Isabella drifts into a new system. This is farther than she usually ventures, but she can make it back to a new human colony after a complete survey here, with a margin of error, and refuel there to get back into central Federation space. Still, she's a little apprehensive as she drops out of warp. If the system proves to be unusually complicated she'll have to do it in two stages.
"It's not really designed for that sort of communications, but it has sensors on it and bits I can control, therefore we can use it to pass data. It does have a maximum range, though: once I go back through the wormhole you won't be able to hail me."
"I would guess about five light-years from a base station, but you can relay it as far as you want with no appreciable loss of speed: we have an interstellar comms web."
"I'll be more than five light-years away pretty quickly, so we'd better do any talking we're planning to do while I'm still in this system."
"I can maybe jury-rig a comms chain as far out as twenty light-years with the probes I have on me and some help from your magnificent drive, but if you're going any further than that you're probably correct."
"Well, one of these drones costs about six thousand ISK. Peanuts to me - the ship I'm flying is about five hundred thousand all kitted out, and it would only sting mildly to lose it - but I'm not sure if many people planetside could afford one."
"If it's small change to at least some people that suggests it's probably not staggeringly rare, materials-wise, at least not in quantity, but if it's expensive to most the manufacture is probably complex. I could be wrong, of course."
"Well, that probe has a miniature warp core in it, and some pretty specialized sensors: the majority of its price probably isn't the radio. If anything, I'd expect them to be easier to manufacture than you expect."
"Maybe your scientists can take the warp core apart too: if it achieves FTL in a different way from yours, it might also give you some new physics."
"Maybe. Especially if the power consumption is low it might be useful for short-range shuttling."
"Well, I have no idea what kind of generator you have on that ship or how much energy 'subspace warp' takes. So my answer is a definite maybe."
"I entirely retract my earlier statements: our warp drives are ludicrously efficient compared to yours if yours require antimatter engines."
"I'm not sure 'efficiency' is quite the comparison to make. It's possible ours go farther on less total energy. But there's no call to belabor the point, I suppose."
(The pilot's portrait is as still as ever: he sends his shrug via text.)
"Is there anything else... Did I remember to give you my name? I'm Captain Isabella T'Mir of the Prometheus."
"Ancien Vatti, but nobody will know me if you call me that: most Capsuleers go by call signs. Mine is Wergeldt. Yes, I know it's terrible: I was a wannabe pirate and now I'm stuck with it, along with a mildly bad sec rating. Crime doesn't pay if you're one of the little fish."