Jonathan_S wrote:The goalposts seem to be moving.
Not really. We are discussing two separate events.
Jonathan_S wrote:You had started by talking about "a ship could experience an emergency which causes them to drop out of hyper" if the emergency is with the hyper generator then dropping out 99 LY from anything is a very bad thing because you're no more able to fix the generator but now if it refuses to work you're centuries of n-space travel from anybody who can help you and there's no way to call for help. So you run out of resources and die.
If there's some emergency with the ship that doesn't involve the hyper generator then dropping out of hyper in the middle of nowhere in deep interstellar space doesn't help you fix it; doesn't gives you any extra resources, and delays you in reaching someone who could help you. Best case you either had the resources to fix it, or enough time to reach help even with this pointless detour -- in which case at least leaving hyper didn't make things worse; but that's your best case.
If you don't have an emergency then the bad bit about leaving hyper is it significantly delays your arrival because no only do you spend however long you're taking a break making effectively zero progress towards your goal, but you've thrown away over 97% of the velocity you'd built up so once you reenter hyper you've also got to spend those hours again working up to your cruising speed.
Honorvese starships aren't one-man crews. Even Honor's little non-hyper runabout has a 2nd crewman, Wayne Alexander the flight engineer. Her hyper-capable yacht probably has at least a 5 man crew (I'd guess 3 able to stand bridge watch, including a licensed captain, plus an engineer and at least one engineering rating). So a ship in hyper doesn't need to pull over when one person gets tired - they carry enough crew that you stand reasonable watches so your watch should be over before you're too tired to 'drive'; and if for some reason you can't last that long you'd call for another crew member to relieve you. (Not that there should be all that much for to do during most bridge watches in hyper; the ship's almost certainly going to on autopilot anyway; sailing along on its days to weeks long journey to the next stop)
That was in response to me supporting my theory of the existence of those codified laws that you question. I said that they loosely or approximately support the notion of a contiguous zone. I was explaining why I felt some ship could or might have an emergency that causes it to just drop out of hyper wherever said ship happens to be at the time. And I tried to specifically explain why I felt those codified laws are related to our very own contiguous zone, because the airspace over a contiguous zone is neutral, but the sea below belongs to the related nation. I don't see very much difference in a stealth plane which is freely flying over the neutral airspace of any contiguous zone falling out of the sky (dropping out of hyper because of a malfunctioning plane) down onto the territorial waters which is part of a contiguous zone. (I should have also concluded that that ship could actually be a warship, by the way.)
I also tried to apply that same excuse to a nomad if he is actually caught squatting on “private property.”
But the goalposts have always been the same. And that is in the end zone where a nomad is just trying to find solace, a place to rest his head for a day, a month, or whatever. He is a nomad, “next to homeless and sleeping in his car.” Parking lots are notorious for not being understanding in these cases. So, I don't see why a nomad can't pull over in the middle of the big huge Hitchhiker’s galaxy and lay his head. Or he and his family. A dispatch boat has a crew of, what, one to three people? A small family living out of their car? Well that has never happened before.
I always try to see real life and the reality that you would see on a closer inspection under the skin of discussions to obtain a microscopic world-view. I am good at projecting real life atop of discussions; the reality of real life that exists outside of the box and not just on paper. That uncanny practice of mine seems to consistently rub many of you the wrong way. You expect that because the author has given enormous consideration to his universe that it somehow ceases to represent the “real world” inside the world that must exist even inside of sci-fi. The human nature of humanity with all of its foibles.
But a hyper capable yacht is better suited for a nomad or even a family of nomads who may have become disgruntled by the system, or simply dispirited by the politics of governments and want to live off the grid. Not like that has ever happened before either. At any rate, I am questioning whether it is possible to live off the grid as much as possible and not be connected to any government.
In the TV series ‘Lost in Space’ the Robinson family were all trained to do a specific job and some of those jobs and talents overlapped. I am not talking about uneducated people simply because they are nomads, but an affluent family of people with means, abilities and simply a desire to disconnect and see as much of the galaxy as possible while racking up frequent flyer miles.