IIRC, any follow up to "Conspiracy" was a victim of the Writers' Strike that destroyed much of TNG's second season.
IIRC, any follow up to "Conspiracy" was a victim of the Writers' Strike that destroyed much of TNG's second season.
There's a fanfic waiting to be written (or probably already exists, but I really don't want to go look) about how "Normal Again" is in the same universe as "Dollhouse." It's not much of an ethical reach for the Rossum Corporation to find new "actives" in mental institutions, and pitch their service to that world's…
Betazoids and Trill are not Human. The Trill in particular probably have some markedly different internal structures, what with needing to make room for that damned symbiont.
The equations driving psychohistory were based on the projected actions of the trillions of people in the galaxy. The vast majority of individuals can do whatever — freely — because their actions are as inconsequential as dropping pebbles in the ocean. Even major figures like Salvor Hardin, Hober Mallow or Bel Riose…
If they're going to deviate from the books, couldn't they at least reunite Arya and Nymeria, her direwolf?
Sure, "Battleship" qualifies as one of the 10 worst. But it was only Taylor Kitsch's SECOND-worst genre film of the year. Where's the snarky Haterade for "John Carter?"
The UCSD Library — both its stacks and the building itself — figure prominently in Vernor Vinge's 2007 novel "Rainbows End," set in 2025.
The UCSD Library — both its stacks and the building itself — figure prominently in Vernor Vinge's 2007 novel "Rainbows End," set in 2025.
The UCSD Library — both its stacks and the building itself — figure prominently in Vernor Vinge's 2007 novel "Rainbows End," set in 2025.
The UCSD Library — both its stacks and the building itself — figure prominently in Vernor Vinge's 2007 novel "Rainbows End," set in 2025.
The UCSD Library — both its stacks and the building itself — figure prominently in Vernor Vinge's 2007 novel "Rainbows End," set in 2025.