[QUOTE="martialbullet"]I must admit, I've has similar thoughts >__> But I also thought about the consequences.... Would doing so destroy the current timeline (therefore you would disappear a la Back to the Future) or would it branch off into it's own timeline? I'd like to think the latter. What am I saying here? [QUOTE="Dman0017"]would the tvs have the proper inputs?MrGeezer
You could always bring a coaxial cable adapter with you.... That, or just bring an HDTV since it's the only way you get the most out of it.Totally off-topic, but I've always hated the "Back to the Future" time travel rules wherein it is possible to destroy the universe by going back in time and causing a time paradox. For starters, if it's possible to go back in time, then someone SOMEWHERE has probably gone back in time LONG before you did. If WE can do it, then there's probably some alien race in a distant galaxy that has developed time travel long before we did.
So...why hasn't the universe ended in a cataclysmic paradoxical ****storm of the very nature of causality being violated, with nothing making sense?
Answer: Because time travel to the past is likely impossible. Either that, or time travel to the past IS possible, but it's just impossible to cause a temporal paradox. I like to think of the universe making sense. The universe LIKES to make sense. The notion that the universe makes sense is probably the single most important assumption of scientific inquiry. And if something could cause the universe to suddenly NOT make sense, then chances are that such a thing CAN NOT HAPPEN.
So..."Back to the Future" time travel rules sort of piss me off.
If we have to go with time travel, then I much prefer the time travel rules of "The Terminator" or "12 Monkeys" or "Lost". You can go back in time, but only if YOU WERE ALREADY THERE. And if you do manage to go back in time, you cannot CHANGE anything. You are only capable of doing WHAT YOU ALREADY DID.
Well there are theories that if it possible to time travel, then by simply going back in time, history has already been changed in which that timeline branches off and becomes an alternate, parallel timeline/universe. (Funny thing is, the time travel rules in Dragonball Z are exact to that theory)Say for instance if I was to bring a 360 back in time and show it to the people, what if then people research it and improve on their technology at that point? It just seems way too convenient that there's some force that would try to stop someone from changing history.
But it seems that conventional fiction is more drawn into "history can't be changed" time travel rules. Not a bad thing, I like when they put a twist on what caused a certain historical piece to come out that way.
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