cthia wrote:Hacking systems had to be a cakewalk for Shannon. But what bothers me is the ease of which it was to accomplish. It doesn't seem like it would have been so easy to destroy her own ship, let alone so many others.
ThinksMarkedly wrote:Harkness did the same aboard PNS Tepes. The SS crews were woefully inadequately skilled for the jobs they had. They didn't know what they were doing and computer security appeared to be very lacking.
We don't know what Shannon did and whether she was alone.
What we can safely say is that:
a) it involved some hacking, since she sent commands and it all happened very quickly after that
b) the cause was internal to the ships (or at least to the sidewalls). As you said, those were SDs, designed to absorb blows, and they had their sidewalls up.
Shannon could have parked an RD on the hull of each ship. If it's just magnetically attached, no one is going to know it's there -- and any EVA crews would assume it's meant to be there. When it powers up its wedge, the ship has no defence, armour or no. And RDs are in her area of expertise.
She could also have taken command of the RDs in each of the SDs launch tubes.
But wedges don't come up that fast, unless the nodes are already warm. That would have been noticeable, unless again it was standard procedure to have a ready-to-go RD in the launch tube.
Note that on the Tepes the pinnacle had to be physically damaged in order to bypass the interlock that should have prevented the wedge from coming up in that situation. There ought to be similar interlocks on anything with a wedge.