I just feel bad for all the crew members that never get back to Earth, especially the Janeway's who realize they have failed their crews. Like if you really think about it, the original crew we start out with never makes it back because of catastrophic events they encountered that required the time line to be changed/reset--therefore it's actually an alternate timeline crew who actually succeed in the end.
+Bryan Yates The bridge crew stay on in case an abandon ship happens, who ever is on rotation they are the last to leave, they leave through 2 escape pods in either the ready room or the conference room :)
+Bryan Yates The senior officers and captain are the last to leave, the captain does not ALWAYS go down with the ship, but only when he/she cannot leave because the escape pods/life boats are full, or for some other reason.
+Bryan Yates Bridge crew remain onboard to ensure safe evacuation of the ship and divert power as needed - same goes for the duty watch in the engine room. Once the ship is otherwise evacuated, the self destruct (not needed in this case) is set and the remaining crew abandon ship
@@JoeSmith-gn9yl, I think the implications is that its audio quality is distorted because of the spread of the temporal fractures taking place. I'm tempted to say that a similar effect was used in another episode, but I can't be sure of a specific example. The weird comm malfunction at the beginning of Twisted comes to mind, but its cause was not the same
As much as many criticize Beltran's performance as being, umm, somewhat indifferent, after a certain point in the show's run, I've always been impressed by how he seems to be barely retaining emotional control, as the irrevocability of the scenario strikes him, at the end. Well done, as I view it. As for Mulgrew, she's also exactly aware of the imminent catastrophe. After doing what she can to try and save as much of the crew as possible, she slumps back in her chair, with as overwhelmed an expression as I can readily recall seeing her employ, throughout the series. She knows the ship is moments from destruction (and secondarily, her life coming to an end) and there's nothing she can do to prevent it. No last second wild card to play, no salvation, no hope. It's pretty sobering to watch. 🙁 🙁 🙁
Its an order Janeway never wanted to give, but had to a few times. Year of Hell comes to mind, that 2 parter shows what lengths she'll go to save her crew even if it means losing her own ship and her life.
@@juliahello6673 She probably could and it was probably done automatically, but I suspect she also said it just in case of a computer failure or something? Just my two cents lol
Only issue was B’Elanna and Seven found the device but in previous attempts; Relativity crew sent a version of Seven back in time to find the weapon while Voyager was still in dry dock but she already found it in the Junction Beta 28.
You know at the time this episode aired I didn't particularly care for it much.However looking back and rewatching it nowadays I really like it. :) Now the time travel I could do without because I'm with Janeway. Time travel gives me a headache too!
I feel like one of the writers or someone on the Voyager team got off on Voyager being destroyed. Theres lots of scenes where it happens, this episode, Year of Hell, the Silver Blood Voyager, the one where Voyager got duplicated or something and blew itself up to stop the Viidians. The list goes on.
yes and no here is the thing she was not the best written captain and i do think she at times played a bit safe but then i think that was the show in a nutshell playing it safe. however i dont get the impression she was written as the female captain as is a complaint quite a few people have with her. i just think she was kind of written as a questionable captain from the start.
I love Captain Janeway cause of her attitude to get her crew home. I do understand why she did play it safe at times cause the delta Quadrant is a very dangerous place and Voyager was always under constant attack through out the show, s9nwith Janeway playing it safe at times it ment the crew could relax from having to fight a battle and I think the crew accepted it were fine with it but they all know she could be as stubborn as a Klingon at times
have the computer beam everyone to the escape pods and shuttles and have the shuttles tractor beam the pods to a safe location away from the ship. I just love how they have the site to site transporter function but no one barely uses it in the show (I know it was used in a few episodes in the show but it was rarely used
@ Donald Dalpian, there was no time to evacuate the ship. It all came too fast for them to respond. I mean, by the time you get off the lift you're blown to pieces. And that's before the shuttle bay.
there are escape pods all over the ship so alot of crewmembers were right next to a pod, especially the bridge crew seeing as they have 3 right next to them so how none managed to escape is amazing
They always seem to give themselves no time, always showing up at the wrong time instead of a few minutes or hours earlier. I'm guessing their time travel technology isn't very accurate, maybe some sort of uncertainty principle, maybe it's just hard to aim at a precise moment from five centuries away.
I never got this episode. The guy was arrested for crimes he hadn't yet committed, and now knowing what his future self did he is unlikely to commit any crimes at all. So what kind of legal system imprisons him. Where's the TVA when you need them
Personally, I never thought this made too much sense. If time is moving faster and slower in different places on the ship, how does it rip the ship apart? sure, if its moving, some parts move faster than others causing cultural stress. then why not stop the damn ship?
@@jantares Nope. You've got it spot on... Although there is something you missed out there... Those distortions in how time passes throughout the ship would cause sections of the ship to age and wear faster. Which assuming things get properly maintained and repaired to keep up, it's all fine... But in the situation they were in there, the aging and wear processes were being accelerated so much that it would have been impossible to keep up. As a result imperfections and any slight defects become weak spots and as the wear issue gets worse and worse, those weak spots will fail, causing hull breaches and other major problems... And because of how air hates being restricted in terms of how fast it can escape through a hole in the hull, unless the breach is contained, it will expand... And after a certain point the damage will cross a critical threshold where the hull will just rip itself apart... It's the same reason commercial aircraft have a grid mesh embedded in the fuselage... So if something damages the aircraft and breaches the cabin, the breach will expand to fill the grid square but 9 times out of 10 it won't expand further, because the grid mesh is providing some extra integrity. I say 9 times out of 10... Because there have been a couple of cases where that grid mesh didn't contain the breach properly... One of these instances was a now retired old-spec Boeing 737 which had some poorly designed door latches and some dodgy wiring which accidentally sparked, triggering the cargo bay door to open while in flight... The aircraft then began to decompress and the escaping air ripped the cargo door, the 3 rows of seats above it a section of the fuselage including 3 windows off of the plane. In that case the mesh was presumably damaged in that area but once the breach spread to the good section of the mesh it stopped expanding. The other one I know off was due to an uncontained engine failure which caused a piece of the engine's turbine disc to smash through a window and punch right on through the top of the cabin... in that case the mesh failed completely and the roof of the cabin in it's entirety peeled off of the aircraft, sending the aircraft over that critical threshold of damage I mentioned. In that case the plane was able to continue flying for a couple of minutes before the damage really started taking it's tool on the aircraft. Once that happened, the plane broke up in flight.
That's a really fancy weapon! Small and compact, capable of ripping a starship to pieces with temporal distortions. Of course, a bomb on an anti-matter pod would have been just as effective. And quicker.
I never understood why there were 2 crewmembers from the Starship Relativity being beamed aboard Voyager. When there only needed to be 1 to put the transporter device on Seven.
You know, it seems to me that when the captain orders abandon ship, that people should actually ABANDON SHIP instead of continuing to stand there working their consoles.
Deck One does have more than just the Bridge. There's the Captain's Ready Room and the Conference Room. Also, if my memory's not failing me, there's even a corridor on Deck One. If I recall correctly, all three known rooms have an exit leading to said corridor.
@@DarkXaven I believe the ready and conference rooms exit to that corridor you mentioned. the bridge looks like it only exits to those two rooms and the turbolift(s).
An insane admiral from the future comes back to the 24th century & puts a bomb on Voyager in an act of revenge. 2 Starfleet officers from the future board Voyager to get Seven because she has the ability & the tech to help find the saboteur. I can't remember the episode very well but the admiral who tries to destroy Voyager is the same admiral who in an earlier episode got stuck in 21st century Earth & Janeway & co went after him. I'd have to google it because it's been so long since I watched it.
@@Lizfan2 Not an admiral. Just a captain. Braxton by name. And he wasn't insane, at least, not naturally. Coming into contact with Janeway in the first place (Future's End), was what led to his temporal psychosis (not insanity).
que es ese término del patrón el patrón el patrón el patrón el patrón el patrón, es una falla en la plataforma virtual o es un programa que determina lo que debe ocurrir
@@kennyryan625 Not just that. The device was connected directly to a critical EPS junction... So they couldn't remove it without serious work and cutting power to life-support and environmental controls. Sure most systems on a starship have internal energy storage so they can remain functional for a time even if the connection to the power grid is severed but for the most part those energy reserves can only hold out for a few hours, and there are not enough EVA suits on federation starships for everyone to suit up while spare parts are installed or a solution can be improvised, most of the crew would die, leaving Voyager with not enough crew members to operate and maintain the ship properly in addition to having food shortages onboard.
Fluctations in spacetime ... as if something as ludicrous as spacetime could ever exist. This is such a theoretical nonsense that could never have anything to do with the real world!
@@mitchellmelkin4078 The biggest question of the modern science is not what was before big bang, it is not what's inside a black hole, but it is how it could ever develop this way! Mathematics making weird, uncomprehensible calculations that cannot have anything to do with the real physical world! And they are using terms that are not even predefined. And I'm not even taking about hogwash like dark matter, for their couldn't be a transparent, passing throw the baryonic matter when ever it feels like it, without interacting with it, but with enormous gravititational effects so called dark matter. But I'm talking about things like space and time. What is space, what even is that? Before we use terms like this, it must be said what it's suppose to be, otherwise a real science looses all its meaning. And it's the same with time. What is this? And how can you merge two things that have to scientifical meaning together to a fictional "spacetime" and claim that it actually interacts with real physical objects without even be able to say what space and time and spacetime is? Gravity, and it's not even said what gravity is, bends a fictional, 4 dimensional spacetime... oh dear. And in spite of the fact that we still don't know how the universe is actually working, and it doesn't matter for us at all, we can say what it's not. It's not a gravitational universe, for gravtiy can't be resonsible for everything we see, which is why science has to invent a fictional additional dark matter, and everything is caused by the electromagnetic force whereas gravity has nothing to say, at all, apart from some minor local effects. The universe was never created, it has no beging, it doesn't expend, (in what would it expend? An object can only expend in another object), there are no other universes, there are no such things as black holes and neutrinium stars, there is no fictional dark energy and dark matter and all these other irrational things. We are living in real world of physics, not in fairy tail of weird bullshit like black holes and all this garbage!
@@DerTypausBielefeld, Well, you took quite a bit of space (sorry about that) in going through your thought processes, which, while I wouldn't exactly categorize as elegant, show a considerable discipline. However, I must take pains to point out that I think you'll find very few scientists (at least, well regarded ones) that would be in accord with many of your contentions. I'm not engaged enough in the matter to make the effort you have. Instead, I'll just ask if you can cite any primary sources to substantiate your rather expansive construct. I suspect you would have done so above, if you're actually able to play that card. Failing that, my impression is that you have, what amounts to a pretty reductive headcanon about the current state of our understanding of causal forces at both a macro and micro level, as regards theoretical and particle physics, plus a number of other disciplines. While it's possible that string theory, as one example, which has been an ascendant strain of thought for decades, might well be thoroughly proven false someday, I find the ideation that you seem to suggest, of generations of the world's most brilliant minds establishing virtually nothing coherent, to be unlikely, aside from quite depressing.
I love episodes where time travelers say “there’s no time”
Jim Butke GET IN THE CAR THERE'S NO TIME TO EXPLAIN
'Cause they always seem to show up _right_ when shit's about to go down.
@@EvilMariobot Best way to ensure they don't alter the timeline.
Get to the choppa!
Could've beamed in 5 seconds earlier to say "Someone sabotaged Voyager and you're the one who can find out who", and THEN beam them off.
When Janeway sits down and sighs thinking "well, that's it." That wrenches my heart.
I know they fix it but every time I see Voyager destroyed, it breaks my heart a little. I love that ship so much.
The intrepid class is a beauty. I was never quite as attached as I was to the Enterprise D, but the ship in star trek is a character in its own right.
I just feel bad for all the crew members that never get back to Earth, especially the Janeway's who realize they have failed their crews. Like if you really think about it, the original crew we start out with never makes it back because of catastrophic events they encountered that required the time line to be changed/reset--therefore it's actually an alternate timeline crew who actually succeed in the end.
@@Emeraldnite-if7vo I always thought of it as the original crew who got back in an altered timeline
Why could that not be StarShip Discovery getting destroyed?
@@Agent77X I like Starship Discovery as well 😀
The words "abandon ship" always make me have goosebumps on every series with Sea ships or star ships involved
well part of it is cause you almost never hear that said in star trek it's usually just Boom
the two crewman behind Janeway died while googling what "Abandon ship" meant.
lol
😂😂😂😂
She said all hands....not the things connected to the hands!!!
lol I love how the crew basically ignore her when she say "All hands proceed to the escape pods and abandon ship"
😂😂
@@IceWolf-23 A Captain goes down with their ship. (sometimes)
"Identify yourselves"
"You look great in that catsuit"
We're here from the future because err... we have a crush on you!!!
Apparently all hands means everyone but the bridge crew.
+Bryan Yates The bridge crew stay on in case an abandon ship happens, who ever is on rotation they are the last to leave, they leave through 2 escape pods in either the ready room or the conference room :)
+Bryan Yates Senior staff go down with the ship, not just the captain ;)
+Bryan Yates The senior officers and captain are the last to leave, the captain does not ALWAYS go down with the ship, but only when he/she cannot leave because the escape pods/life boats are full, or for some other reason.
+Bryan Yates It's never discussed, but the bridge crew are referred to as feet.
+Bryan Yates Bridge crew remain onboard to ensure safe evacuation of the ship and divert power as needed - same goes for the duty watch in the engine room. Once the ship is otherwise evacuated, the self destruct (not needed in this case) is set and the remaining crew abandon ship
2:04 Love the sound of that emergency klaxon.
Thats not an emergency klaxon, that's the standard red alert just dis
torted
@@mirkwoodphotography2089 Whatever it is, the sound is cool af.
@@theslicefactor5326 I agree with you man it does sound cool but yeah it's just your basic red alert sound
It sounds brutal.
@@JoeSmith-gn9yl, I think the implications is that its audio quality is distorted because of the spread of the temporal fractures taking place. I'm tempted to say that a similar effect was used in another episode, but I can't be sure of a specific example. The weird comm malfunction at the beginning of Twisted comes to mind, but its cause was not the same
That was the best ship explosion graphics of any Star Trek
@JRPGFan20000 The defiant getting destroyed comes to mind, because that's one of the few that actually stuck, and was also a beloved ship.
Funny, I was just wondering if they ran out of effects budget for that one.
@@stargazer7644 Same, in my eyes, it seemed like the worst one yet
Nah man Archer's Enterprise getting ripped apart by the Xindi is maybe not the best but definetely significantly better than this explosion.
I loved the graphics too.
As much as many criticize Beltran's performance as being, umm, somewhat indifferent, after a certain point in the show's run, I've always been impressed by how he seems to be barely retaining emotional control, as the irrevocability of the scenario strikes him, at the end. Well done, as I view it.
As for Mulgrew, she's also exactly aware of the imminent catastrophe. After doing what she can to try and save as much of the crew as possible, she slumps back in her chair, with as overwhelmed an expression as I can readily recall seeing her employ, throughout the series. She knows the ship is moments from destruction (and secondarily, her life coming to an end) and there's nothing she can do to prevent it. No last second wild card to play, no salvation, no hope. It's pretty sobering to watch. 🙁 🙁 🙁
Its an order Janeway never wanted to give, but had to a few times. Year of Hell comes to mind, that 2 parter shows what lengths she'll go to save her crew even if it means losing her own ship and her life.
As the Year of Hell was cancelled out, I think the order legitimate time that she gave the order to abandon ship was "Workforce"
Good point - I actually forgot about that one
And the Haunting of deck 12..... if nelix is to be believed
she also gave the order to abandon ship in dreadnoght.
also she used janeway pie in that episode too :)
Scary stuff, Janeway telling the crew to abandon ship.
I think they're used to it because she's done it so many times
@@shonaghkennedy9875 She has *never* said that, that's what made it a moment. Maybe you're thinking of "land the ship" which she's done 4x.
I love the red alert sound when seven was walking through the corridor
It was the same red alert of the Enterprise-D during Star Trek Generations
I love that how she say to abandon ship but its waaay to late!!!! I love the distortion effects as she heels over and blows!
Shes better at calling it than Picard was, there was atleast 30seconds til the end, Picard didn't even get to finish saying it before the kaboom
Crew 1: Yo, Bill.
Crew 2: Yeah, Bob?
Crew 1: What was that heading again?
How can Janeway not program the escape pods automatically through a command to the computer?
@@juliahello6673 She probably could and it was probably done automatically, but I suspect she also said it just in case of a computer failure or something? Just my two cents lol
Only issue was B’Elanna and Seven found the device but in previous attempts; Relativity crew sent a version of Seven back in time to find the weapon while Voyager was still in dry dock but she already found it in the Junction Beta 28.
I can totally 'Relate' to this episode *insert laugh here*
I'll go home now
Surprisingly I watched exactly this episode today
You know at the time this episode aired I didn't particularly care for it much.However looking back and rewatching it nowadays I really like it. :) Now the time travel I could do without because I'm with Janeway. Time travel gives me a headache too!
Poor Braxton lead the mission to stop himself from killing the ones that drove him insane
Janeway at the end there was like this is not a good day to die.
Voyager the best Star Trek series ever
Top 3.
Top 9
Nope...Deep Space Nine was the # 1...
1. DS9
2. TNG
3. Voyager
4. TOS
5. Enterprise.
One of the coolest episodes..
yeah i agree if voyager had episodes more like this it could have been the best star trek show.
Lord Byron - Blink of an Eye. Best episode of all.
@@thewewguy8t88 - Blink of an Eye my favourite. Yours?
I feel like one of the writers or someone on the Voyager team got off on Voyager being destroyed. Theres lots of scenes where it happens, this episode, Year of Hell, the Silver Blood Voyager, the one where Voyager got duplicated or something and blew itself up to stop the Viidians. The list goes on.
It's because it always hits! I get genuinely upset when I see it, even though I know something will happen and they'll save the day.
One of my favorite episodes!!!!
Kate Mulgrew was so perfect in this role.
yes and no here is the thing she was not the best written captain and i do think she at times played a bit safe but then i think that was the show in a nutshell playing it safe. however i dont get the impression she was written as the female captain as is a complaint quite a few people have with her. i just think she was kind of written as a questionable captain from the start.
I love Captain Janeway cause of her attitude to get her crew home. I do understand why she did play it safe at times cause the delta Quadrant is a very dangerous place and Voyager was always under constant attack through out the show, s9nwith Janeway playing it safe at times it ment the crew could relax from having to fight a battle and I think the crew accepted it were fine with it but they all know she could be as stubborn as a Klingon at times
It sounds like the beginning of a joke *"Why don't time travelers have any time?"* ....
What's the quickest way to Abandoned Ship?
EVA suit blow out the airlock
Escape by Shuttlecraft
Fired out the Torpedoes tube.
To have the computer beam you you to shuttle bay. ship's of this time line could do that
have the computer beam everyone to the escape pods and shuttles and have the shuttles tractor beam the pods to a safe location away from the ship.
I just love how they have the site to site transporter function but no one barely uses it in the show (I know it was used in a few episodes in the show but it was rarely used
@ Donald Dalpian, there was no time to evacuate the ship. It all came too fast for them to respond. I mean, by the time you get off the lift you're blown to pieces. And that's before the shuttle bay.
i was just thinking that it looked like no one manged to make to any escape pods before the ship was destoryed.
there are escape pods all over the ship so alot of crewmembers were right next to a pod, especially the bridge crew seeing as they have 3 right next to them so how none managed to escape is amazing
@Joseph Jardine, where did you find this information? Thanks
I guess I was just a tad too young to realize how stunning Seven actually looked when the series aired for the first time ;)
is it just me or do all time travelers in voyager seem to use the line no time lol.
They always seem to give themselves no time, always showing up at the wrong time instead of a few minutes or hours earlier. I'm guessing their time travel technology isn't very accurate, maybe some sort of uncertainty principle, maybe it's just hard to aim at a precise moment from five centuries away.
P Or they're dramatic bastards.
Time is relative
@@DayneTreader, Daniels.
can we talk about how effortlessly sexily seven climbs out of the crawlspace and stands up compared to how torres does it
I never got this episode. The guy was arrested for crimes he hadn't yet committed, and now knowing what his future self did he is unlikely to commit any crimes at all. So what kind of legal system imprisons him. Where's the TVA when you need them
Couldn't they have just blown out that section and rebuild it later?
One of my favorite episodes.
Personally, I never thought this made too much sense. If time is moving faster and slower in different places on the ship, how does it rip the ship apart? sure, if its moving, some parts move faster than others causing cultural stress. then why not stop the damn ship?
It's not that time was moving faster or slower, more like the different areas were out of sync.
Orbital mechanics 101.
@@jantares Nope. You've got it spot on... Although there is something you missed out there... Those distortions in how time passes throughout the ship would cause sections of the ship to age and wear faster. Which assuming things get properly maintained and repaired to keep up, it's all fine... But in the situation they were in there, the aging and wear processes were being accelerated so much that it would have been impossible to keep up. As a result imperfections and any slight defects become weak spots and as the wear issue gets worse and worse, those weak spots will fail, causing hull breaches and other major problems... And because of how air hates being restricted in terms of how fast it can escape through a hole in the hull, unless the breach is contained, it will expand... And after a certain point the damage will cross a critical threshold where the hull will just rip itself apart... It's the same reason commercial aircraft have a grid mesh embedded in the fuselage... So if something damages the aircraft and breaches the cabin, the breach will expand to fill the grid square but 9 times out of 10 it won't expand further, because the grid mesh is providing some extra integrity. I say 9 times out of 10... Because there have been a couple of cases where that grid mesh didn't contain the breach properly... One of these instances was a now retired old-spec Boeing 737 which had some poorly designed door latches and some dodgy wiring which accidentally sparked, triggering the cargo bay door to open while in flight... The aircraft then began to decompress and the escaping air ripped the cargo door, the 3 rows of seats above it a section of the fuselage including 3 windows off of the plane. In that case the mesh was presumably damaged in that area but once the breach spread to the good section of the mesh it stopped expanding. The other one I know off was due to an uncontained engine failure which caused a piece of the engine's turbine disc to smash through a window and punch right on through the top of the cabin... in that case the mesh failed completely and the roof of the cabin in it's entirety peeled off of the aircraft, sending the aircraft over that critical threshold of damage I mentioned. In that case the plane was able to continue flying for a couple of minutes before the damage really started taking it's tool on the aircraft. Once that happened, the plane broke up in flight.
All movement is relative. "Stop the ship" relative to what?
Voyager ... the ship that even destroyed the Borg.
That's a really fancy weapon! Small and compact, capable of ripping a starship to pieces with temporal distortions. Of course, a bomb on an anti-matter pod would have been just as effective. And quicker.
I never understood why there were 2 crewmembers from the Starship Relativity being beamed aboard Voyager. When there only needed to be 1 to put the transporter device on Seven.
just in case she resisted.
Plus the asian guy is hot
Maybe they have to time-travel in pairs to keep an eye on each other, like the KGB do
Doubles the chance for success while still keeping their presence small enough to go unnoticed.
@@RecoveringChristian Agreed!
Reminds me of Dr.Strange 1st episode: Dormamu, I come to bargain!! Priceless!!
You know, it seems to me that when the captain orders abandon ship, that people should actually ABANDON SHIP instead of continuing to stand there working their consoles.
2:02 2:05 2:06 2:09
2:15 I was thinking about that the ship got blown up
Breaches on all decks ? The bridge is deck one. If there was a breach, where is it ?
Deck One does have more than just the Bridge. There's the Captain's Ready Room and the Conference Room. Also, if my memory's not failing me, there's even a corridor on Deck One. If I recall correctly, all three known rooms have an exit leading to said corridor.
@@DarkXaven I believe the ready and conference rooms exit to that corridor you mentioned. the bridge looks like it only exits to those two rooms and the turbolift(s).
none of the escape pods even launhed.
Janeway would of had to obey starfleet regulations and maritime law, in that she would have to be the last one off the ship
Donald Dalpian
1. They aren't a maritime vessel and 2.
The UFP doesnt have that regulation.
It's still been demonstrated and even said by Janeway herself that that's what she would do, I think in Year Of Hell at least.
donot ryon UFP does have that regulation, cause Picard said so in First Contact when he started the self destruct sequence at the end
it's a naval tradition, neither maritime law nor any regulation prescribe this kind of action
I know that they got home to earth but they could have made a new life on a earth like planet
and start a branch of the Federation in there?
They had the option to do that numerous times. But they would rather try to get home than to settle down with their situation.
"Demolecularize" the hull...xD
What's funny about that?
seven is hot in no matter suit she wears.
I totally agree lol
That is the worst special effect explosion!
The writers should have of kept Kas
did they died?
I wished they made it home.
The End.
this episode is 5X23 not 24
Lil trouble saying "demolecularize" Harry? Lol
he said it perfectly
It wasn't fluid. He had difficulty saying it. I never said he mispronounced it, just that he had difficulty, which he did.
@@dannyg1195 he did not have any difficulty
Guess my ears are a little more finely tuned than yours.
@@dannyg1195 He said it perfectly
Wow how sad
They should have depressarized junction bay 28 and blew the device out into space.
FYI: 5x23 not 24
I don't remember this episode...
An insane admiral from the future comes back to the 24th century & puts a bomb on Voyager in an act of revenge. 2 Starfleet officers from the future board Voyager to get Seven because she has the ability & the tech to help find the saboteur. I can't remember the episode very well but the admiral who tries to destroy Voyager is the same admiral who in an earlier episode got stuck in 21st century Earth & Janeway & co went after him. I'd have to google it because it's been so long since I watched it.
@@Lizfan2 thanks!
@@Lizfan2 Not an admiral. Just a captain. Braxton by name. And he wasn't insane, at least, not naturally. Coming into contact with Janeway in the first place (Future's End), was what led to his temporal psychosis (not insanity).
What a way to end the series!
que es ese término del patrón el patrón el patrón el patrón el patrón el patrón, es una falla en la plataforma virtual o es un programa que determina lo que debe ocurrir
¿De qué hablás?
o que es eso del patrón
Yyyyyyy
there so smart could just open the cargo bay doors throw it out game over you lose
Do you mean the temporal device? It’s attached to the bulkhead so depressurisation wouldn’t remove it
@@kennyryan625 Not just that. The device was connected directly to a critical EPS junction... So they couldn't remove it without serious work and cutting power to life-support and environmental controls. Sure most systems on a starship have internal energy storage so they can remain functional for a time even if the connection to the power grid is severed but for the most part those energy reserves can only hold out for a few hours, and there are not enough EVA suits on federation starships for everyone to suit up while spare parts are installed or a solution can be improvised, most of the crew would die, leaving Voyager with not enough crew members to operate and maintain the ship properly in addition to having food shortages onboard.
@@GabbieTheFox In any case, as Col. Sharp so dramatically said, "No time, No time!!!!"
There was no time, and only Seven could see it to do anything to it ...... which is why Seven was captured by the temporal agents to begin with.
@@dhinton1, Exactly. It was inaccessible for them to remove, as it was out of phase. Seven could see it, but that was about all.
y la realidad es que todos los días se está reprogramando todo el y cada cosa que ocurre es responsabilidad del gobierno
!pecar? buen chiste en un planeta dónde todo es programado
promueven ideas de gestación humana que no es cierta, le hacen cree que son humanos y que pecan
diego arismendi, Uh, what?
No this is dead end I don’t like this clip
thanks to new fake woke star trek, we will never ever have a truly diverse human star trek show and its sad
Fluctations in spacetime ... as if something as ludicrous as spacetime could ever exist. This is such a theoretical nonsense that could never have anything to do with the real world!
Aaron .aus Bielefeld, Well, I guess Andre Bormanis would take issue with that characterization.
@@mitchellmelkin4078
The biggest question of the modern science is not what was before big bang, it is not what's inside a black hole,
but it is how it could ever develop this way!
Mathematics making weird, uncomprehensible calculations that cannot have anything to do with the real physical world! And they are using terms that are not even predefined.
And I'm not even taking about hogwash like dark matter, for their couldn't be a transparent, passing throw the baryonic matter when ever it feels like it, without interacting with it, but with enormous gravititational effects so called dark matter. But I'm talking about things like space and time. What is space, what even is that? Before we use terms like this, it must be said what it's suppose to be, otherwise a real science looses all its meaning. And it's the same with time. What is this? And how can you merge two things that have to scientifical meaning together to a fictional "spacetime" and claim that it actually interacts with real physical objects without even be able to say what space and time and spacetime is?
Gravity, and it's not even said what gravity is, bends a fictional, 4 dimensional spacetime... oh dear.
And in spite of the fact that we still don't know how the universe is actually working, and it doesn't matter for us at all, we can say what it's not. It's not a gravitational universe, for gravtiy can't be resonsible for everything we see, which is why science has to invent a fictional additional dark matter, and everything is caused by the electromagnetic force whereas gravity has nothing to say, at all, apart from some minor local effects. The universe was never created, it has no beging, it doesn't expend, (in what would it expend? An object can only expend in another object), there are no other universes, there are no such things as black holes and neutrinium stars, there is no fictional dark energy and dark matter and all these other irrational things.
We are living in real world of physics, not in fairy tail of weird bullshit like black holes and all this garbage!
@@DerTypausBielefeld, Well, you took quite a bit of space (sorry about that) in going through your thought processes, which, while I wouldn't exactly categorize as elegant, show a considerable discipline.
However, I must take pains to point out that I think you'll find very few scientists (at least, well regarded ones) that would be in accord with many of your contentions. I'm not engaged enough in the matter to make the effort you have. Instead, I'll just ask if you can cite any primary sources to substantiate your rather expansive construct. I suspect you would have done so above, if you're actually able to play that card.
Failing that, my impression is that you have, what amounts to a pretty reductive headcanon about the current state of our understanding of causal forces at both a macro and micro level, as regards theoretical and particle physics, plus a number of other disciplines. While it's possible that string theory, as one example, which has been an ascendant strain of thought for decades, might well be thoroughly proven false someday, I find the ideation that you seem to suggest, of generations of the world's most brilliant minds establishing virtually nothing coherent, to be unlikely, aside from quite depressing.
Demolecularize - not a word.