I enjoyed that.
I enjoyed that.
To me, Morrison's continuity is the only one that counts.
I feel TNG was also trying something new, whereas Voyager was just a pale imitation of TNG, with all of TNG's flaws amplified "planet of the hats, reset buttons, technobabble" and less interesting characters.
I read one of those shatner books, and found it enjoyable.
Jean-Luc, I think his seventh season arc made sense, but now is not the time to discuss it.
Pranlaster, I read that odo one as well. The fight scene between the two was very entertaining. The only contradiction is that Odo "probably" kills that changeling, although the Founders wouldn't have known about it, and it should have come up in the series if that had "happened." The other book you were talking…
And Tales of the Dominion War isn't bad, except for one really, really terrible story.
Q-Squared
Well, they've spent so much time trashing the Klingons, it's cool that they show that there are "True" Klingon heroes who really do embody the best of the cultural ideals.
No they wouldn't. And that's why it would be hard to film.
What part is that in?
Wait, Kirk, comforts a female crew member in that episode?
I think Soldiers of the Empire is also significant, AKA How Martok Got His Groove Back.
And the Vulcans do have telepathic abilities.
If the brains are all humanoid, and we eventually learn roughly what a human thinking certain basic ideas looks like on a brain scan, it's not a huge stretch that a device that scans brains of other humanoids and applies some syntatic analysis could provide a rough translation. Of course it wouldn't be in real time,…
The funny thing is, even the computer generated gripes are legitimate criticisms.
SHHH… the episodes are all out there for free if you know where to look
@Tales, as we've established, in cardassian culture, this is what flirting looks like— exchanging insults.
That sounds super expensive. It would be silly to see the Founders in a lab working as humanoids.
I also remember reading that it analyzed humanoid brain wave patterns or something to ascribe meaning, which actually seems more plausible now then it did when Star Trek came up with the idea. http://www.newscientist.com…