Originally posted by jaden101
How did I ignore the information?...You're the one that stated that the nanoprobes were necessary to build the weapon...They're not.Which can bring us full circle to your initial incorrect point that it would somehow take a huge amount of time to build enough weapons to have any decent effect on the SW galaxy. You claimed that the Borg cube and Voyager's combined efforts took a while (can't remember the exact length of time...I'd need to watch the episode again)...Combine the Borg's entire collective "will" to create a weapon similar (Could be nanoprobes...Could be some other manner or disabling star destroyers).
That's millions of cubes, trillions of drones plus the combined efforts of all their planetary based drones....Logic dictates it wouldn't take a huge amount of time to create millions of MKNM's.
Have you, by chance, ignored my last posting. Apparently, yes, you did. Just to sum it up: The MKNM isn't an explosive device, can't destroy lightyears of space and is, in general, a total illogical piece of technology. So I suggest that you take this pile of red herrings you have shipped in and eat them yourself, because I won't waste my time with that.
As for how they would affect SD's...Take your pick. It's not like the SD's have any type of technology that the Borg haven't already encountered similar versions of in the ST universe.
Really? They have encountered repulsorlift technology, which is based on material that they mine out of black holes in the SW universe? They have encountered metals altered on a monecular level to such an extend that they are easily able to withstand a supernova explosion? They've encountered hypermatter and devices making use of that material, ranging from conventional hyperdrives to the hypermatter reactor of the Death Star. The latter being an energy source that produces much more energy per second that our sun in an entire year?
Really? They've encountered all that? They've adapted to technology using language programming that they don't understand? They have encountered force-enhanced technology, such as the ships used by the Infinite Empire or weapons on the flagships of the Ancient Sith Empire? They have encountered devices able to move planets and entire stars around with apparent ease?
No. Apparently, they didn't. They didn't even see stuff coming close to that. Yet, according to you, they would still be able to adapt to all of that and assimilate it easily, despite of the fact that those things at times violate the most basic concepts of physics they encounted in their universe? Despite the fact that evidence shows that when something "unfamiliar" pops up (Data, Species 8472) they are totally lost?
The Borg have even assimilated non corporeal beings from other planes of existence.
Source?
I hardly think energy shields are going to be of any great difficulty to adapt to given the multitude of times they are seen doing it on screen in Voyager and Next Generation.
Which is based on the (false) assumption that energy shields in SW work like ST shields.
In TNG: The Wounded, a photon torpedo was shown with a range of just below 300,000kmA class 6 torpedo in Voyager had an effective range of 8,000,000km
So what were you saying about my weapon range argument?
I said that you attempted to talk down the range of the SW weapons. Fact. You counter this by listing the range of ST weapons again. Brilliant. Another red herring for the above mentioned pile.
But we're discussing which fictional universe would win...Not the moral implications of whether or not they would fight or use their powers. Logic would dictate that the likes of the Jedi would easily come to an understanding and peace with the Federation...Given both their apparently willingness and openness to such things. So arguing that a certain species wouldn't get involved is a bit pointless really and could end up a never ending debate of just who would fight and who wouldn't....regardless of who would win if they did fight....You could potentially get another entire thread as long as this and the other SW v ST threads.
You do realize that, allowing the Q and the Douwd, I would simply take the Force, point out that it has a will ("The Phantom Menace", "Revenge of the Sith" novelization), dictate that it's will would be that the SW universe survives, and it simply kills anything present in the ST universe, including the Q and the Douwd, with nobody being able to defend against the energy field that trancends the universe. Does that make sense? No.
Do omnipotent (or almost omnipotent) beings make sense, that can win this battle with a mere thought? No. Especially not if they rather don't give a ducky about what happens in their universe, as it simply doesn't affect them. Otherwise I could throw the Bedlam spirits at the Douwd and let Darth Nihilus force drain the entire Q continuum, instantly killing all it's inhabitants.
Shall we limit it to technology? Bias towards the SW universe, which features a lot of technologies that do require the force in order to operate them. Yet still the SW universe would steamroll the ST forces.
Can you debate without forming biased arguments everywhere to ensure you preferred side wins? That would be great.
It's not the theoretical maximum yield at all...In fact it was the type 2 photon torpedoes from the original series which used only 1.5kg of antimatter. Unless you're trying to claim that ST weapons haven't advanced at all since then.
The theoretical maximum yield for a photon torpedo was 25 isotons. Which is a term that isn't defined. 25 isotons can be half of the yield required to "destroy a small star" or one quarter of a bomb needed to create a 800 KM explosion. Where was the calculation for your 600+ gigaton figure again?
This is stated where? Episodes please. I recall from Scorpion that a fleet of bioships converged on Voyager and were going to take about 3 hours before they arrived. It didn't state their distance or velocity.
You should check the episodes again. There is no warp movement possible in fluid space, because it's not "space" but "matter".
Voyager endgame...Voyager uses transwarp to travel from the delta quadrant to the alpha quadrant in seconds.
Really? That "seconds" apparently lasted long enough to first enter the transwarp hub, then fly around in it, until the future Janeway has taken out the Borg. Then the Voyager destroys the hub, flies out and is pursuit by a Borg Sphere which also has time to catch up with the escaping ship and fire on it again and again, for a time long enough to result in a fail of the ablative armor from the future. That "seconds" do even span several minutes in the actual episode and it might have taken hours in real time. Which doesn't even take into consideration, that we don't know how far away the Voyager was from Earth when starting that final journey in the first place.
So nice exeggeration of events occuring on screen without any conclusive evidence presented. Good job.
TNG: Where noone has gone before. The traveller enabled the enterprise to travel to the edge of the known universe in about a minute.
What did I say about the help of quasi-omnipotent beings? *shrugs*
Voyager: Threshold...The Cochrane achieved infinite velocity because of a rare form of dilithium that stayed stable at extremely high warp.
Which led to Paris suffering from heavy mutation, turning him into some lizzard like creature. Obviously not useable in context of this battle.
I do love how I have to present proof for my argument when you merely stated that SW was faster and ST speeds were "laughable" in comparison.
Millenium Falcon crossed 40.000 lightyears from Tatooine to Alderaan in seven hours in "A New Hope". You can do the math yourself, I suppose.
The traveller was a mortal humanoid.
Oh, yes. Sorry. He could just alter time and space with his thoughts. Nothing nigh omnipotent right there. Total normal human being. 🙄
Something like?...Elaborate.Still not convinced that a black hole that ravages space and time would effect something that exists outside space and time though.
But yes, obviously time does pass on board the vessel but it has no effect on the crew or the ship...rendering them immortal.
Do I really have to explain the concept again?
The ship exist outside of the regular space-time continuum of the ST universe, rendering it untouchable for conventional weapons. "The Force" is clearly not a conventional weapon, neither is an object that resembles a black hole.
Really don't think it would take anyone millenia to find out what are key planets and where they are. They also wouldn't have to accurately predict what would happen as they know it wouldn't affect themselves or any other ST species because their timelines have obviously never interacted.
Really?
They are stranded in a foreign Galaxy, where most people (maybe) don't even speak their language. They are seeking for knowledge about Galactic history, which they would need to study. This means 25,000 years of the history of a Galaxy-spanning civilization, which uncounted millenia prior to that, to figure out the "key planets". Then, they would need to visit said planets, spread through-out the Galaxy, using a maximum speed of Warp 6. It's rather clear that this alone would take several centuries.
After they've done that, they would need to travel to the Yuuzhan Vong Galaxy (2,4 million lightyears @ Warp 6 - millenia) and repeat the action again. You were saying?