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It could be interpreted as an arbitrary choice to set a standard by the military (that happens to be inconceivably convenient for writers), automatic translation to go along with the idea that everything we're hearing is being flawlessly translated to current idiomatic English despite no decent explanation for that, a cultural relic inherited from Kobol from Earth, or any number of other things. Notably, there's no reason to have an identical hour if a day is not a highly composite multiple of an hour. It's wildly unlikely for a given world to have an exactly 12, 18, 24, 30, or 36 hour day, and those are, requiring the green belt, the only reasonable sizes. For that matter, '''the probablity of the rotation of an arbitrary planet being any integer multiple of an hour is exactly 0''' (assuming time is a continuous variable, which is a stock assumption for physics). Effectively, the only reasonable assumption is that it has nothing to do with the length of day on any colony or the average of the day on all colonies. I like the translation one, personally. --[[User:CalculatinAvatar|CalculatinAvatar]] 01:11, 5 January 2006 (EST)
It could be interpreted as an arbitrary choice to set a standard by the military (that happens to be inconceivably convenient for writers), automatic translation to go along with the idea that everything we're hearing is being flawlessly translated to current idiomatic English despite no decent explanation for that, a cultural relic inherited from Kobol from Earth, or any number of other things. Notably, there's no reason to have an identical hour if a day is not a highly composite multiple of an hour. It's wildly unlikely for a given world to have an exactly 12, 18, 24, 30, or 36 hour day, and those are, requiring the green belt, the only reasonable sizes. For that matter, '''the probablity of the rotation of an arbitrary planet being any integer multiple of an hour is exactly 0''' (assuming time is a continuous variable, which is a stock assumption for physics). Effectively, the only reasonable assumption is that it has nothing to do with the length of day on any colony or the average of the day on all colonies. I like the translation one, personally. --[[User:CalculatinAvatar|CalculatinAvatar]] 01:11, 5 January 2006 (EST)
==Guest Star Template Concerns==
I couldn't find the right place to mention this: some articles have all of the guest stars in the top episode box, others have them still listed on the bottom.  Does this need updating?, or are they too long the other way, or what?--[[User:Ricimer|Ricimer]] 15:54, 2 February 2006 (EST)

Revision as of 20:54, 2 February 2006

GateWorld has newer information on this episode. Apparently the D'Anna character has a name change here from what we did know. There is more of a synopsis here for anyone that wants to flesh out the page a bit more before air time. Spencerian 12:24, 22 Aug 2005 (EDT)

Exposure in More Ways Than One

Was it just me, or did this episode also expose more skin as it did other revelations about our characterss? Not that watching Ms. Sackoff kick the s*** out of a bag in a small workout suit was unappealing to me or anything. I'm sure female viewers were pleasantly stunned to see that Jamie Barber is not only handsome, but so buff you could wash clothes on his abs. The sexuality on the show hit a new high with this one. Considering that you would think that the population of the fleet would be trying to multiply like rabbits, I guess this should be expected later: somebody will have to make due on Roslin's suggestion that the fleet start to make babies. Spencerian 11:41, 12 September 2005 (EDT)

Yeah, I too thought the skin was gratuitous, and I am definitely heterosexual and female. I just don't like skin/sex for its own sake. An argument can be made that it shows the crew's humanity or something, but it bothers me a little. There is so much that this show is; BSG doesn't need to stoop to the level of (Star Trek's) Troi's low-cut dresses, or Seven of Nine's skin-tight outfits. --Fang Aili 15:05, 12 September 2005 (EDT)
At least it's equal-opportunity stooping. There was a lot of sex in the miniseries too, and Tyrol and Boomer had a fairly graphic relationship for the first half of the first season. --Peter Farago 17:19, 12 September 2005 (EDT)
equal-opportunity stooping.. Yeah, I agree that part of it is cool. --Fang Aili 10:12, 13 September 2005 (EDT)

Saved the baby?

How exactly do we know that the baby was saved? (Did I miss something in the episode?) --Fang Aili 14:57, 12 September 2005 (EDT)

(I just read the episode quotes.) Oh, the Cylons say so at the end. I was too wrapped up being surprised at Cylon!Lawless to notice what they were saying. --Fang Aili 15:02, 12 September 2005 (EDT)

Overview and Summary

A question/suggestion: Does anyone else think that those words mean the same thing? In the article, the items under "Summary" don't really sum-up the episode, since those are not the main action (the "Overview" is). Perhaps "Summary" could be renamed something like "Significant plot developments" or somesuch. (I'm being a detail-stickler.) --Fang Aili 10:18, 13 September 2005 (EDT)

Spence had been doing our summaries lately (real summaries, as in the first season pages), but he seems behind lately. I don't think I really have his gift for it. --Peter Farago 20:29, 13 September 2005 (EDT)

Thanks for the compliment, Peter, but I usually don't start any summaries, except for Flight of the Phoenix as that episode got me so excited. I do review, trim, fold, spindle and mutiliate other existing summary points more often than not, however. In fact, Final Cut might be due for a bit of it... :) Spencerian 23:41, 18 September 2005 (EDT)

24 Hours a Day

It could be interpreted as an arbitrary choice to set a standard by the military (that happens to be inconceivably convenient for writers), automatic translation to go along with the idea that everything we're hearing is being flawlessly translated to current idiomatic English despite no decent explanation for that, a cultural relic inherited from Kobol from Earth, or any number of other things. Notably, there's no reason to have an identical hour if a day is not a highly composite multiple of an hour. It's wildly unlikely for a given world to have an exactly 12, 18, 24, 30, or 36 hour day, and those are, requiring the green belt, the only reasonable sizes. For that matter, the probablity of the rotation of an arbitrary planet being any integer multiple of an hour is exactly 0 (assuming time is a continuous variable, which is a stock assumption for physics). Effectively, the only reasonable assumption is that it has nothing to do with the length of day on any colony or the average of the day on all colonies. I like the translation one, personally. --CalculatinAvatar 01:11, 5 January 2006 (EST)


Guest Star Template Concerns

I couldn't find the right place to mention this: some articles have all of the guest stars in the top episode box, others have them still listed on the bottom. Does this need updating?, or are they too long the other way, or what?--Ricimer 15:54, 2 February 2006 (EST)