Difference between revisions of "Borg"
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As of ''Star Trek: Voyager'', Borg territory reportedly includes thousands of star systems. It would take an ''Intrepid''-class Federation starship approximately two months to pass through their territory, presumably traveling the shortest available route at its best speed while avoiding contact. | As of ''Star Trek: Voyager'', Borg territory reportedly includes thousands of star systems. It would take an ''Intrepid''-class Federation starship approximately two months to pass through their territory, presumably traveling the shortest available route at its best speed while avoiding contact. | ||
==Threat | ==Threat Assessment== | ||
The Borg can be rated as a very low threat to anyone with a working functioning brain. For example, in [[First Contact]], the [[Enterprise-E]]'s on board systems did not detect the Borg beaming on board, nor did they detect the significant alterations the Borg proceeded to make to the on board systems, such as increasing temperature and humidity in the Engineering levels. In the end, it took several [[Red Shirts]] dying before the Borg threat was detected. Compare this with the [[Enterprise-A]] in [[The Undiscovered Country]], which was capable of detecting on board weapons fire. | The Borg can be rated as a very low threat to anyone with a working functioning brain. For example, in [[First Contact]], the [[Enterprise-E]]'s on board systems did not detect the Borg beaming on board, nor did they detect the significant alterations the Borg proceeded to make to the on board systems, such as increasing temperature and humidity in the Engineering levels. In the end, it took several [[Red Shirts]] dying before the Borg threat was detected. Compare this with the [[Enterprise-A]] in [[The Undiscovered Country]], which was capable of detecting on board weapons fire. | ||
Revision as of 19:20, 9 November 2007
The Borg are a society of cyborgs that control a large volume of space in the Delta Quadrant of the Milky Way galaxy in Star Trek. Originally conceived as a collective of "ultimate users" who would consume any useful technology they encountered, they were later re-invented as an expansionist regime that "assimilates" other species to acquire their technology, knowledge, and genetic material.
Organization
The Borg exist as a Collective in which all individuals are directly connected to a massive computer network via cybernetic implants. Individual "drones" in the Collective can have varying levels of authority, with the Borg Queen operating as the highest-ranking member and directing Borg policy. In this way, the Borg Collective resembles an insect hive, albeit one with problem-solving intelligence, advanced technology, and enormous resources.
Attributes
The Borg population consists primarily of "drones" captured from other civilizations and forced to serve the Collective through a process called "assimilation". Fitted with cybernetic implants, these drones are physically much stronger than normal humans and have a variety of special abilities, such as replicating nutrients to sustain their organic components. Borg drones communicate with each other via a constant stream subspace transmissions, allowing the Collective to rapidly re-allocate resources in response to changing situations.
While the Borg have acquired vast stores of knowledge from civilizations they have assimilated, they seem to have lost the ability to innovate. They now learn solely by assimilating knowledge from other races, doing no research or inventing of their own. This proved to be a devastating disadvantage when they faced a species that resisted their assimilation technology.
Borg drones and starships include shielding technology that allows them to resist attack from energy weapons. These defenses rely heavily on the ability to identify the frequencies of incident beams and adapt the shield to block those frequencies.
Territory
As of Star Trek: Voyager, Borg territory reportedly includes thousands of star systems. It would take an Intrepid-class Federation starship approximately two months to pass through their territory, presumably traveling the shortest available route at its best speed while avoiding contact.
Threat Assessment
The Borg can be rated as a very low threat to anyone with a working functioning brain. For example, in First Contact, the Enterprise-E's on board systems did not detect the Borg beaming on board, nor did they detect the significant alterations the Borg proceeded to make to the on board systems, such as increasing temperature and humidity in the Engineering levels. In the end, it took several Red Shirts dying before the Borg threat was detected. Compare this with the Enterprise-A in The Undiscovered Country, which was capable of detecting on board weapons fire.