• @gnate
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    61 year ago

    I don’t accept the premise – the pattern is read on transport, yes? Rather than a fixed record of one’s composition. Therefore, the only aging you won’t be doing is for the duration of the transport process itself. Chump change.

    • @ClockworkN
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      31 year ago

      They regularly allude to the idea of “pattern buffers” that hold on to a copy of you for as long as the plot requires.

      • @jj4211
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        21 year ago

        Like how Scotty sat for decades in the transporter buffer. How the doctors kid in strange new worlds was stashed in the transporter buffer most of the time.

        Multiple TNG references using “last transport” as a reference point for Crusher to talk about mysterious space sickness of the day.

      • @gnate
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        11 year ago

        Sure, but I don’t think those are used as a matter of standard practice. The idea of some immutable, archival pattern being used for each trip doesn’t track.

        • MaggiWuerze
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          11 year ago

          I thought you were read into the buffer until your pattern was wholly scanned and then replicated onto the target from it

          • @gnate
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            11 year ago

            Sounds right to me.