Another excellent episode. 9-10 for the last 3 in a row. Fantastic end to the first half.
Did anybody have a room like Gary Seven's room IRL?
I wasn't born of that era, but some of us fellow TrekBBS folks lived through that, so I'm wondering if any of you remember if some of your rooms resembled "Gary Seven's" room?
Obviously not in it's entirety, but some parts of your rooms would have furnishings or knick knacks that he had in that room?
Also, Janeway's knowledge of how to defeat "The Loom" should be required knowledge to spread to all Temporal Agents along with StarFleet.
I don't think there was a mother vessel to which that shuttle was attached to.Early in the season, we also saw/heard Gwyn's advisor (on the shuttle) being killed, with an implication that the mother vessel of the shuttle was also lost (as Janeway mentioned they lost contact with it). Possibly the work of either Asencia's Rev-## vessel, or of already existing Vau N'akat vessels (though it is doubtful those could detect, reach and then overwhelm a starship by themselves, unless Starfleet was caught napping).
The shuttles of the Voy-A certainly seem more formidable... but to be fair, we seldom got to see shuttles in their full glory... and when we did, they DID kinda display some impressive feats - after all, they ARE mini starships and sport a full array of what is essentially same technology, just downscaled.Indeed. I wonder if the first death, the "redshirt" on the planet who got a name only shortly before he was devoured, was a bit of an inside joke at the meta treatment of redshirts (who usually got introduced in the episode they were killed and promptly forgotten afterwards, never to be mentioned again).
Loved Janeway finding a way to hurt the loom. All the others were firing and firing, but it never did anything. She wasn't taking sh*t from anyone this episode, not from admirals and not from time-devouring monsters.
Her shuttle is more heavily armed than the Defiant, it fires an entire spread of quantum torpedoes,...
Majel got to experience Zero in their present form. Nice, but wonder how that turns out when Zero will likely return to original form later in the season. She's a good addition to the wayward crew.
In S2e4, Tysess says that Starfleet lost contact with "Gwyn's diplomatic ship", the Sacagawea.I don't think there was a mother vessel to which that shuttle was attached to.
It was just the shuttle itself if I'm not mistaken.
In S2e4, Tysess says that Starfleet lost contact with "Gwyn's diplomatic ship", the Sacagawea.
I believe he is indeed talking about a ship, rather a small shuttle, because of the following:
-he says "ship" and I would think Tysess tends to be precise in his reporting
-a pretty standard shuttle craft, as shown in episode 2, wouldn't warrant a description of being "diplomatic". A ship though, could have accomodation and/or crew specific to diplomatic missions. If it was just a shuttle, "Gwyn's shuttle" would have been far more precise as a description
-in S2e1, during Dal's and Gwyn's long distance call, we see some of her surroundings and there seems to be a big/wide window behind her. This doesn't seem to match interior nor exterior shots of the shuttle she is on in S2e2. I also got the impression during that conversation that she was alone in the room shown, as I think her behaviour would have been more formal if she had been sharing the space with the woman shown on the shuttle in S2E2.
-if the small shuttle shown in S2E2 has a name, it likely wouldn't have been known to Starfleet officers from another vessel many lightyears away. I'd imagine that even a runabout name like "Rio Grande" wouldn't have meant anything to the Ent-D crew during TNG seasons 4/5; they would have said something like "contact with Sisko's runabout was lost" rather than "Sisko's ship the Rio Grande was lost".
-Waltke did mention in a fairly recent interview (shortly before S2 debuted on Netflix) that his take was that Gwyn wasn't sent alone but that she went in a ship with support personnel, a view that seems to be entirely in line with how it was depicted in early season 2 (it was heavily implied that Gwyn had been trained/drilled for the scenario, though Starfleet's instructors evidently failed to think about Ascencia possibly showing up beforehand)
-even without Waltke's statement, it seems very unlikely in-universe that a small shuttle would make a massive voyage from Federation space to Solum alone, with just 2 people on it.
Examples of shuttles being referred to as ships in-universe?Actually, I think the Sacagawea IS in fact a shuttle.
Shuttles were referred to as ships too in-universe, so dialogue wise, I don't think its an issue.
A diplomatic ship being a shuttle makes sense if you ask me. Its small, fast (probably equipped with Quantum Slipstream to get to Solum quickly), and it was the only vessel that was actually seen destroyed visually.
At the end of S1, Gwyn departs Earth to go to Solum in a shuttle when it warped. In S2, we only ever see a shuttle... but never a larger ship.
If there was a big ship, I suspect that we would have seen it (and given the kind of attention to detail Prodigy has been doing, I don't think it would have forgotten to put a bigger ship at the screen for us to actually see).
Given how First Contact unfolded in the alternate future, I think SF was being cautious here and didn't want to look imposing or threatening, so it would make sense to send a shuttle and minimize casualties if any issues arise.
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