Posted By Raboy on 22 Jun 2009 11:21 PM
Did it ever occur to you that people can discuss parts of both Outlanders and DL and you don't have to get all defensive and on the muscle about it?
Especially when OL was brought into this thread by a DL writer.
I find the interphaser more believable than the mat-trans myself...but not by much.
I came up with it so OL wouldn't be duplicating the standard DL openings of waking up, looking around in a strange place and then puking.
I don't find much satisfaction in writing about puke, regardless of how dramatic it might seem to some folks.
The interphaser came about because the whole redoubt formula was incredibly limiting...not to mention that if I came up with a host of new redoubts for Kane and Crew to explore and added them to those in DL, then it would seem like the crust of the Earth would collapse beneath their collective weight.
Whether the mat-trans was inspired more by
The Fly or by
Star Trek's transporter, the whole set-up was scientifically specious.
For science-fiction to actually
be science-fiction, it has to have some real science in it...otherwise it's fantasy, like
Lord of the Rings. There's nothing remotely moot about it.
Laurence's grasp of theoretical physics was about on par with his grasp of biology and genetics--to call it "feeble" is to be charitable.
I didn't want to repeat his mat-trans/puke/explore the redoubt formula (even in my own DL novels), although I did posit an "explanation" of how the damn things came about and how they worked.
The interphaser operated differently than the mat-trans, although the basic principle was the same--tapping into the quantum stream.
Whereas as the mat-trans did the old tried and true of reducing matter to energy, beaming it to another location and then reassembling it, the interphaser opened localized wormholes over geomagnetic vortex points--the intersections of ley lines, earth energies.
It was more like opening a conduit between point A to point B and the travelers just stepped from one end of the conduit to the other--far closer to Jack Kirby's "Boom Tubes" than a teleportation machine.
For the times when the Cerberus Crew couldn't find a convenient vortex point in a place they needed to be, they climbed into a Manta ship and just flew there.
Both methods streamlined the storytelling and greatly diminished the puke potential.