bluegargantua (
bluegargantua) wrote2009-01-01 11:56 am
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Dear My Subconscious
Hey,
Guess what? You actually graduated from college. Made par on the course even. So there's no reason to spend all morning dreaming about how I'm trying to finish my senior year now, at this late date. Further, the whole "waking up but not really schtick" gets old after about the third or fourth time.
Also, The Enterprise has teleporters and Imperial Star Destroyers don't, but I concur with your overall assessment that the Enterprise is toast in a stand-up fight.
In other news: Happy New Years! Only 19 days until everything is magically better again.
Tom
Guess what? You actually graduated from college. Made par on the course even. So there's no reason to spend all morning dreaming about how I'm trying to finish my senior year now, at this late date. Further, the whole "waking up but not really schtick" gets old after about the third or fourth time.
Also, The Enterprise has teleporters and Imperial Star Destroyers don't, but I concur with your overall assessment that the Enterprise is toast in a stand-up fight.
In other news: Happy New Years! Only 19 days until everything is magically better again.
Tom
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Also, if the ISD commander opens with a tractor beam, then we get to discuss how much power each ship can generate! Star Trek technology is flat-out better than Star Wars tech, but an ISD is two and a half times bigger than the Enterprise.
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ETA: fixed mah grammatical parallelism.
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In that case, it's a question of how quickly the Structural Integrity Field (really; the Enterprise D can't support its own weight when under the influence of gravity, so instead of handwaving super-materials, they handwaved a magic field that holds the ship together) will buckle and allow the nacelle section to tear free.
One would think the ISD commander would assume the saucer section is a decoy, akin to a lizard dropping its tail, because who would be stupid enough to put non-combatants in a vessel with only sublight capability and a bare minimum of shielding?
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I think it depends on the paranoia level of the commander; Vader or Thrawn would have the whole thing dragged in just in case, while someone else might ignore the saucer. Unless of course the Enterprise had opened fire at any point, in which case it would be clear that the weapons were on the saucer and it needed to be captured, too.
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(Tom, all these people you don't know are commenting because I linked to you.)
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I maintain it's a question of which commander realizes what the hell is going on first. The Enterprise can't beat a Star Destroyer, but it can get away from one.
(THIS IS THE BEST JANUARY 1ST I HAVE EVER HAD.)
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The Enterprise can't beat a Star Destroyer, but it can get away from one.
Definitely.
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The computing resources available to the Enterprise are a distinct advantage--Star Wars computer tech is barely-extrapolated late 70s, and TNG computers are extrapolated late 80s.
Captain Dirk of the ISS "Engineering Solution"
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...I'm not clear how an "ion cannon" is different from a "blaster," since PLASMA IS A BUNCH OF FUCKING IONS.
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(Did they EVER explain that?)
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I believe in the in-universe explanation has to do with different "blaster gas" mixtures in different models of gun.
The real reason, of course, is so the audience can tell who's shootin' whom.
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One is designed to punch a hole in things, while the other is designed to envelope the whole structure.
Either that, or "ion cannon" is the SW way of saying "EMP gun."
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Carry on.
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Inauguration day is Jan 20th (I think).
later
Tom
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