and declare it to be from a journalist, I will laugh hardly.
Yeah, sorry if I do go with that.
I don't even know why I have to prove anything beyond that point. It's used that way over the world, it's also defined that way in dictionaries.
The only reason why we can't accept the meaning that annoys you, is because... it annoys you.
I wasn't trying to show which one was better than the other. We've all been arguing against you to tell you that the "leveled" interpretation was valid. That defining a low end, then. You reject this possibility, making the low end anything based on physics defined vaporization.
You're simply wrong. That's all.
So thank you but I consider this case closed.
The nightside sky is an infinite lattice of shining hairlines that interlock planetoids and track erratic spirals of glowing gnats.
This is a lattice:
Notice how the entire nightside sky is mentioned, meaning that as much as half of the sky was covered with turbolasers.
Damn, is it hard for you to look at the heavy turrets and spot the rather obvious blue bolts originating from them?
Seriously.
Prove that they were heavy turrets.  Since when were turbolasers blue?
What's more idiotic is claiming that the Venator had lost her shields when she entered that short ranged spiting contest with no glaring sign of severe damage. You know, like you would expect from a ship having lost her megaton shields (or more) and being hit by an extra bolt (because we doubt that the enemy stops firing in the middle of a battle, with precog and all that, knowing when shields would fail).
The Republic was clearly winning the Battle of Coruscant, so when the Venator lost shields it could have easily retreated back into Republic lines, while the Invisible hand was doing just that.
That's why you shouldn't cut and quote every little bit before having read the whole.
There's obviously a problem between ships which can throw megatons at each other, yet a few centimeters of armour getting pierced by shitty level of firepower.
In a way, yes, that would be an agreement that both ships couldn't fire anything spectacular.
But that also means that to conform to the book, then there has to be other ships which were exchanging that much firepower.
Fact remains that the low end will make that firepower (which could be kilotons) be fired from HTLs. The highest end will have the greatest figure available, attached to the smallest turbolasers.
The point that you seem to trying to make, which you aren't really articulating, is that they could not have been LTL's or else if both ships could consistently take LTL's like they did in the megaton range, they would not be harmed by flak cannons.
Problem is that flak cannons and turbolasers use different mechanisms for damaging targets.
Since you quote Wong's website so much, you must surely have read at least once the Turbolaser Commentaries pages he has hosted. There are pictures from TESB there.
The only bolt seen that was faint was one coming from the nose of the ISD, one that probably wasn't even a turbolaser.  The rest were pretty bright.
1. I'm not pro-Trek. I'm anti-wank. Especially anti SW wank in this case.
2. If it has to be dismissed, so be it. I won't feel sorry. Would you?
1. As a question for you, what are your calcs for SW weaponry and ST weaponry??
2. So then why are you still arguing in support of a quote that you think should be dismissed?
Ah, the neutronium hull.
The same hull that was seen burning and being peeled away as the Invisible Hand fell through the atmosphere of Coruscant, with literally entire sections of the armour and the ship burning and detaching themselves under the heat and friction? Exposed parts of the superstructure, previously undamaged, yet incapable of coping with the heat of a rather tame reentry.
Remember 
this post?
Well obviously not, it's just better to flush it all so you can repeat the same nonsense later on.
 
Obviously you missed the entire point.  That is, that your attempt to equate the durability of single manned starfighters with that of a capital ship is silly and stupid.
Mmm, I feel like the reason they'd be used would be relevant, but let's put that aside now that I've shown they are the worst design ever for flak cannons.
In the formations that were seen in the Battle of Coruscant, starfighters would have to fly along the sides of many enemy capital ships, where flak cannons mounted on those sides could be useful.
And yet is the planet of one of the aliens we see the most in Star Wars. They even had a seat of their own in the Senate, and were clearly brought to evidence during the movie.
And I see plenty of black people in the USA, so that must mean that Africa is a highly developed continent, right?  I see plenty of Arabic people here too, so surely Saudi Arabia is a highly developed country, right? 
Let's make that easier, shall we?
Show me a small town in Star Wars.
Something different than the "town" reference you brought earlier on from some novel and which was dealt with.
Town population sizes are hinted at in LOTF: Revelation, but other than Mos Eisley we do not visibly see any small towns in SW.  Mos Eisley is not an accurate representation of an average small town in SW.
I'm talking about your Canadian example. It agreed with me.
The entire point I brought up in the Canadian example was that capital cities are not necessarily large.  You rebutted this by saying...that capital cities can be small?  Do you eve understand what I'm trying to say here?
Sure. It's an example that's again in my favour.
I'm just going to wait to see what a small town is supposed to look like in your book.
In SW?  Probably similar to that of a small city by our standards.
Ah, now it's not important.
Not a Canadian small town in this context, no.  You obviously seem to think that you've got me on something, but you can't seem to explain what.  My point was that capital cities are not always large, and I cited Otowa as an example.  Your rebuttal is...to say that Otowa is small?
It would require millions of worlds hosting billions of people.
Even if it were true (and I'm waiting to see evidence of that from higher canon), where does it prove that a small town would be huge in Star Wars?
The 100 quadrillion quote is not contradicted by any higher canon; indeed, the RotS novel mentions "quadrillions" of people.  If we divide this by the one million planet figure in the ANH novel (even though most of these would be concentrated in the more populated planets), that's an average of 50 billion people.
Well, go find a superior definition then.
Until you do, I'll still be right and you wrong.
Define "superior".  Superior in that it fits your definition better?  Tell me, what makes you think that "to spread thin and vanish" is somehow quantifiable?  Do you wish to calculate the energy needed to fragment something so small it'll be microscopic?  That'll probably take even more energy than simply vaporizing it literally, and...gasp, vaporizing literally just happens to "spread thin and vanish" something!
"To spread thin or scatter and gradually vanish."
Or the other line, that says "to break up and scatter or vanish."
If I posted all of them, it's for a good reason.
The only reasonable way for something to vanish like that is for it to be vaporized.  Once again, you support my theory.
I never claimed we HAD to go for the figurative. I merely attacked the idea that it was not valid.
Its validity defines the true low end.
Did I question that it could have been figurative?  What I do question is how you scientifically quantify a figurative term.  Explain what the calc's would be to:
Figuratively vaporize Bastrop
Scorch Bastrop
Devastate Bastrop
Screw up Bastrop
Scatter Bastrop
Figuratively disintegrate Bastrop
Oh, no, you can't, can you?
Are you shitting me?
Venators, according to Saxton, could already output more than 800 teratons per second and divert all of that to guns.
We're way above the highest end.
Besides, as I said, even said highest end would have warranted a completely different description. You don't say that a turbolaser can vaporize a small town when you fire multi gigatons at a planet.
No, Venators could in theory divert almost all of its 800 teratons/second into its various heavy turbolaser turrets.  How this relates to what I'm saying you have not explained.
lol yes, it does.
This, Mr. O, is not what I'd call a rebuttal supported by facts.
Huh, did you read his page? He DOES come with a low megaton figure for HTLs.
Jesus.
And he comes up with kilotons/second reactors, while at the same time claiming that ISD's can do 2 HTL's/second.  See if you can tell the problem with this.
Who gives a shit about other EU? I told you that we're analyzing this text on its own merits.
And both interpretations of the text (figurative and literal) have equal merit on its own, so therefore we need to go with the one that fits with the rest of canon better.
What's more, you have no problem with analyzing ICS quotes based on comparisons with the rest of canon, or quotes related to the DS based on comparisons with outside sources.  Stop applying silly double standards, Mr. O.
You don't understand. The hyper high end is based on the literal scientific interpretation of vaporization.
How is it hyper high end?  If Riker said in an episode "this phaser has enough power to vaporize a 20th century car", I'd bet you 10 imaginary bucks that every Trekkie here would be trying to figure out how much energy it takes to literally vaporize a car, because vaporize is a literal, clearly defined term that it used very often.
 Aka, turn to goddamn vapor, especially a hot one in this case.
Yes, that's what vaporize means.
Heck, the figure ends with much more mass than the small town's being vaporized.  
What the fuck are you talking about?  Are you claiming that vaporizing something increases its mass?
Oh, just to be lazy, I went for a totally silly figure there, and plugged 10 km for the asteroid calculator at SDN.
Nickel-iron, central detonation, vaporization yield: 7.49 e3 gigatons.
Can somebody tell me why you think that vaporizing a town equates to vaporizing a nickel iron asteroid of the same diameter as the town?
Surely, the author wouldn't think that speaking of vaporizing a small town would be an understatement.
Oh, but why, you don't understand that reality either.
Your selective use of authorial's intent is annoying.  Don't you think that the author would fine it extremely deceptive and misleading to say that the DET portion of the superlaser beam is soooooo powerful and that the DS is a "brute force" weapon while the alleged chain reaction component is quintillions of times more powerful and is never mentioned?
Damn, the farce. :)
I'm correcting you on your use of OoMs and you go on with some irrelevant shit.
I should be paid for that.
You actually claim that the figurative use of vaporize is more commonly used than the literal term?
That surely explains why the first definition listed in the source you used is literal.
That surely explains why in a quick google search, all of the uses of vaporize are literal except for darkstar's page (which is inexplicitly in the first page result of "vaporize") and a few irrelevant ones (song lyrics, brand names) and none are figurative.
In fact, I searched up hiroshima vaporized:
http://www.google.com/#hl=en&sugexp=bve ... 16&bih=413
The only sources to mention Hiroshima itself as vaporized is some random poster (and another poster pointed out that Hiroshima wasn't vaporized) and a random blogger.  
The majority of the sources describe Hiroshima specifically as human bodies being vaporized and material at the epicenter of the explosion being vaporized, an explicit contrast from the actual city being vaporized.
Science, you dolt.
Or thermodynamics!, to parrot you. :D
Clearly you miss the direction of my why, which was at why the author would use your description instead of the equally scientifically valid vaporization statement.
No, we don't.
And the ICS are the outlier in the vast swarm of EU facts, if a comparison is needed.
I get the feeling that you don't even understand what the ICS figures are really about here.
No, you don't understand it.  Your figurative statement does not fit well with the ICS, my literal statement does.  Therefore, the literal statement fits better with the facts.
Case by case. Moving on.
Ah, Mr. O attempts to dodge the question!  If you want to do a case by case application of authorial's intent, explain and justify why the Death Star case gets a pass while the small town case does not.
This board is literally choke full of such evidence.
Use the search function, you damn troll.
I am under no obligation to support your own claims for you.  Either show me some evidence or concede the point.
Wonderful "logic" you've got here!
You will now present evidence that asteroids existed in place of those flashes, just before those flashes appeared and stop dodging this request.
I'll be waiting, but it is unlikely that I'll still be posting on this website around 2050 though, so hasten your pace!
This is like asking for proof that there was oxygen when you see a fireball.  There had to have been some matter there that was hit or else we would see not glow.
And here:
You clearly see that this is that of an asteroid being vaporized.