VOY 3x26: Scorpion Part 1

Is there some kind of Starfleet form I can sign to opt out of transporter hacks you “just came up with”?

  • @Emotet@slrpnk.net
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    263 months ago

    Yeah, that’s one of those tropes I hate pretty much everywhere, but (old) Star Trek is great enough to look past it.

    They are skilled and professional. But how incompetently was the playbook written, if pretty much everyone can come up with something previously not derived spontaneously, if it’s that easy?

    • @cynar@lemmy.world
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      313 months ago

      I generally view them as developmental or unreliable methods. A 20% risk of killing everyone involved is horrifying for a normal away mission return. However, the same risk for pulling a team away from imminent death is a lot more tolerable.

      This also explains how they can implement them so quickly, it’s already buried in the codebase.

    • @schema@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      IMO, it’s essentially the duality of techno babbling. In the hands of good writers it can enhance an already well written story.

      In bad writing, it’s often used as a fluff drama element, sometimes even becoming deus ex machina.

  • @phx@lemmy.ca
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    213 months ago

    I always looked Galaxy Quest’s take on this:

    “But the pig-beast is inside out… and now it has exploded.”

  • @TootSweet@lemmy.world
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    193 months ago

    It was just like a clueless captain to say “energize” as if that’s going to magically make it work. Like, I’m trying to invent a whole new field of engineering here, Kathryn. Maybe step off a bit if you want them back in one piece.

    • Torres (later to Vorik over a mug of something replicated and syntheholic)
  • NegativeNullM
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    153 months ago

    Instead of a DNR (do not resuscitate), create a DNTH (do not transporter hack)

  • @mojofrododojo@lemmy.world
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    143 months ago

    whenever I see transporter memes, it reminds me that no one in starfleet needs to die. they could save and update your pattern. you’d only lose the away mission.

    :|

    • SkaveRat
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      53 months ago

      Pretty sure that’s explained in canon by being too compute and storage intensive. You can’t store a person’s pattern in any medium, apart from the buffer.

      And in there it’s only very temporarily before breaking down (see scotty in the Dyson sphere or m’bengas kid)

      • @mojofrododojo@lemmy.world
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        53 months ago

        and I’m pretty sure any society advanced enough to develop FTL can figure out the storage problem lol.

        also, scotty was in that pattern buffer for 75 years lol. All I’m saying is if scotty can rig that up in a crashed ship (IN A CAVE) star fleet probably could figure something out.

  • @Agent641@lemmy.world
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    83 months ago

    Could I theoretically lock onto the poop in my lower intestine and the piss in my bladder and beam them out of myself so I don’t have to go to the toilet?

    • Admiral PatrickOP
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      3 months ago

      Lol, a few years ago on the alien site, I wrote a scene for The Orville as a “what if The Orville suddenly got transporters” That was basically the premise of it.

      If there’s interest, and I can find it (I saved it to a text file somewhere before nuking my account), I can post it here.

        • Admiral PatrickOP
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          3 months ago

          Found it in “Unsaved Document 4.txt” LOL

          MERCER: I have to pee. Bortus, you have the conn.
          
          BORTUS: Aye, sir.
          
          MALLOY: Why not just use the teleporter?
          
          GRAYSON: You pee in the teleporter booth? That's disgusting!
          
          MALLOY: What?! No! Of course not. Watch.
          
          [The bridge crew watch as Mallloy presses buttons on his console to initiate a site-to-site teleport. He then switches the main screen to display a view off the starboard bow where an amber blob of liquid materializes and begins to boil and freeze into an icy nebula]
          
          MALLOY: Ahhhhh.
          
          MERCER: Did you just...? Gordon, you're relieved.
          
          MALLOY: You bet I am!
          
          MERCER: No, I mean get out.
          
          GRAYSON: Wait a minute. I remember right after we got the teleporters installed, we spent two months in orbit around Galavar VI. During that time their moon mysteriously and miraculously developed a ring system. That was you?
          
          LAMARR: Yeah, I, uh, might have helped with that.
          
          ALARA: Me too.
          
          MALLOY: Yeah, and even Issac got in on it.
          
          ISSAC: That is impossible as I am an artificial lifeform and do not produce urine. However, I do require periodic coolant flushes which could be considered crudely analogous.
          
          MALLOY: And do you have any record of coolant flushes during that time?
          
          ISSAC: [BEAT] I do not. To use your parlance: You. Bastard.
          
          BORTUS: Is that why my Ja'loja is late this year? Dr. Finn was unable to determine...[INTERRUPTED BY MERCER]
          
          MERCER: [PICARD FACEPALM] Oh my God. [BEAT] You know what? It's fine. Gordon, you're fine. Return to your station and set a course for Galavar VI. We've got to go tell them their holy miracle ring is just a bunch of piss. It's fine.
          
          GRAYSON: Ed?
          
          MERCER: You know what they say: there's a good story and a bunch of idiots behind every warning label.
          
          
          • @cordlesslamp@lemmy.today
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            23 months ago

            LoL I wouldn’t surprise if this is actually a real idea from the show’s writers. Fit the show so well. Though the show’s runners has made it clear that they do not want to use a teleporter because the story would be much more interesting without one or something like that.

  • @FinishingDutch@lemmy.world
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    83 months ago

    I’m always a bit disappointed with how safe and PG Star Trek is. Because transporters would be an awesome way to put some gruesome body horror into the series.

    It really is the scariest thing by far on any ship. The ‘science’ behind transporters basically makes it a murder machine if it works correctly. I want to see what horrors beyond imagination can occur when that thing messes up or is deliberately sabotaged.

    • @TrueStoryBob@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      In the first film, “Star Trek: The Motion Picture,” a horrific transporter accident occurs in the first act. It’s kind of a plot point as the Chief Science Officer (a Vulcan we only briefly meet at Starfleet HQ) is killed along with another poor soul, necessitating Mr. Spock’s return to his seat. It’s fairly graphic, you hear screaming and see deformed humanoid shapes in the transporter “light show” on the ship’s platforms… the transporter technician says “oh no, they’re forming” shortly before what’s left of them is beamed back down to San Francisco. Starfleet ground control then confirms to Kirk and Co that “what made it back didn’t live long.”

      Later (like only three or four scenes later), we are told that Dr McCoy doesn’t want to use the transporter to board the ship -likely because of the obvious inherent danger of the device- but is ordered to beam aboard by Kirk. His worry is then played for laughs… as if not an hour ago two people got melted and died. It’s a bizarre shift in tone, only made weirder by the framing of Bones as an old Luddite for being scared to use it.

      • Flying SquidM
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        43 months ago

        And Bones had no problem using it in TOS, so it didn’t even make much sense.

        • @TrueStoryBob@lemmy.world
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          3 months ago

          The danger of the transporter is not really talked about in TOS, outside of accidentally sending folks to the Mirror universe. Wait, I’m just realizing… so, on top of possibly causing untimely (not instant enough for my liking) death and nonconsensual cloning, any old transporter can also accidentally create a portal to fully up-and-running interplanetary fascism. It’s just a dangerous technology all the way down.

    • Admiral PatrickOP
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      3 months ago

      ENT did a little bit of body horror with the transporters since they were still new in-universe. One of the away team was beamed up during a storm, and some branches and leaves blew into the beam and became integrated into him when he rematerialized. He got better.

      I’m hazy on the specifics, but in DS9, someone sabotaged the transporter and the contact they were supposed to meet burned alive during rematerialization. That was pretty gory for Trek.

      Galaxy Quest went all the way and turned the pig-monster inside out lol … and then it exploded.

    • @T156@lemmy.world
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      33 months ago

      You say that, but the warp core is also pretty nasty stuff. Not only is it full of flesh melting radiation and coolant, but a slight knock will cause it to explode, at least on any ship built in the 24th century.

      At least you can not use a transporter. You kind of scuffed if you’re on a warp core powered ship and it suddenly goes up in smoke.

      • @FinishingDutch@lemmy.world
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        33 months ago

        Well sure, the warp core is inherently dangerous. But they seem to have a good grasp on the radiation aspect as well as general safety. It’s also a fairly acceptable trade off to sail among the stars at faster than light speed.

        But the transporter? I consider it an inherently evil and untrustworthy device. It basically kills the user, sends an energy beam and reassembles an entity at the other end that thinks it’s the person who just stepped on the pad.

        We know this is how it works, because we’ve seen incidents that clearly show us. In TOS ‘The Enemy Within’, Kirk is split into two people. And similarly, in TNG’s ‘Second Chances’, the transporter again splits Riker into two people.

        Logically, if the transporter sent and reassembles the actual matter, clearly it wouldn’t be able to make perfect copies. You’d end up with two half scale copies at best. So, the matter used to reassemble is not the same matter that was disassembled. Therefore, the transporter inherently murders anyone who uses it.

        So nooooo thank you, I’m taking the shuttle.

        • @T156@lemmy.world
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          33 months ago

          At least with Riker, we also know that it is a combination of the transport operator splitting Riker across two transport streams instead of the usual one, and a bunch of unique circumstances surrounding an ion storm. It’s only been done twice, from people doing the exact same procedure in exacting circumstances.

          We also know that the transporter isn’t a simple clone and kill device, otherwise, their replicators would just utilise the same functionality, and we know that they lack the fine detailed resolution to recreate living matter, or computer chips with it, the result having telltale problems indicative of replication.

          Scotty and Voyager would not need to rig up some hyper-complex loop procedure to keep people inside of the transporter otherwise. They could just keep the clone pattern, and put it into normal persistent storage. DS9 shows that that is possible to do that, albeit for a small handful of people per Cardassian space station. The transport accident in TMP would never need to happen, because they could just abort the transport procedure and recreate the clone from the sending transporter.

          We also know that the transporter has some error correction capabilities. Scotty seemed reasonably convinced that it might have been possible to recall Lt. Franklin. Geordi disagreed, but more due to the level of pattern degradation, rather than a damaged pattern at all. Though fabricating half a person is almost definitely pushing the limits of those capabilities, it’s not impossible. Those imperfections and errors are implied to be what caused Transporter Psychosis in the early days. There do also seem to be variations in the copies that come out the other end. Both parts of Kirk came out different, as did both copies of Boimler. Riker may have been the same, but we don’t know enough to say for sure.

          So, the matter used to reassemble is not the same matter that was disassembled.

          Untrue, for the most part. We’re explicitly told that the matter stream is what gets transported, with the constituent matter being converted to energy, moved across, and converted back. Barclay is held at that junction where his matter starts converting to energy, and there’s a real concern that it wouldn’t be possible to hold him in that state for long.

          He then doubles his mass by grabbing onto another person, which oughtn’t be possible if the transporter was cloning people, since the other transporter would not have received the pattern to reintegrate with. It’d just squish everything into a double-mass Barclay.

  • Rob T Firefly
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    53 months ago

    cut to the planet below, where there are three puddles of meat and clothes gurgling in pain and disappointment

  • @xia
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    23 months ago

    Nah… probably just missing their clothes and equipment.