teceem: I've only seen 2 episodes, but didn't they say that they weren't even near at replicating a "Data". That the androids that attacked Mars were very functional but didn't contain any of Soong's "special sauce".
Breja: Possibly, but it still seems to me like quite jump to go from no androids whatsoever to mass produced fully functional ones in just 6 years. I guess I just don't understand why not have those events happen a bit later, say 15 years after Nemesis, still leaving 5 years for Picard to spend in retirement (quite enough, I think).
But yeah, those are details, and if the show picks up the pace and doesn't piss me off with anything new, I won't be inclined to nitpick so much.
Acriz: In Voyager it was established that they used the old EMH for slave labor. Which makes sense, if something goes wrong the most damage you get are some busted hologram emitters. But with Androids, you would never see a return of investment, if even one get's damaged while welding or carrying stuff.
Breja: Well, unless they managed to duplicate the mobile emitter future-tech, holograms would have very limited use.
Rather than boldly go into the depths of space, Picard is far more interested in exploring the depths of its famous leader. In doing so, the series more than justifies its existence in today's nostalgia-driven era.
Smart, well-crafted, layered - verging on over-layered.
Picard is Trek through and through, full of thorny ethical quandaries, social allegories, sinister admirals, and an undercurrent of optimism in spite of it all.
burger king customer survey