I'd just like to say that I did my best to stick to canon. The GDW book was used as the solid foundation, but of course new material had to be added to make a 128 page supplement out of the 30-something (non-scenario) pages of the original. Some new ideas were added, concepts extrapolated, and a bit of tongue in cheek squeezed in.
I'm fervently hoping you had a look at the writeup of the Darrians in
GT:Humaniti too. As the author of that one, I spent considerable effort on getting it to work (including adding the span of history that was unaccountably missing from
Darrians). Having my contribution to the Traveller canon overwritten because you disliked what I'd come up with is one thing; having it overwritten because it was completely ignored is something else entirely (Best of all, of course, would be to have it included into the newest version).
My primary objectives were to give the race some depth and break the space-elf stereotype. Secondly I tried my best to rationalise the odd questions how and why Darrian society collapsed so thoroughly and why it has taken such a long time to recover.
The collapse is not much of a mystery. Losing 80% of the population and every bit of electronics on Darrian would have to have quite an impact. All the other settlements were too small to maintain advanced technology when Darrian ceased to be a source of spare parts.
The UWP oddities were given plausible explanations too.
Splendid! I'm looking forward to seeing that.
Of course I'm in a 'Damned if you do, damned if you don't' situation, since my explanations will no doubt be at odds with the dozens of different (and conflicting) views of the Darrians which have developed over the years.
The key word there is 'conflicting'. No fan has the right to expect new canon to fit with anything he has made up himself. As long as what you've written fits with previously published information (and isn't inconsistent in itself), no one has any legitimate beef.
Even if it does conflict, there's a world of difference between a deliberate change and a careless mistake.
As for non-careless mistakes, well, it happens. I know from personal experience how mistakes slip past the most rigorous editing. As long as you don't say "We meant to do that" and refuse to errata them, I have no quarrel.
And then, of course, there are the things that were broken in the original writeup; they
ought to be changed (e.g. the electronic pulse frying electronics on worlds lightyears from Darrian; any pulse strong enough to fry electronics at at parsec's distance would have killed everyone on Darrian and any pulse weak enough to leave 20% of the population (and the biosphere) intact would be unable to fry electronics on Mire, let alone worlds further away).
Hans