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| Tags: borg, chess, data |
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"CaptJosh" wrote in message ...
I have a sense of humor. However, some things simply do not amuse me. Especially not jerks who can only tell someone out for some fun to "get a life". Was the original post a silly question? Perhaps. But I find it intellectually stimulating, as I have never considered it before. I find it fascinating. CaptJosh How so do you consider the qustions silly yet intellectually stimulating? Have you considered the possibility that Roddenberry's imagination is somewhat very true to life as we see the entire galaxy with all four quadrants, objectively? Buck Rogers was just a figment of a writer's imagination long time ago. When Armstrong sat foot on that moon, the creation of Skylab, and the construction of the International Space Station, such imagination all of a sudden, became a reality. Lance Smith |
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"CaptJosh" wrote in message ...
Liam Too wrote: "CaptJosh" wrote in message ... I have a sense of humor. However, some things simply do not amuse me. Especially not jerks who can only tell someone out for some fun to "get a life". Was the original post a silly question? Perhaps. But I find it intellectually stimulating, as I have never considered it before. I find it fascinating. CaptJosh How so do you consider the qustions silly yet intellectually stimulating? Have you considered the possibility that Roddenberry's imagination is somewhat very true to life as we see the entire galaxy with all four quadrants, objectively? Buck Rogers was just a figment of a writer's imagination long time ago. When Armstrong sat foot on that moon, the creation of Skylab, and the construction of the International Space Station, such imagination all of a sudden, became a reality. I merely admitted the objective possibility that the question was silly. I personally don't consider it to be silly. But even silly questions can stimulate the intellect. For example, the following riddle: A Starfleet Cadet is marooned on a class K planet. His only supplies are his tricorder, and a calendar. When a ship comes looking for him a year later, he is alive and well. How did he survive? (Note: Those who know the answer from the Voyager ep on which this riddle was posed to Tuvok, do not answer) CaptJosh My guesses: -He ate the dates -He was so full of hot air he didn't need to breathe in. -He used the tricorder to record a recording, then reword the recording, reward the rewording, use the reward for something useful, use the useful item, turn the item into a totem, use a modem from the totem, and use the modem to order supplies from e-Bay. -Munched on the mondays, fried the fridays, and slurped the sundays. -use tricorder to find an inexplicable, lost well of water, use tricorder to disable electric water guard, and drink up! (Wesley Crusher did this in a TNG episode). -Find the neighborhood Starbucks, drink coffee and eat scones. -Find reverse-scalosian water, so one hour passes by in a second, making 1 year a mere 2 hours, 6 minutes. -Find some rocks, build a prayer niche, use the niche and the calendar to summon the Norse gods for help (Woden, Thor, Friga, etc.). -Turn the tricorder into a transporter (if the Cadet is a miracle engineer), and use a feedback loop to be stuck in the transporter for 364 days. -Ask people around for help (you didn't say there was nobody else on the planet!) -DanielSBen |
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