I really love this show! I want to hug it and squeeze it and call it George. 

Janeway not answering how long Rok-Tahk was alone said volumes. It really broke my heart. BUT... how many 8 year olds of *any* species could learn all that stuff! (Maybe a Vulcan.
) I felt SO proud of her!
I am curious - if it was more than a year, has she aged? I'm thinking no because of the reset (ie., Jankom isn't blown up).

It was nice that they "lampshaded" the distance when the Diviner got the coordinates from Nandi.
One thing I keep coming back to is the name Diviner. Merriam-Webster says, "divination: 1: the art or practice that seeks to foresee or foretell future events or discover hidden knowledge usually by the interpretation of omens or by the aid of supernatural powers; 2: unusual insight: intuitive perception." Could this be a clue to who he was before all this started for him?

I disagree. I was watching TOS pretty young and I figured a lot of it out from context. Plus, the visual Janeway showed Rok helped *me*, so it probably helped kids too.It was a little trek-no-babbly though, and I think younger kids might have a lot of this stuff go over their head

Ooh, I missed that. Good catch.“Close but not quite”
Interesting hint by Deathlok there. If it wasn’t him who corrupted the Protostar, was it someone else of his kind?
THAT is a chilling thought!There is another option (though this one might be out there)... what if Chakotay IS Dreadnock?... Or part of him ended up in Dreadnock?
OMG right?!? My heart!the Murf doll
I think it's good that Janeway isn't a magic bullet. That puts the responsibility - and spotlight - on the kids, where it belongs.It's pretty clear to me now that Janeway really is just a training advisor. Anything else is out of her wheelhouse. Apparently she wasn't just being coy when she identified the kids as cadets. She doesn't have unfettered control of the ship. She's smart enough to be adaptable to circumstances, but she's not a magic bullet.
That's one of the more complicated temporal anomalies that Star Trek has ever shown, I think. But it did a pretty good job of explaining it.
I'm really pleased with Rok-Tahk's growh in this episode. And also a bit horrified by the fact that she was alone for an unspecified amount of time -- probably a few months, at least. That's one more traumatic event to add to the pile.
Janeway not answering how long Rok-Tahk was alone said volumes. It really broke my heart. BUT... how many 8 year olds of *any* species could learn all that stuff! (Maybe a Vulcan.

I am curious - if it was more than a year, has she aged? I'm thinking no because of the reset (ie., Jankom isn't blown up).
The long-distance replication was deeply spooky. I wondered too if it's a "clone" or if he can transfer his consciousness. I was pretty freaked when he used those codes too - Chakotay had to have been a prisoner for at least a little while. The Drednok/Diviner relationship is quite the mystery - sometimes it seems one way, sometimes another. It's very interesting (to me). Yes, I got that vibe too. ::EEK::Interesting notes:
-Drednok can replicate himself (or only his body and transfer himself there? Not totally sure here) with a Federation replicator
-Drednok knows the ship well and knows Chakotay’s codes!!!!
-His relationship with the Diviner seems like a more or less reluctant servant here.
Looking forward to next week…Am I the only one to get a Terminator vibe from that last shot?
I think that would actually work well. This is far from a traditional crew, and a small crew at that. Specific jobs like Science Officer, Captain, etc., may not be the best choice here.I wonder if Dal and Gwen will end up splitting captaining duties, in some non traditional structure?
Yep. They need to put their collective heads together and figure a way to lock the Bad Guys out!- The team (especially Gwyn) needs to find a way to prevent future takeovers and intrusions from Dreadnok and the Diviner. I realize they know the ship better than our young crew, but this incident should put it front and center that as long as those two have access to command codes and computer systems even from light years away, they'll never be safe.
For me, that means that I really love the show because I want more and I want it NOW.I think episodes like this show the limitations of being a 24-25 minute show. After an episode of Lower Decks it feels…over. Like they get in everything they wanted and told a complete story. After an episode of Prodigy it feels unfinished, like there is more to do, more to see.

Good point about the backdoor, but he still had the access code. I'm not sure plugging the "holes" will be that simple, but we'll see.So, the way I see it is that Dreadnok already had Chakotay's access codes from interrogating him... and its also possible he left a backdoor into Protostar systems from the first time he was onboard and attacked Chakotay and his crew - the Va'uk'nat code was in the system after all which messed up Holo Janeway's memories etc. - its possible this served as a backdoor entry into the ship's computer.
Plus, these are kids... point being, they don't have in-depth knowledge of cybersecurity... but I would imagine they don't have to have that because they could just give a few words to the computer to examine any possible entry points to the mainframe from external sources and to try and plug those 'holes' up.
Good catch! It must be based on the existing settings in the vehicle replicator.Anyone else notice that the Drednok clone had the same colour scheme as the shuttle/rover?
It was nice that they "lampshaded" the distance when the Diviner got the coordinates from Nandi.
One thing I keep coming back to is the name Diviner. Merriam-Webster says, "divination: 1: the art or practice that seeks to foresee or foretell future events or discover hidden knowledge usually by the interpretation of omens or by the aid of supernatural powers; 2: unusual insight: intuitive perception." Could this be a clue to who he was before all this started for him?
