Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Kobayashi Maru is a fictional spacecraft training exercise in the Star Trek continuity. It is designed by Starfleet Academy to place Starfleet cadets in a no-win scenario. The Kobayashi Maru test was invented for the 1982 film Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan, and it has since been referred to and depicted in numerous other Star Trek media.
Sowards created the term Kobayashi Maru (a simulation test in The Wrath of Khan), naming it for his next-door neighbors in Hancock Park. [1] A native of Texarkana, Texas, Sowards had numerous writing credits which extended from episodes of The Bold Ones: The Lawyers in 1969 to an installment of B. L. Stryker in 1990.
Carl von Clausewitz's advice never to launch a war that one has not already won characterizes war as a no-win situation. A similar example is the Pyrrhic victory in which a military victory is so costly that the winning side actually ends up worse off than before it started.
FOX 11 Los Angeles/YouTube. Separately, there’s also the question of what to do with more than $50,000 in GoFundMe money raised in two separate funds — one to help look for Kobayashi and one ...
Editor’s note: This article discusses suicide. If you or someone you know is struggling or in crisis, help is available. Call or text 988 or chat at 988lifeline.org. Hannah Kobayashi has been ...
Hannah Kobayashi was reported missing in Los Angeles on Nov. 11 after missing a connecting flight to New York City. Before her disappearance, the Hawaii native had sent a flurry of bizarre text ...
Kobayashi Maru: Final: Reboot RGDC December 2012 [89] [90] Last Strike: Reboot AtariAge: October 2020 [49] Loopz: Audiogenic [b] Songbird Productions October 25, 2018 [91] Lost Treasures: Starcat Developments Starcat Developments November 4, 2006 [59] Mad Bodies: FORCE Design FORCE Design May 2, 2009 [92] [93] Mad Professor Mariarti: Krisalis ...
The mystery man who spent nine hours with photographer Hannah Kobayashi before she vanished told investigators that she was a “free spirit” — but otherwise seemed completely normal ...