How dare you plagiarize my post in News for a meme!
TenForward: Where Every Vulcan Knows Your Name
/c/TenFoward: Your home-away-from-home for all things Star Trek!
Re-route power to the shields, emit a tachyon pulse through the deflector, and post all the nonsense you want. Within reason of course.
~ 1. No bigotry. This is a Star Trek community. Remember that diversity and coexistence are Star Trek values. Any post/comments that are racist, anti-LGBT, or generally "othering" of a group will result in removal/ban.
~ 2. Keep it civil. Disagreements will happen both on lore and preferences. That's okay! Just don't let it make you forget that the person you are talking to is also a person.
~ 3. Use spoiler tags. This applies to any episodes that have dropped within 3 months prior of your posting. After that it's free game.
~ 4. Keep it Trek related. This one is kind of a gimme but keep as on topic as possible.
~ 5. Keep posts to a limit. We all love Star Trek stuff but 3-4 posts in an hour is plenty enough.
~ 6. Try to not repost. Mistakes happen, we get it! But try to not repost anything from within the past 1-2 months.
~ 7. No General AI Art. Posts of simple AI art do not 'inspire jamaharon'
~ 8. No Political Upheaval. Political commentary is allowed, but please keep discussions civil. Read here for our community's expectations.
Fun will now commence.
Sister Communities:
Want your community to be added to the sidebar? Just ask one of our mods!
Honorary Badbitch:
@jawa21@startrek.website for realizing that the line used to be "want to be added to the sidebar?" and capitalized on it. Congratulations and welcome to the sidebar. Stamets is both ashamed and proud.
Creator Resources:
Looking for a Star Trek screencap? (TrekCore)
Looking for the right Star Trek typeface/font for your meme? (Thank you @kellyaster for putting this together!)
I have a good reason, but it would break the Temporal Prime Directive to reveal it.
Janeway doesn’t see a problem
Overall science TL;DR
Relatively large single-celled organisms such as amoeba often engulf and digest other, smaller micro-organisms. Sometimes they're not digested and the smaller one just continues living inside the big one. This is a big deal because it's how we got mitochondria, which are thought to be descended from free-living, parasitic, tiny bacteria. As we all know, mitochondria are the powerhouse of the cell, and indeed, without mitochondria, complex life as we know it could never have evolved. Chloroplasts also evolved this way.
There's been a lot of debate about at what point the little bacterium on the inside stops being thought of as a bacterium and starts being more of an organelle, because it's not just as simple as one organism inside another one, because symbiosis (a mutually beneficial relationship) isn't a binary condition. One facet of symbiosis that I find cool is the exchange of genetic material — did you know that mitochondria have their own genome that's much smaller than ours, and that mitochondrial genomes are inherited from your mum? Genes from the host cell can be transported to the little cell, and vice versa. They can become more optimised, just like how if you moved from a tiny, person flat into a fully equipped 5 bed family home, you might throw away your rusty tin opener.
Most of how this happened with mitochondria and chloroplasts is speculative because of how incredibly improbable this "endosymbiont event" would have been, but now we're getting to see that gradient of endosymbiosis play out, this time with a nitrogen-fixing (captures nitrogen from the air) and an algae. It's very cool, and I'm glad to learn of it.
If you find this stuff cool, one of my favourite pop-sci books I've ever read is Nick Lane's "Power, Sex, Suicide: Mitochondria and the Meaning of Life" — I read it the year before going to uni to study biochemistry and it was accessible, but I learned a ton! Message me if you want a pdf link.
Awesome. Thanks. Will read that here in a bit.
I did actually read the article this was based on (Flying Squid posted it to news earlier), but I read things twice like Beckett Mariner: skim it once to make fun of it and then read it in detail later because I'm a nerd. xD
That's a valid legal defense in like, 34 US states 😆
What's Janeway going to do when she learns mitrocondria was once a separate organism from our cells?
Ed.....ward... Wait, wrong sub.