Star Wars Bookworms Book Club discussion
July 2014 Book Discussion
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If Droids and Drives
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1) Is "droid" a language? Both Zeerid and Aryn (and many other characters in other books) understand nonverbal droids like T7 and R2-D2.
I believe it is, yes. It's why R2 would say something in the movies and it would translate onto Luke's X-wing readout, allowing them to have conversations in Empire and Jedi.
Travis wrote: "I have two Star Wars questions for people.
1) Is "droid" a language? Both Zeerid and Aryn (and many other characters in other books) understand nonverbal droids like T7 and R2-D2.
I would assume that it is its own separate language of sorts. Either that or the people have worked with them their whole lives that they are just used to the things they say.
1) Is "droid" a language? Both Zeerid and Aryn (and many other characters in other books) understand nonverbal droids like T7 and R2-D2.
I would assume that it is its own separate language of sorts. Either that or the people have worked with them their whole lives that they are just used to the things they say.
As far as for the hyperdrive I have no idea about this...maybe some of the other members can comment
"Why does the pilot have to manually disengage hyperdrive? Zeerid does this and I'm pretty sure I recall this happening in other books and even the movies. Seems like a bad idea to put a person into that equation where a wrong move can put you in the middle of a planet."
I think of it as the limitations of an older or less sophisticated ship. Sure some ships have a built in disengage feature, but a guy like Zeerid can't afford a ship like that. Same goes for a ship like the Falcon.
Or maybe he prefers to have more control. Kind of like how people who are really into driving prefer to drive stick shift even though automatic makes much more sense.
I think of it as the limitations of an older or less sophisticated ship. Sure some ships have a built in disengage feature, but a guy like Zeerid can't afford a ship like that. Same goes for a ship like the Falcon.
Or maybe he prefers to have more control. Kind of like how people who are really into driving prefer to drive stick shift even though automatic makes much more sense.

Is "droid" a language? Both Zeerid and Aryn (and many other characters in other books) understand nonverbal droids like T7 and R2-D2.
I like to think that the droids serve as sounding boards for their human/alien partners, using the droids to think things through their travels and experiences. In turn, I think the characters learn to distinguish what the droid is trying to convey, figuring out the nuances in the droid's chirps and whistles.

That's a good point about Hyperdrive, though. We appear to see them pulling a lever to engage and disengage it. I wonder if you can set it to be automatic and guys like Han and Zeerid just choose not to.



I'm sure the droid beeps and whistles represent words and data, sent out in audio form so it can be transferred to other systems that are not directly connected to the droid. 3PO would be more than capable of translating the beeps to "words".
And who knows, maybe humans can learn to pick a few things out, but completely understanding it would be near impossible I guess.
In the OT we see Luke reading a lot of R2's messages on he display of his X-wing, so there he's not listening. Maybe the rest is just guessing, with maybe a few recognized sounds in there.
1) Is "droid" a language? Both Zeerid and Aryn (and many other characters in other books) understand nonverbal droids like T7 and R2-D2.
2) Why does the pilot have to manually disengage hyperdrive? Zeerid does this and I'm pretty sure I recall this happening in other books and even the movies. Seems like a bad idea to put a person into that equation where a wrong move can put you in the middle of a planet.