Want to read Slashdot from your mobile device? Point it at m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×

Comment Re:V: The Thought Experiment. (Score 1) 708

The original producers of V actually brought in some real science fiction writers to try to save the show. I think it was Niven and Pournelle. I story I read was that the Visitors had left the Earth (or a very similar planet) a long, long time ago and had come home and found the humans infesting the place. They wanted to be here because it was home to them -- the air smelled right, the sun was the right color, the day was the proper length.

Of course, that wasn't enough to save the show, I don't think it was even used.

Comment Re:Ooozing sympathy ... (Score 2, Interesting) 66

I beg to differ on the current. If you look at the buildup of the water on the door and window supports, it looks like there's at least half a foot of pileup due to water velocity. There are some pulsating waves so you know it's not just head difference between inside and outside. That water appears to be moving a couple of feet per second, especially after the breakthroughs. It's not a seeping flood, they're getting real velocity.

I don't think I've ever heard of flood water velocity as a measure of distance from channel before, though.

Comment Re:What always annoyed me about Star Trek (Score 1) 592

I stand somewhat corrected. I'm going to claim that Lost in Space and My Favorite Martian were broadcast during a period when television shows couldn't acknowledge sex. Keep in mind, Laura and Rob Petrie slept in separate beds and they were both humans married to each other. Battlestar Galactica sure had alien prostitutes in the "Guns of Navarone" episode, I think it was called The Gun on Ice Planet Nine or something like that. I don't recall Earth II, and IMDB only finds a movie.

Okay, how about I modify my statement to be, "Every live-action American television show broadcast in color eventually has includes sex with aliens, if aliens are present." That gets rid of the Firefly exception for me as well.

Comment Re:it's been over FORTY YEARS (Score 1) 592

There was an amazingly playable miniatures game called Full Thrust that came out 15 years ago. Games take about 30 minutes; it takes about 10 minutes to pick up the basics. Large fleet battles take a little longer, but I played convention games with 30 ships per side that were done in under 4 hours with a couple of newbies on each side. It's not SFB, but it's fun spaceship combat. Try to track down a copy and play it. If you liked SFB, you'll like Full Thrust. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Full_thrust

Comment Re:Let's think of what makes no sense in this movi (Score 1) 592

2) While I agree, remember that the crew is mostly cadets and recent graduates. There probably weren't any dedicated soldiers with grenades.

What, the Federation didn't realize they were building a new starship and that she might need a crew? Did the discovery of warp drive destroy all concept of workforce planning? How can you build a ship and not have a crew in training, along with a adequate number of transfers to act as cadre?

Slashdot Top Deals

Ya'll hear about the geometer who went to the beach to catch some rays and became a tangent ?

Working...