star wars

May 30, 2005 22:23

Well then ( Read more... )

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big_eddy May 31 2005, 06:24:12 UTC
interesting points

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eye_sac May 31 2005, 06:27:39 UTC
first of all, everybody who reads this has seen episode III so the warning was unnessecary, if not long enough. 2nd point, that is not how tractor beams work, and ion cannons are freaking huge. 3rd point, a droid opens a spot in a window in episode II, and it's a freaking lightsaber. 4th point, who the hell asked you how shields should work? 5th point, they never say how long it takes to build the first deathstar. 6th point, why the hell does anybody care about the deathstar's gravitational field? 7th point, yes, hand weapons can hit fighters, the laser disrupts the field protecting the ship, eventually it gets through; some shields prevent physical things entering as well, such is the case with destroyers, nothing gets through their shields. and for my final point, no one gives a damn what you think.

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another point swordsketcher June 7 2005, 05:03:08 UTC
Being without THAT much extensive knowledge and all, i have no objections to what you are saying. I would like to add something though. When someone destroys a window in the Chancellor Palpatine Rescue scene, everyone is being sucked out, including General Grievance, who finds a way to escape. Two things wrong: a) everyone should have extreme hypothermia from the cold of space, and should have exploded from lack of outside pressures to check their personal body pressure. b) General Grievance, later, is shown to possess a seemingly humanoid head and organ, which are unprotected from the extremes of space. How come he gets to crawl around on the outside of the ship while everyone else doesn't ( ... )

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Re: another point lassoguy June 19 2005, 02:29:08 UTC
Yes, there is actually no way to concieve the word "cold" in space, because in a vacuum, there is no form in which heat can leave the body save radiance. There is no air, so convective cooling has no effect, and unless you are touching an asteroid, or a piece of space junk, there won't be any conduction either, again, for want of something to conduct to ( ... )

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Re: another point swordsketcher June 21 2005, 04:39:13 UTC
Interesting. I'm only in ninth grade, so I have no resources or knowledge to argue with. You learn something new every day, I suppose. I wonder if chicken tastes good when bombarded by both the extremes of a vacuum and infrared and ultraviolet (hint hint good project for NASA hint hint). I'd make someone else eat it first, though. Thanks for the infinite wisdom,

Atarume

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Re: another point lassoguy June 21 2005, 05:35:00 UTC
Yeah, don't worry, I wasn't trying to contradict you.

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