User Panel
Originally Posted By Bohr_Adam: That's a good point... sure seems to be underutilized, though. There's few more more clich a scene in American TV than jail processing where they take the arrestee's fingerprints. Our society has been doing stuff like this since loooong before any computerized comparison methods. Doesn't seem to exist there. I can understand database issues and the sheer scope problems, and this needing to access a local file to compare data obtained elsewhere. I can understand plenty of incompetence and gaps along the way. But, we never really see it done. They can do DNA scans for mitichlorians, but there's no DNA samples associated with people in "the system." View Quote Not like they were ever gonna be released. Imagine how it works here, now see how it would communicate on a galaxy wide scale. Probably didn't want it to communicate with other agencies as the truth might leak out. |
|
|
Originally Posted By Bohr_Adam: That's a good point... sure seems to be underutilized, though. There's few more more cliché a scene in American TV than jail processing where they take the arrestee's fingerprints. Our society has been doing stuff like this since loooong before any computerized comparison methods. Doesn't seem to exist there. I can understand database issues and the sheer scope problems, and this needing to access a local file to compare data obtained elsewhere. I can understand plenty of incompetence and gaps along the way. But, we never really see it done. They can do DNA scans for mitichlorians, but there's no DNA samples associated with people in "the system." View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By Bohr_Adam: Originally Posted By MarkMustang: Originally Posted By Bohr_Adam: Fortunately for many of the heroes in those stories, the Empire never seemed to develop biometrics technology. They did develop it eventually. Facial recognition is used in The Mandalorian, episode 15: The Believer. Mango takes off his disguise and let's the terminal scan his face so he can find Moff Gideon's position. That's a good point... sure seems to be underutilized, though. There's few more more cliché a scene in American TV than jail processing where they take the arrestee's fingerprints. Our society has been doing stuff like this since loooong before any computerized comparison methods. Doesn't seem to exist there. I can understand database issues and the sheer scope problems, and this needing to access a local file to compare data obtained elsewhere. I can understand plenty of incompetence and gaps along the way. But, we never really see it done. They can do DNA scans for mitichlorians, but there's no DNA samples associated with people in "the system." Another notable issue with biometrics is the wide variety of lifeforms that would require identification, hence the chaincodes, which is a more manageable system of identification. As already detailed in Bad Batch, those codes can be faked though We use fingerprints, for example, but that wouldn't even work with most of the other species on Earth, let alone a whole universe filled with sentient species. DNA analysis might work for some species, but you might end up having to have specific setups for many different species depending on their biology. It quickly becomes problematic, ignoring the issue of storing and efficiently communicating that amount of data given the ease and speed with which you can jump worlds. |
|
|
Originally Posted By Naporter: Another notable issue with biometrics is the wide variety of lifeforms that would require identification, hence the chaincodes, which is a more manageable system of identification. As already detailed in Bad Batch, those codes can be faked though We use fingerprints, for example, but that wouldn't even work with most of the other species on Earth, let alone a whole universe filled with sentient species. DNA analysis might work for some species, but you might end up having to have specific setups for many different species depending on their biology. It quickly becomes problematic, ignoring the issue of storing and efficiently communicating that amount of data given the ease and speed with which you can jump worlds. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By Naporter: Originally Posted By Bohr_Adam: Originally Posted By MarkMustang: Originally Posted By Bohr_Adam: Fortunately for many of the heroes in those stories, the Empire never seemed to develop biometrics technology. They did develop it eventually. Facial recognition is used in The Mandalorian, episode 15: The Believer. Mango takes off his disguise and let's the terminal scan his face so he can find Moff Gideon's position. That's a good point... sure seems to be underutilized, though. There's few more more cliché a scene in American TV than jail processing where they take the arrestee's fingerprints. Our society has been doing stuff like this since loooong before any computerized comparison methods. Doesn't seem to exist there. I can understand database issues and the sheer scope problems, and this needing to access a local file to compare data obtained elsewhere. I can understand plenty of incompetence and gaps along the way. But, we never really see it done. They can do DNA scans for mitichlorians, but there's no DNA samples associated with people in "the system." Another notable issue with biometrics is the wide variety of lifeforms that would require identification, hence the chaincodes, which is a more manageable system of identification. As already detailed in Bad Batch, those codes can be faked though We use fingerprints, for example, but that wouldn't even work with most of the other species on Earth, let alone a whole universe filled with sentient species. DNA analysis might work for some species, but you might end up having to have specific setups for many different species depending on their biology. It quickly becomes problematic, ignoring the issue of storing and efficiently communicating that amount of data given the ease and speed with which you can jump worlds. The other extreme would be the Marvel universe where everyone seems to have such tech and there are zero limitations in speed or access unless the script asks for it. Two locations - "Earth" and "space," and it's apparently easier to get around space than to move between countries on Earth. Yes, I still hate the way Infinity War handled that, they could so so much more with explaining the "universe" part of the MC... U. |
|
Here’s an example from a butterfly, an example that it can be happy on a hard rock. An example that it can lie on this unsweetened stone, friendlessly and all alone. Now let my bed. I do not care.
|
Originally Posted By Bohr_Adam: That's a good point... sure seems to be underutilized, though. There's few more cliché a scene in American TV than jail processing where they take the arrestee's fingerprints. Our society has been doing stuff like this since loooong before any computerized comparison methods. Doesn't seem to exist there. I can understand database issues and the sheer scope problems, and this needing to access a local file to compare data obtained elsewhere. I can understand plenty of incompetence and gaps along the way. But, we never really see it done. They can do DNA scans for mitichlorians, but there's no DNA samples associated with people in "the system." View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By Bohr_Adam: Originally Posted By MarkMustang: Originally Posted By Bohr_Adam: Fortunately for many of the heroes in those stories, the Empire never seemed to develop biometrics technology. They did develop it eventually. Facial recognition is used in The Mandalorian, episode 15: The Believer. Mango takes off his disguise and let's the terminal scan his face so he can find Moff Gideon's position. That's a good point... sure seems to be underutilized, though. There's few more cliché a scene in American TV than jail processing where they take the arrestee's fingerprints. Our society has been doing stuff like this since loooong before any computerized comparison methods. Doesn't seem to exist there. I can understand database issues and the sheer scope problems, and this needing to access a local file to compare data obtained elsewhere. I can understand plenty of incompetence and gaps along the way. But, we never really see it done. They can do DNA scans for mitichlorians, but there's no DNA samples associated with people in "the system." I think maybe it is a bit of an anachronism of keeping with the spirit of the state of technology when Star Wars was originally conceptualized. |
|
Shit like this is why you don't give typewriters to monkeys. - L_JE
Colonialism, bringing ethnic diversity to a continent near you. - My Father Me being brief, this is like seeing a comet - Geralt55 |
Originally Posted By exDefensorMilitas: I think maybe it is a bit of an anachronism of keeping with the spirit of the state of technology when Star Wars was originally conceptualized. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By exDefensorMilitas: Originally Posted By Bohr_Adam: Originally Posted By MarkMustang: Originally Posted By Bohr_Adam: Fortunately for many of the heroes in those stories, the Empire never seemed to develop biometrics technology. They did develop it eventually. Facial recognition is used in The Mandalorian, episode 15: The Believer. Mango takes off his disguise and let's the terminal scan his face so he can find Moff Gideon's position. That's a good point... sure seems to be underutilized, though. There's few more cliché a scene in American TV than jail processing where they take the arrestee's fingerprints. Our society has been doing stuff like this since loooong before any computerized comparison methods. Doesn't seem to exist there. I can understand database issues and the sheer scope problems, and this needing to access a local file to compare data obtained elsewhere. I can understand plenty of incompetence and gaps along the way. But, we never really see it done. They can do DNA scans for mitichlorians, but there's no DNA samples associated with people in "the system." I think maybe it is a bit of an anachronism of keeping with the spirit of the state of technology when Star Wars was originally conceptualized. That's always a hard narrative hurdle to negotiate, no doubt. I like how they've managed to keep computer graphics and such feel "real" despite this. Star Trek shows suffer a lot more from this problem. |
|
Here’s an example from a butterfly, an example that it can be happy on a hard rock. An example that it can lie on this unsweetened stone, friendlessly and all alone. Now let my bed. I do not care.
|
A Grendel's Love is different from a 5.56's Love
SC, USA
|
Originally Posted By Bohr_Adam: But all readily defeated with a good R2 unit... or was getting R2 the key needed to access the Death Star associated with getting the plans themselves? Or is the canon that sustainment / infrastructure systems are protected differently than databases and information systems meant for non-droid interface (perhaps another oversight due to imperial conceit... even if ironic due to the recent history of actual droid armies. View Quote No Just poor writing like PARSEC which messed with the entire FTL storyline for the life of the SW universe. |
Leave me alone. I’m a libertarian.
|
Originally Posted By Bohr_Adam: But all readily defeated with a good R2 unit... or was getting R2 the key needed to access the Death Star associated with getting the plans themselves? Or is the canon that sustainment / infrastructure systems are protected differently than databases and information systems meant for non-droid interface (perhaps another oversight due to imperial conceit... even if ironic due to the recent history of actual droid armies. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By Bohr_Adam: Originally Posted By RattleCanAR: They are CACs or a SIPR Token depending on what system they are on. But all readily defeated with a good R2 unit... or was getting R2 the key needed to access the Death Star associated with getting the plans themselves? Or is the canon that sustainment / infrastructure systems are protected differently than databases and information systems meant for non-droid interface (perhaps another oversight due to imperial conceit... even if ironic due to the recent history of actual droid armies. In Rebels they frequently had to intercept imperial droids to get the credentials for Chopper to access some imperial systems. That said, it also goes towards what Cassian said about their hubris. They wouldn't guess a person would just walk in and steal something, let alone a lowly droid. R2 is a special case as well. His memory never got wiped. It was a major point of contention when discovered during TCW. Even Chopper got his wiped on occasion to protect Intel. |
|
|
Originally Posted By FreefallRet: Prison didn't care as they just needed bodies. Not like they were ever gonna be released. Imagine how it works here, now see how it would communicate on a galaxy wide scale. Probably didn't want it to communicate with other agencies as the truth might leak out. View Quote I imagine a galaxy-spanning technological bureaucracy that's literally thousands of years old. Our gov bureaucracy has only been computerized for a few decades on a single planet, and it's already a mass of half-connected legacy systems, data silos, and stop-gap fixes. Add in tons of other lifeforms and an actively secretive empire, and it's absolutely believable that he could be on a Most Wanted list in one system, but not exist at all in dozens of others. |
|
|
Originally Posted By Xyster7212: I imagine a galaxy-spanning technological bureaucracy that's literally thousands of years old. Our gov bureaucracy has only been computerized for a few decades on a single planet, and it's already a mass of half-connected legacy systems, data silos, and stop-gap fixes. Add in tons of other lifeforms and an actively secretive empire, and it's absolutely believable that he could be on a Most Wanted list in one system, but not exist at all in dozens of others. View Quote "You just watch yourself. We're wanted men. I have the death sentence on twelve systems." |
|
Who controls the present, controls the past.
Who controls the past, controls the future... |
Originally Posted By ICU: "You just watch yourself. We're wanted men. I have the death sentence on twelve systems." View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By ICU: Originally Posted By Xyster7212: I imagine a galaxy-spanning technological bureaucracy that's literally thousands of years old. Our gov bureaucracy has only been computerized for a few decades on a single planet, and it's already a mass of half-connected legacy systems, data silos, and stop-gap fixes. Add in tons of other lifeforms and an actively secretive empire, and it's absolutely believable that he could be on a Most Wanted list in one system, but not exist at all in dozens of others. "You just watch yourself. We're wanted men. I have the death sentence on twelve systems." Good point. I meant data systems, like the empire's version of a LexisNexis database or NCIC or something. Whatever they would use to verify the identity of a prisoner arrested on Space Miami and link him to a warrant(?) issued by the central empire / ISB. Not star systems. Just saying that sheer bureaucratic mass could explain why they didn't ID him. |
|
|
Originally Posted By RattleCanAR: No Just poor writing like PARSEC which messed with the entire FTL storyline for the life of the SW universe. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By RattleCanAR: Originally Posted By Bohr_Adam: But all readily defeated with a good R2 unit... or was getting R2 the key needed to access the Death Star associated with getting the plans themselves? Or is the canon that sustainment / infrastructure systems are protected differently than databases and information systems meant for non-droid interface (perhaps another oversight due to imperial conceit... even if ironic due to the recent history of actual droid armies. No Just poor writing like PARSEC which messed with the entire FTL storyline for the life of the SW universe. Fixed, and well, in Solo. It was the ship's superior hyperspace navigation abilities, not just speed, that made it special. Before solo you also had the issue of why the hyperdrive was apparently nothing really different from every other ship with hyperdrive, yet Han made such a big deal about its speed. |
|
Here’s an example from a butterfly, an example that it can be happy on a hard rock. An example that it can lie on this unsweetened stone, friendlessly and all alone. Now let my bed. I do not care.
|
Originally Posted By Bohr_Adam: But all readily defeated with a good R2 unit... or was getting R2 the key needed to access the Death Star associated with getting the plans themselves? Or is the canon that sustainment / infrastructure systems are protected differently than databases and information systems meant for non-droid interface (perhaps another oversight due to imperial conceit... even if ironic due to the recent history of actual droid armies. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By Bohr_Adam: Originally Posted By RattleCanAR: They are CACs or a SIPR Token depending on what system they are on. But all readily defeated with a good R2 unit... or was getting R2 the key needed to access the Death Star associated with getting the plans themselves? Or is the canon that sustainment / infrastructure systems are protected differently than databases and information systems meant for non-droid interface (perhaps another oversight due to imperial conceit... even if ironic due to the recent history of actual droid armies. R2 had the Death Star plans, safe to say he had all sorts of access and back doors to all sorts of things. Not to mention his history with the a Royal House of Alderaan, Naboo, Republic, Jedi Temple, never having his memory whiped and exceeding his programming becoming more sentient than most other droids. So yeah, R2 was a Galaxy-class hacker. |
|
|
Originally Posted By Bohr_Adam: That's always a hard narrative hurdle to negotiate, no doubt. I like how they've managed to keep computer graphics and such feel "real" despite this. Star Trek shows suffer a lot more from this problem. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By Bohr_Adam: Originally Posted By exDefensorMilitas: Originally Posted By Bohr_Adam: Originally Posted By MarkMustang: Originally Posted By Bohr_Adam: Fortunately for many of the heroes in those stories, the Empire never seemed to develop biometrics technology. They did develop it eventually. Facial recognition is used in The Mandalorian, episode 15: The Believer. Mango takes off his disguise and let's the terminal scan his face so he can find Moff Gideon's position. That's a good point... sure seems to be underutilized, though. There's few more cliché a scene in American TV than jail processing where they take the arrestee's fingerprints. Our society has been doing stuff like this since loooong before any computerized comparison methods. Doesn't seem to exist there. I can understand database issues and the sheer scope problems, and this needing to access a local file to compare data obtained elsewhere. I can understand plenty of incompetence and gaps along the way. But, we never really see it done. They can do DNA scans for mitichlorians, but there's no DNA samples associated with people in "the system." I think maybe it is a bit of an anachronism of keeping with the spirit of the state of technology when Star Wars was originally conceptualized. That's always a hard narrative hurdle to negotiate, no doubt. I like how they've managed to keep computer graphics and such feel "real" despite this. Star Trek shows suffer a lot more from this problem. I think Star Wars benefits from the narrative separation of being a different time, place and specifically not Earth based. More creative freedom in that sense. Whereas Star Trek was an idealized extension of the then current trajectory of humanity. Star Trek seems to be more of a projection, which constrains it in some areas. |
|
Shit like this is why you don't give typewriters to monkeys. - L_JE
Colonialism, bringing ethnic diversity to a continent near you. - My Father Me being brief, this is like seeing a comet - Geralt55 |
|
|
|
A Grendel's Love is different from a 5.56's Love
SC, USA
|
Originally Posted By Bohr_Adam: Fixed, and well, in Solo. It was the ship's superior hyperspace navigation abilities, not just speed, that made it special. Before solo you also had the issue of why the hyperdrive was apparently nothing really different from every other ship with hyperdrive, yet Han made such a big deal about its speed. View Quote It wasn’t fixed. They just twisted a story to “fix” it into a movie arc. He blew it in the script for the first movie. He knew very little technical information on astronomy and winged it. |
Leave me alone. I’m a libertarian.
|
Finally got to watch the last episode, and had a few things that bugs me:
Nothing on the prison break aftermath. Maybe Cassian bumping into folks from the prison and having a chat about what happened next season. But we would not get the "what happened to the coward guards" payoff. How did Syril "rescue" Dedra? She had 4-6 people dragging her off, but somehow Syril just picks her up off the ground and the others let go? Just because he had a blaster? I figure the crowd would drag him off too as an imp in plain clothes. Syril and "Scotty" trading hats. I don't think it fits Syril's character very well, a cheap chuckle move. I feel like they could've had a 1-2 more episodes between the prison break and the season finale. I'm used to seasons lasting 20+ episodes. A lot of the hate for Andor think this show is slow, etc. I think they are just not used the kind of world and character building that we saw in sci-fi/fantasy shows before streaming. Story arcs that spans seasons/years. X-Files was 9 seasons before they did 2 more in 2016-18. I feel like Andor was going for something similar, but with no self contained episodes that network shows had to do for syndication friendliness. |
|
|
Originally Posted By movingalong: Finally got to watch the last episode, and had a few things that bugs me: Nothing on the prison break aftermath. Maybe Cassian bumping into folks from the prison and having a chat about what happened next season. But we would not get the "what happened to the coward guards" payoff. How did Syril "rescue" Dedra? She had 4-6 people dragging her off, but somehow Syril just picks her up off the ground and the others let go? Just because he had a blaster? I figure the crowd would drag him off too as an imp in plain clothes. Syril and "Scotty" trading hats. I don't think it fits Syril's character very well, a cheap chuckle move. I feel like they could've had a 1-2 more episodes between the prison break and the season finale. I'm used to seasons lasting 20+ episodes. A lot of the hate for Andor think this show is slow, etc. I think they are just not used the kind of world and character building that we saw in sci-fi/fantasy shows before streaming. Story arcs that spans seasons/years. X-Files was 9 seasons before they did 2 more in 2016-18. I feel like Andor was going for something similar, but with no self contained episodes that network shows had to do for syndication friendliness. View Quote |
|
|
Originally Posted By movingalong: Finally got to watch the last episode, and had a few things that bugs me: Nothing on the prison break aftermath. Maybe Cassian bumping into folks from the prison and having a chat about what happened next season. But we would not get the "what happened to the coward guards" payoff. How did Syril "rescue" Dedra? She had 4-6 people dragging her off, but somehow Syril just picks her up off the ground and the others let go? Just because he had a blaster? I figure the crowd would drag him off too as an imp in plain clothes. Syril and "Scotty" trading hats. I don't think it fits Syril's character very well, a cheap chuckle move. I feel like they could've had a 1-2 more episodes between the prison break and the season finale. I'm used to seasons lasting 20+ episodes. A lot of the hate for Andor think this show is slow, etc. I think they are just not used the kind of world and character building that we saw in sci-fi/fantasy shows before streaming. Story arcs that spans seasons/years. X-Files was 9 seasons before they did 2 more in 2016-18. I feel like Andor was going for something similar, but with no self contained episodes that network shows had to do for syndication friendliness. View Quote The hat trading scene was awesome, and the rest of my opinions are also very different from yours. |
|
Here’s an example from a butterfly, an example that it can be happy on a hard rock. An example that it can lie on this unsweetened stone, friendlessly and all alone. Now let my bed. I do not care.
|
That hard case on his shoulder is a HK G3 cleaning kit painted black.
|
|
|
Originally Posted By movingalong: Finally got to watch the last episode, and had a few things that bugs me: Nothing on the prison break aftermath. Maybe Cassian bumping into folks from the prison and having a chat about what happened next season. But we would not get the "what happened to the coward guards" payoff. How did Syril "rescue" Dedra? She had 4-6 people dragging her off, but somehow Syril just picks her up off the ground and the others let go? Just because he had a blaster? I figure the crowd would drag him off too as an imp in plain clothes. Syril and "Scotty" trading hats. I don't think it fits Syril's character very well, a cheap chuckle move. I feel like they could've had a 1-2 more episodes between the prison break and the season finale. I'm used to seasons lasting 20+ episodes. A lot of the hate for Andor think this show is slow, etc. I think they are just not used the kind of world and character building that we saw in sci-fi/fantasy shows before streaming. Story arcs that spans seasons/years. X-Files was 9 seasons before they did 2 more in 2016-18. I feel like Andor was going for something similar, but with no self contained episodes that network shows had to do for syndication friendliness. View Quote They traded hats so they'd be able to keep track of one another under stress, while dressed as locals. Nothing more recognizable than your own hat. |
|
|
Originally Posted By movingalong: Finally got to watch the last episode, and had a few things that bugs me: Nothing on the prison break aftermath. Maybe Cassian bumping into folks from the prison and having a chat about what happened next season. But we would not get the "what happened to the coward guards" payoff. How did Syril "rescue" Dedra? She had 4-6 people dragging her off, but somehow Syril just picks her up off the ground and the others let go? Just because he had a blaster? I figure the crowd would drag him off too as an imp in plain clothes. Syril and "Scotty" trading hats. I don't think it fits Syril's character very well, a cheap chuckle move. I feel like they could've had a 1-2 more episodes between the prison break and the season finale. I'm used to seasons lasting 20+ episodes. A lot of the hate for Andor think this show is slow, etc. I think they are just not used the kind of world and character building that we saw in sci-fi/fantasy shows before streaming. Story arcs that spans seasons/years. X-Files was 9 seasons before they did 2 more in 2016-18. I feel like Andor was going for something similar, but with no self contained episodes that network shows had to do for syndication friendliness. View Quote |
|
|
Originally Posted By The_Gooch: That hard case on his shoulder is a HK G3 cleaning kit painted black. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By The_Gooch: That hard case on his shoulder is a HK G3 cleaning kit painted black. Well I’ll be damned! |
|
|
Originally Posted By movingalong: I feel like they could've had a 1-2 more episodes between the prison break and the season finale. I'm used to seasons lasting 20+ episodes. A lot of the hate for Andor think this show is slow, etc. I think they are just not used the kind of world and character building that we saw in sci-fi/fantasy shows before streaming. Story arcs that spans seasons/years. X-Files was 9 seasons before they did 2 more in 2016-18. I feel like Andor was going for something similar, but with no self contained episodes that network shows had to do for syndication friendliness. View Quote Yeah, I wish we still got those long seasons too. The writers strike of 2007 changed that. Remember how LOST and Battlestar Galactica both fell apart mid-way through the series? That was due to the writers strike. The way networks played catch-up was to start the mid-season break. So you get a 10+ episodes then a 6-8 week break then another 10 episodes or so. Then over time you had summer seasons (a time when network shows were usually in reruns). Streaming takes that even further - not constrained by network broadcasting schedules, they can do whatever they want, but are still influenced by the fallout from the '07 strike. Imagine Andor at 26 episodes. Would be amazing. |
|
|
Originally Posted By movingalong: Syril and "Scotty" trading hats. I don't think it fits Syril's character very well, a cheap chuckle move. . View Quote If you look back, Syril had altered his Corpsec uniforms to fit better, his personal clothes too. The hat was fitted to him better vs. 'Scotty' hat |
|
|
Originally Posted By shane01: If you look back, Syril had altered his Corpsec uniforms to fit better, his personal clothes too. The hat was fitted to him better vs. 'Scotty' hat View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By shane01: Originally Posted By movingalong: Syril and "Scotty" trading hats. I don't think it fits Syril's character very well, a cheap chuckle move. . If you look back, Syril had altered his Corpsec uniforms to fit better, his personal clothes too. The hat was fitted to him better vs. 'Scotty' hat It was done to recognize each other in a crowd should they get separated. You would recognize your own hat.. |
|
RS Callsign Mayhem Midget
"I'll come for the killing and stay for the cheesecake" SSgt Jason A Decker. 11/6/09 |
Originally Posted By stoner01: It was done to recognize each other in a crowd should they get separated. You would recognize your own hat.. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By stoner01: Originally Posted By shane01: Originally Posted By movingalong: Syril and "Scotty" trading hats. I don't think it fits Syril's character very well, a cheap chuckle move. . If you look back, Syril had altered his Corpsec uniforms to fit better, his personal clothes too. The hat was fitted to him better vs. 'Scotty' hat It was done to recognize each other in a crowd should they get separated. You would recognize your own hat.. The fact it was unspoken made it so much more powerful. |
|
Here’s an example from a butterfly, an example that it can be happy on a hard rock. An example that it can lie on this unsweetened stone, friendlessly and all alone. Now let my bed. I do not care.
|
Originally Posted By FreefallRet: Prison didn't care as they just needed bodies. Not like they were ever gonna be released. Imagine how it works here, now see how it would communicate on a galaxy wide scale. Probably didn't want it to communicate with other agencies as the truth might leak out. View Quote This. Look at the way that he was captured, sentenced, and processed. There was no concern with justice. They were simply railroading people into slave labor; they didn't care who they were. |
|
|
Originally Posted By K2QB3: They traded hats so they'd be able to keep track of one another under stress, while dressed as locals. Nothing more recognizable than your own hat. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By K2QB3: They traded hats so they'd be able to keep track of one another under stress, while dressed as locals. Nothing more recognizable than your own hat. Thanks, that makes sense. Glad they put in stuff like that. Originally Posted By FreefallRet: Might be some prison flashbacks in season 2 I hope so. Maybe through an ISB review/investigation of the prison break. Or another prison arc at the prison the guards and some recaptured escapees get sent to :) Originally Posted By MarkMustang: Yeah, I wish we still got those long seasons too. The writers strike of 2007 changed that. Remember how LOST and Battlestar Galactica both fell apart mid-way through the series? That was due to the writers strike. The way networks played catch-up was to start the mid-season break. So you get a 10+ episodes then a 6-8 week break then another 10 episodes or so. Then over time you had summer seasons (a time when network shows were usually in reruns). Streaming takes that even further - not constrained by network broadcasting schedules, they can do whatever they want, but are still influenced by the fallout from the '07 strike. Imagine Andor at 26 episodes. Would be amazing. I am aware of the streamers doing shorter "seasons" of series. In addition to your points, streamers' goal is to get and retain subs, while network shows are aimed at advertisers in hopes of getting a contract for the whole season, and hopefully syndication revenue for many years ala Seinfeld, Star Trek, etc. |
|
|
Thanks for the info about the code cylinders
|
|
My personal defensive weapons self-identify as black-nitride-American high-speed wireless peacekeeping devices.
ALL gun control is unconstitutional infringement. Be ungovernable. Do not kneel. |
@movingalong - don't forget, add on streaming services are coming, unless you pay for a premium membership.
|
|
|
President's 100, US Army Distinguished Rifleman
KWT
|
|
No snowflake in an avalanche ever feels responsible.
Disclaimer: Nothing I post on the Internet, to include political commentary, implies official sponsorship, approval, or endorsement from my employers. |
Originally Posted By movingalong: Finally got to watch the last episode, and had a few things that bugs me: Nothing on the prison break aftermath. Maybe Cassian bumping into folks from the prison and having a chat about what happened next season. But we would not get the "what happened to the coward guards" payoff. How did Syril "rescue" Dedra? She had 4-6 people dragging her off, but somehow Syril just picks her up off the ground and the others let go? Just because he had a blaster? I figure the crowd would drag him off too as an imp in plain clothes. Syril and "Scotty" trading hats. I don't think it fits Syril's character very well, a cheap chuckle move. I feel like they could've had a 1-2 more episodes between the prison break and the season finale. I'm used to seasons lasting 20+ episodes. A lot of the hate for Andor think this show is slow, etc. I think they are just not used the kind of world and character building that we saw in sci-fi/fantasy shows before streaming. Story arcs that spans seasons/years. X-Files was 9 seasons before they did 2 more in 2016-18. I feel like Andor was going for something similar, but with no self contained episodes that network shows had to do for syndication friendliness. View Quote The new norm for several years now it seems is shorter seasons. If it wasn't for this thread I would have stopped at episode 10, figured it was the finale. |
|
World's okayist yeller
|
|
Not sure if it has been mentioned already, but Mon Milfma also played the mom/wife in Tin Star.
|
|
|
|
Originally Posted By Roland-G23: https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/74797/save_ferrix_andor-2618766.jpg View Quote Attached File |
|
Always assume that the government wants to kill you, and you'll be far closer to the truth than assuming otherwise.
ArGyLe64 III, Esq. He/Him/His/m'lord MBA DTF BBQ Not Vaccinated |
i like the fact that the show also has invested character dev on the other side as well, syrill (his mom and call center job) and how loyal scotty was to him. they had their own struggles as well, made the show much much fuller and deeper
|
|
MEMENTO MORI
|
Andor - The Best Show At The Worst Time Drinker finally gets to watch the series... |
|
RS Callsign Mayhem Midget
"I'll come for the killing and stay for the cheesecake" SSgt Jason A Decker. 11/6/09 |
For those curious, this latest episode has a mid credits scene that proves several of your right (about the prison parts) but in the wrong way..
But damn.. what an episode and series.. |
|
|
Originally Posted By stoner01: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pPhEsoSAhvY Drinker finally gets to watch the series... View Quote I love that guy. No homo, but I'd love to have a drink and watch a movie with him. I'd even buy him dinner. |
|
It's so annoying trying to have a Socratic argument with a psychopath.
|
|
Originally Posted By AR-1904: https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/168740/028773ED-197C-495D-8B21-BD2AE33D3833_jpe-2618981.JPG View Quote There's been a few youtubers who caught that, you can definitely see it when you look at her mouth, the "t" sound requires a very distinctive tongue to upper mouth movement. The consonant she used came from the back of the throat. |
|
Here’s an example from a butterfly, an example that it can be happy on a hard rock. An example that it can lie on this unsweetened stone, friendlessly and all alone. Now let my bed. I do not care.
|
The show was decent for the most part. Slow AF a lot of the time though...
|
|
intPostwhore := intPostwhore + 1;
|
I was finally able to get some time to chill and was able to sit down this morning, so I finished up the last 2 episodes of the season. I really enjoyed the whole thing. Like most others in the thread I believe Andor is one of the better Star Wars shows to come out. I am super stoked for the next season of course.
One thing I really enjoyed about this show was the intelligence agency side of things with the empire search for the rebels and the building of the character Dedra Meero. The meetings and the building of the case and Information. I thought her fight to gain respect within her own agency seemed real to life and was a cool addition. It's much better than boom they just know or some one saying "Our sources told us this was going to happen", which is an easy way out that is often used. I liked the the new droid in the show. B2EMO is sad little worn down pathetic but loyal and cool droid. He reminds me of a that dog whos owner has passed but wont leave the door because they are waiting for that owner to come home. Someone I think said it a few pages back, perhaps B2 memories will be implanted in K2so. That would be kind of cool for continuity. Luthan's ship is totally cool. Of course Skargard is a great actor as are his kids, i am really glad he is in Andor. Haha I love how he just demolished the tractor beam dish, takes out the Tie Fighters and hyperdrives the fuck out of there. Hell to the yeah! |
|
Sa/oU Home Of The Brave
Wesley Sindelar (I-M-A-WMD) RIP Jeff Chandler (Mauser1) RIP |
Originally Posted By Bohr_Adam: Fixed, and well, in Solo. It was the ship's superior hyperspace navigation abilities, not just speed, that made it special. Before solo you also had the issue of why the hyperdrive was apparently nothing really different from every other ship with hyperdrive, yet Han made such a big deal about its speed. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By Bohr_Adam: Originally Posted By RattleCanAR: Originally Posted By Bohr_Adam: But all readily defeated with a good R2 unit... or was getting R2 the key needed to access the Death Star associated with getting the plans themselves? Or is the canon that sustainment / infrastructure systems are protected differently than databases and information systems meant for non-droid interface (perhaps another oversight due to imperial conceit... even if ironic due to the recent history of actual droid armies. No Just poor writing like PARSEC which messed with the entire FTL storyline for the life of the SW universe. Fixed, and well, in Solo. It was the ship's superior hyperspace navigation abilities, not just speed, that made it special. Before solo you also had the issue of why the hyperdrive was apparently nothing really different from every other ship with hyperdrive, yet Han made such a big deal about its speed. Han Solo flew smuggling runs into and out of The Maw. An area of space littered with blackholes. He did the Kessel run in under twelve parsecs because he was that talented of a pilot and flew a course that less skilled pilots would died doing. This was explained in the original EU. |
|
|
Originally Posted By Miami_JBT: Long before Solo it was explained. Han Solo flew smuggling runs into and out of The Maw. An area of space littered with blackholes. He did the Kessel run in under twelve parsecs because he was that talented of a pilot and flew a course that less skilled pilots would died doing. This was explained in the original EU. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By Miami_JBT: Originally Posted By Bohr_Adam: Originally Posted By RattleCanAR: Originally Posted By Bohr_Adam: But all readily defeated with a good R2 unit... or was getting R2 the key needed to access the Death Star associated with getting the plans themselves? Or is the canon that sustainment / infrastructure systems are protected differently than databases and information systems meant for non-droid interface (perhaps another oversight due to imperial conceit... even if ironic due to the recent history of actual droid armies. No Just poor writing like PARSEC which messed with the entire FTL storyline for the life of the SW universe. Fixed, and well, in Solo. It was the ship's superior hyperspace navigation abilities, not just speed, that made it special. Before solo you also had the issue of why the hyperdrive was apparently nothing really different from every other ship with hyperdrive, yet Han made such a big deal about its speed. Han Solo flew smuggling runs into and out of The Maw. An area of space littered with blackholes. He did the Kessel run in under twelve parsecs because he was that talented of a pilot and flew a course that less skilled pilots would died doing. This was explained in the original EU. Then they should get even more credit for taking an EU thing and making it canon like they did. |
|
Here’s an example from a butterfly, an example that it can be happy on a hard rock. An example that it can lie on this unsweetened stone, friendlessly and all alone. Now let my bed. I do not care.
|
Andor - The Best Show At The Worst Time |
|
|
Originally Posted By Coffin-Nail: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pPhEsoSAhvY View Quote |
|
RS Callsign Mayhem Midget
"I'll come for the killing and stay for the cheesecake" SSgt Jason A Decker. 11/6/09 |
|
|
Always assume that the government wants to kill you, and you'll be far closer to the truth than assuming otherwise.
ArGyLe64 III, Esq. He/Him/His/m'lord MBA DTF BBQ Not Vaccinated |
|
Sign up for the ARFCOM weekly newsletter and be entered to win a free ARFCOM membership. One new winner* is announced every week!
You will receive an email every Friday morning featuring the latest chatter from the hottest topics, breaking news surrounding legislation, as well as exclusive deals only available to ARFCOM email subscribers.
AR15.COM is the world's largest firearm community and is a gathering place for firearm enthusiasts of all types.
From hunters and military members, to competition shooters and general firearm enthusiasts, we welcome anyone who values and respects the way of the firearm.
Subscribe to our monthly Newsletter to receive firearm news, product discounts from your favorite Industry Partners, and more.
Copyright © 1996-2024 AR15.COM LLC. All Rights Reserved.
Any use of this content without express written consent is prohibited.
AR15.Com reserves the right to overwrite or replace any affiliate, commercial, or monetizable links, posted by users, with our own.