@aequitas:
@Karl7:
let me ask a question (if it hasn’t been asked already), which is:
Why were the death star plans held on a specially designated planet, like the archive planet? � Why do you need a special planet to hold such things? � Why aren’t the plans kept under lock and key in the dock yards where the thing was built? � Or in Palpatine’s safe? � What idiot would send them to the “archive planet?” �
I think that’s a pretty hokey piece of screenplay laziness. �
You may see it as a Back up Station or the fact that in the past, Rebells allready tried a couple of times to get their Hands on the blueprints of the DS.
The DS it self was infiltrated in aNH by an Assasin-Droid named IG 88B without Palpatine even knowing about it.
So far no Problem for a SW fan, since these kinds of Infos are in the Novels but I do see your Point.
Hope that helped.
Ok, I didn’t read the books so perhaps I am missing something.
But it seems like there are 2 options: 1, keep the plans locked up in the data “cloud,” which would mean they could be hacked by anyone from anywhere with access, or 2, they are in “hard” copy stored in a secure location. Why wouldn’t that location be at Curosant or some military base with maximum ability to resist instead of sitting in some far flung base, even if it was guarded?
Also, I guess I think the idea of getting “the plans” to the base being the surefire solution to defeating the threat is quite gimmicky. You can get the plans to something but still be unable to counter the threat. Having the plans to the MX missile may have been nice but not useful in countering it.
Finally, I have to point out that the whole “Dad built the Death Star” theme was illogical. Why would he still go forward to build the DS even if his daughter’s life was in danger if he knew there was a reasonable probability it would be used to destroy at least 1 planet full of millions and the only hope to stop it would be the unlikely chance the “plans” could be found, successfully stolen, correctly analyzed, and then used to defeat the DS. It wasn’t like sending a proton torpedo down the venting shaft was a surefire way of blowing the thing up. It was pretty hard and required the skill of a so-so Jedi. Why didn’t he just program a back door into the program running the DS and hand that off somehow?
I think the Disney screen writers are trying too hard to backfill a story that originally was not about the DS, how it was built, where the plans were, how they were stolen, and the DS’s design flaws.
I mean, how prescient Dad must have been to include a defense design flaw that was so obscure that it simultaneously escaped the defense review board and was yet extraordinarily, but not impossibly, hard to exploit! What a guy!