pwnage wrote:Ha, we will need the speed if we want to explore other galaxies or colonize alien planets.
Can I ask why you would want to?
People worry too much about space travel like its going to be some sort of amazing thing. YOU will, in all likely hood, never get a chance to step foot on an alien planet, much less LIVE on one. We can't even live on the MOON. You know, that thing orbiting around us that we just kind of went "Yeah! We're here! Lets go?"
I've honestly never understood the fascination with actually going to other planets. The theory of going to other planets and the possibility are nice, but the actual "Lets put people there" is kind of a strange decision, to me. Forget the fact that we can't even keep a permanent colony on the moon yet, lets waste billions of tax payer dollars on putting 5 random guys on Mars, just so they can be world heroes. It is entirely pointless right now... Manned space explorations are just idiotic, when you consider all the money going down the toilet so a handful of people can say they walked on another planet. Granted they DO supply additional information, I don't think the amount of information is enough for the amount of time and money put in. And the "LIFE ON MARS!" is kind of stupid, too. Its not like we really LEARN anything if we find life on Mars, other than that we aren't a fluke in the universe and there IS other life. But that doesn't really help tell us HOW we got here. It would be very simple bacteria at best, which we've got right here on Earth, study the for a fraction of the cost. And unless you find a way to simulate gravity, LIVING on Mars is a no-no...So...Mars expeditions=total fail. /rant
But, anyway...I've never been a fan of the wormhole theory. It just seems like a bit of a leap, to me. Tearing space-time can't be the smartest of things, if you ask me...I do like the idea of hyperspace engines. They still seem a bit odd in how they would work, but I just find for credibility in them than wormholes. That is probably just my limited knowledge on the subject, though.