cthia wrote:I thought it was textev. I distinctly remember text stating that development had hit a few snags. Although, I could be remembering facts regarding the spyder drive. At any rate, I won't easily accept that mankind nailed such an unprecedented project first attempt, even with someone else's notes.
I still think it is unprecedented at least in its accomplishment. If not in its overall conception. (Although, that might be argued as well since no one thought of applying it to the theta wall.) Indeed, I wasn't aware of the fact that work had been previously effected. Can you remember that reference? The sleuth in me eyes have furled.
Here's what the text says, bolding added by me:
Mission of Honor wrote:In the last few centuries, efforts to beat the iota barrier had waned, until the goal had been pretty much abandoned as one of those theoretically possible but practically unobtainable concepts.
But the Mesan Alignment hadn't abandoned it, and finally, after the better part of a hundred T-years of dogged research, they'd found the answer. It was, in many ways, a brute force approach, and it wouldn't have been possible even now without relatively recent advances (whose potential no one else seemed to have noticed) in related fields. And even with those other advances, it had almost doubled the size of conventional hyper generators.
I do indeed think that the streak drive is a big deal. It was instrumental in allowing the MAlign to achieve what they did.
Oh, I agree that it is a breakthrough, and provides an enormous advantage if most people don't have it. All I'm saying is that the theoretical aspect of the system is not revolutionary. The Spider drive is revolutionary--it is radically different from previous drive systems. The Streak drive is not revolutionary--it is an incremental improvement on an existing system. And the theory had always said that it was possible. It was just the practical application that was a problem. Yes, that improvement was hard to achieve, but high difficulty is not the same as revolutionary.
And I don't think you understand the definition of unprecedented. The streak drive most certainly had precedents. There have been previous incremental improvements of hyper generators; for a long time, they were limited to the Delta bands, if I recall correctly. This is just another incremental improvement; hard won, but still merely an increment.
The text actually does not say that Simoes was part of the breakthrough to achieve the Streak Drive. What the text says is that he has been working on improving the streak drive further. We don't know what improvement that refers to--size? efficiency? new bands? We also don't know how long the Alignment has had the Streak Drive. For all we know, they may have had the drive for decades. But this does support your thought that a long communication lag between Mesa and Darius would hinder development.