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Moderators: George Berryman, CrazyChris, AmFan15, BD, Kevin Cushing
by CrazyChris » Sun Oct 03, 2010 4:50 pm


by George Berryman » Sun Oct 03, 2010 5:08 pm
CrazyChris wrote:George's best point is that Data would know of Dracula's many well-documented weaknesses because of Data's vast knowledge of Earth literature. Dracula, on the other hand, would know nothing about Data.
CrazyChris wrote:I don't want to sell Dracula short, though. He's not going to be easily caught off guard, and after the fight goes on for a while he'll get a good sense of Data's capabilities. I give Dracula enough credit to say he won't be taken out by one phaser shot, and once he sees a wall get vaporized he'll know what he's dealing with and adjust his strategy accordingly.
CrazyChris wrote:Dracula's powers also make him better able to move through the shadowy nooks and crannies of the hospital, be it in animal form or mist form. Can Data do much more than lumber around while Dracula pounces from the shadows and takes him apart piece by piece with hit and run tactics?
CrazyChris wrote:This is a very interesting fight. Good job to George for such a creative counter to Dracula.





by AmFan15 » Sun Oct 03, 2010 6:00 pm
George Berryman wrote:CrazyChris wrote:George's best point is that Data would know of Dracula's many well-documented weaknesses because of Data's vast knowledge of Earth literature. Dracula, on the other hand, would know nothing about Data.
This.
George Berryman wrote:CrazyChris wrote:I don't want to sell Dracula short, though. He's not going to be easily caught off guard, and after the fight goes on for a while he'll get a good sense of Data's capabilities. I give Dracula enough credit to say he won't be taken out by one phaser shot, and once he sees a wall get vaporized he'll know what he's dealing with and adjust his strategy accordingly.
Data's mind works at 60 trillion operations per second. His positronic brain and android hearing also allow him to detect several hundred distinct sound patterns at any given time, giving him better hearing than a dog. That, plus his tricorder which can scan and track data across a wide variety of information (including, for instance, thermal anomalies, energy patterns, organic/inorganic materials and their chemical/mineral compositions) gives him a damn good chance at being able to track Dracula. Yes, even in his mist form.
George Berryman wrote:CrazyChris wrote:Dracula's powers also make him better able to move through the shadowy nooks and crannies of the hospital, be it in animal form or mist form. Can Data do much more than lumber around while Dracula pounces from the shadows and takes him apart piece by piece with hit and run tactics?
Data also moves and reacts quickly (again I point to a Starfleet robotics engineer saying Data's hands moved so fast that he couldn't see them) and that gives him more than enough of a chance to nail Dracula with a phaser.
George Berryman wrote:CrazyChris wrote:This is a very interesting fight. Good job to George for such a creative counter to Dracula.
I like to think "outside the box."

"Whether Aunt May dies or not isn't the question. If she dies, does it mean anything beyond a brief sales spike because collectors/speculators think they'll be able to make a profit selling the book later? That is the question. Back when, Stan and company won our hearts and minds. I cared about Spider-Man and the other Marvel characters as though they were friends. I cared every time Aunt May got sick. That's what good creative work does."
--Jim Shooter--



by George Berryman » Sun Oct 03, 2010 6:09 pm
AmFan15 wrote:He knows that he is inhuman, and that he stands in Dracula's way...that's all he NEEDS to know! How's his enhanced hearing going to help him when Dracula commands ALL of the nocturnal animals in the area (Crickets, owls, wolves, etc.) to swarm? Think about it: over a cacophony of squeaks, hoots, howls, and growls, he's going to hear Dracula?
AmFan15 wrote:He can also command the weather, including mist and fog. He clouds the area, and vanishes into the mist. I think even the tricorder could have trouble sorting THAT out!
AmFan15 wrote:Methinks that robotics engineer needs to get his glasses checked. Well, at the end of the day, Data's going to have to be put into a box...Possibly SEVERAL once Dracula's through with him!





by CrazyChris » Sun Oct 03, 2010 6:19 pm


by AmFan15 » Sun Oct 03, 2010 6:24 pm
CrazyChris wrote:In popular culture, Dracula is generally invisible to artificial means of capturing his image. He has no reflection, doesn't show up on film, and etc. This is a speculative point because the novel doesn't and couldn't have addressed whether Dracula would show up on a Tricorder scan, but it makes me hesitant to emphasize Data's superhuman visual capabilities.
Thanks, CrazyChris! I nearly missed that!
"Whether Aunt May dies or not isn't the question. If she dies, does it mean anything beyond a brief sales spike because collectors/speculators think they'll be able to make a profit selling the book later? That is the question. Back when, Stan and company won our hearts and minds. I cared about Spider-Man and the other Marvel characters as though they were friends. I cared every time Aunt May got sick. That's what good creative work does."
--Jim Shooter--



by George Berryman » Sun Oct 03, 2010 6:27 pm
CrazyChris wrote:I don't think Dracula would read as a cold spot on a thermal scan. His body should be room temperature, the same as his surroundings. He would be invisible on the thermal spectrum. If Data is going to see him, I think it would have to be with some other Tricorder function. In popular culture, Dracula is generally invisible to artificial means of capturing his image. He has no reflection, doesn't show up on film, and etc. This is a speculative point because the novel doesn't and couldn't have addressed whether Dracula would show up on a Tricorder scan, but it makes me hesitant to emphasize Data's superhuman visual capabilities.





by CrazyChris » Sun Oct 03, 2010 6:33 pm


by AmFan15 » Sun Oct 03, 2010 6:35 pm
George Berryman wrote:CrazyChris wrote:I don't think Dracula would read as a cold spot on a thermal scan. His body should be room temperature, the same as his surroundings. He would be invisible on the thermal spectrum. If Data is going to see him, I think it would have to be with some other Tricorder function. In popular culture, Dracula is generally invisible to artificial means of capturing his image. He has no reflection, doesn't show up on film, and etc. This is a speculative point because the novel doesn't and couldn't have addressed whether Dracula would show up on a Tricorder scan, but it makes me hesitant to emphasize Data's superhuman visual capabilities.
Does the novel mention he doesn't show up on film? I can't remember. The tricorder's not a mirror or film.
Either way Dracula is made up of physical matter. When he becomes mist, that mist has a chemical make-up and/or energy output - probably both. Data could track him having the tricorder scan for moving, dead organic tissue. The tricorder could track him by the leather of his footwear. Hell it could track him by the vibrations in the floor or walls when he moves.

"Whether Aunt May dies or not isn't the question. If she dies, does it mean anything beyond a brief sales spike because collectors/speculators think they'll be able to make a profit selling the book later? That is the question. Back when, Stan and company won our hearts and minds. I cared about Spider-Man and the other Marvel characters as though they were friends. I cared every time Aunt May got sick. That's what good creative work does."
--Jim Shooter--



by George Berryman » Sun Oct 03, 2010 6:37 pm
CrazyChris wrote:I'd agree with all those points, but the main thing holding me back is that Dracula is a supernatural being, so who knows what "energy output" and so on he would have? I haven't read the novel, so everything I know about Dracula comes from popular culture. Pop culture depicts him as supernaturally silent and cloaked in shadows. Does the novel ever demonstrate that someone can perceive him when he's actively trying not to be perceived?





by CrazyChris » Sun Oct 03, 2010 6:39 pm
AmFan15 wrote:George Berryman wrote:CrazyChris wrote:I don't think Dracula would read as a cold spot on a thermal scan. His body should be room temperature, the same as his surroundings. He would be invisible on the thermal spectrum. If Data is going to see him, I think it would have to be with some other Tricorder function. In popular culture, Dracula is generally invisible to artificial means of capturing his image. He has no reflection, doesn't show up on film, and etc. This is a speculative point because the novel doesn't and couldn't have addressed whether Dracula would show up on a Tricorder scan, but it makes me hesitant to emphasize Data's superhuman visual capabilities.
Does the novel mention he doesn't show up on film? I can't remember. The tricorder's not a mirror or film.
Either way Dracula is made up of physical matter. When he becomes mist, that mist has a chemical make-up and/or energy output - probably both. Data could track him having the tricorder scan for moving, dead organic tissue. The tricorder could track him by the leather of his footwear. Hell it could track him by the vibrations in the floor or walls when he moves.
But NOT if he changes into mist, in a fog enshrouded area! Dracula is practically the DEFINITION of inorganic: He has no heartbeat, does not breathe, and hasn't technically LIVED in a VERY long time. He won't show up on Data's precious tricorder, and Data won't be able to hear him, until it's too late.


by George Berryman » Sun Oct 03, 2010 6:40 pm
AmFan15 wrote:But NOT if he changes into mist, in a fog enshrouded area! Dracula is practically the DEFINITION of inorganic: He has no heartbeat, does not breathe, and hasn't technically LIVED in a VERY long time. He won't show up on Data's precious tricorder, and Data won't be able to hear him, until it's too late.





by Peter Palmer » Sun Oct 03, 2010 9:13 pm
George Berryman wrote:Does the novel mention he doesn't show up on film? I can't remember.




by AmFan15 » Mon Oct 04, 2010 1:17 pm

"Whether Aunt May dies or not isn't the question. If she dies, does it mean anything beyond a brief sales spike because collectors/speculators think they'll be able to make a profit selling the book later? That is the question. Back when, Stan and company won our hearts and minds. I cared about Spider-Man and the other Marvel characters as though they were friends. I cared every time Aunt May got sick. That's what good creative work does."
--Jim Shooter--



by stillanerd » Mon Oct 04, 2010 1:19 pm




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