So during a game I was playing in the other day one of the Players wanted to be able to break into a Imperial database from the Holonet. This brought on a short discussion as to the differences between our Internet and such and the information technology in the Star Wars Universe and how there really wasn't anything like it.
The conversation started with:
"Think of all the technology in Star Wars as analog instead of digital"
Which is a good analogy for something things but the discussion continued on to:
Basically even though there is obviously insanely advanced tech in SW it's all discrete and separated from each other. In our world nearly everything digital is moving towards being interlinked. We can communicate and control all sorts of stuff with just our smartphones, not to mention all the things we can do online. But none of this is possible in the Star Wars Universe partly because most of it was written before the internet but also because it makes sense that it wouldn't.
As convenient as our interconnected life is right now it's also very vulnerable to attack and disruption so it makes sense that over time future tech will necessarily be unconnected and hardwired to counter this vulnerability. Think the new Battlestar Galactica and how it was designed to counter Cylon hacking attacks. Now extrapolate that over 10's of thousands of years as in SW and nearly everything we see makes sense. Computers and Droids can speak to each other and share information but they actually speak to each other rather than pass on information digitally which could hide malicious software. You can't just remotely access information systems either because to be able to do this would open the system to digital attack. We see lots of examples in SW where C3P0 mentions things like the vocabulary of the Millennium Falcon's Hyperdrive or R2D2 having to physically access data ports to get information from individual systems such as speaking to Bespin station about the same hyperdrive being fixed but disabled.
Added from a later post:
So all of the computational machinery (Droids, ship and station computers, "physical" digital data storage, even the reliance on seemingly analogue communicators and the unconnected Holonet make perfect sense when you consider the necessity to protect against intrusion. Software is relatively easy to hack whereas hard coded, discrete systems are much less vulnerable. After 10's of thousands of years we could expect everything to require a physical connection and/or require an intermediary communication system to act as a "firewall" to intrusion.
Any way I'm sure others have thought of this but I figured I'd post it if it helps when dealing with the differences between our tech and SW tech.
Edited for clarity


