1. Captain McBain

    Captain McBain Captain Captain

    Were holograms in use during the TOS era?
     
  2. Timo

    Timo Fleet Admiral Admiral

    Joined:
    Aug 26, 2003
    By Starfleet? Only in recreational purposes, as seen in TAS "The Practical Joker" - and their quality may have been somewhat cartoonish...

    By Starfleet's enemies? Sure - our heroes regularly encountered visual illusions best characterized as holograms. But mundane foes such as Klingons or Romulans were not witnessed using those, or being any more hardened against visual illusions than our heroes.

    By the UFP civilian population? Most probably. Entertainment technology would have moved forward from where it is today. Starfleet just wouldn't necessarily take its newest achievements to deep space, and the cameras in any case wouldn't necessarily focus on those moments when our heroes utilized such achievements. "The Practical Joker" is a fairly plausible glimpse into the rare off time of our heroes, and the seldom seen but often talked about Recreation Rooms of TOS.

    Timo Saloniemi
     
  3. Metryq

    Metryq Fleet Captain Fleet Captain

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    Losira from "That Which Survives" was a projection, yet seemed to have substance. Was she a holodeck-type projection with force beams to create "contact," or was she an actual object, transporter/replicator-type?

    Then there was Landru from "Return of the Archons," a see-through specter hanging in the air.

    Maiman built the first LASER in 1960. I'm not sure when the first hologram was recorded after that. While it is possible for sci-fi writers to imagine anything, some technical grounding in reality, such as LASER holograms, helps advanced technologies seem more "real." (In other words, LASER holograms were extremely new, at the very least, at the time of TOS.)
     
  4. F. King Daniel

    F. King Daniel Fleet Admiral Admiral

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    Looking at The Original Series in isolation? Not by Starfleet.

    Looking at the greater Trek universe, yes holograms were used in the TOS era. The technology was available in-universe but simply not seen due to 1960's TV budget/FX constraints. They had the Rec Room holodeck in the animated episode "The Practical Joker", a whole century earlier we saw lots of holograms in the Enterprise TV series (including seeing the NX-01 crew practicing by shooting holographic targets and the Romulans using holographgic technology to disguise one of their ships), and in the last movie we saw holographic heads-up displays on the USS Kelvin and the new Enterprise. Oh, and holographic games were seen in the TMP rec room and the bar McCoy visited in TSFS.
     
  5. Pavonis

    Pavonis Commodore Commodore

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    Watch out, man. You're showing your age by capitalizing laser like that. Next thing you know you'll be telling us you recently watched TOS on a CRT.
     
  6. Maurice

    Maurice Snagglepussed Admiral

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    Sorry, but no. No such things were shown.
     
  7. Metryq

    Metryq Fleet Captain Fleet Captain

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    Interesting how an acronym can become so commonplace as to lose its all capital status. I imagine the Chicago Manual of Style shows all lowercase as the new "normal."
     
  8. Pavonis

    Pavonis Commodore Commodore

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    Laser is a word now, not an acronym. Capitalizing it just makes it look like you're shouting it.
     
  9. Timo

    Timo Fleet Admiral Admiral

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    Aug 26, 2003
    Well, a three-dimensional object of unknown physicality was shown. For all we know, even the tables from which the games emerged were holographic, and could be replaced by holographic trees, pole dancers or other ornaments at the push of a button.

    But yeah, no effort was made to suggest a visual illusion nature for the fancy games. Then again, effort was made to suggest that shower stalls clothe Starfleet officers with the help of transporter technology, but none of this really manages to be evident on screen...

    Timo Saloniemi
     
  10. JarodRussell

    JarodRussell Vice Admiral Admiral

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    3D chess was all holographic. Prove the opposite.
     
  11. Shawnster

    Shawnster Rear Admiral Rear Admiral

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    Charlie Evans melted the chess pieces in Charlie X.
     
  12. Shawnster

    Shawnster Rear Admiral Rear Admiral

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    I see what you did there. +1
     
  13. GSchnitzer

    GSchnitzer Co-Executive Producer In Memoriam

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    [​IMG]

    From the "For What It's Worth" Department:

    The script for "Chalie X" has an interesting quick scene between Kirk and McCoy right before Charlie comes to Kirk's quarters for the above scene. Before Charlie gets there, Kirk is puzzling over the inexplicably melted chess pieces and tells McCoy: "These are Antarian metal chess pieces. They can't be melted." (I guess the thinking was that crossing your eyes with dramatic sting music and melting stuff at will is rather hum-drum. But--Holy Moly!--he's able to do that with unmeltable Antarian chess pieces! How could he have done that just by crossing his eyes with the dramatic sting music? Now that ability should be concerning!)

    In the end, of course, the whole scene was excised.
     
  14. GSchnitzer

    GSchnitzer Co-Executive Producer In Memoriam

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    This is a reminder that The Making of Star Trek book has the following content (on page 190):

    "The fourth major facility on the eighth deck level is the entertainment center. Cetainly man of the future will require entertainment as much as we enjoy motion pictures and televisioin today. Probably entertainment will be three-dimensional in nature, and perhaps will even go further, in that you will sit in the room and the story will take place all around you. In orther words, a sophisticated extension of holography.

    "This technique will also have its effect on the traditional 'mail call.' Instead of receiving a letter, a man can sit in the room and, via tape, actually 'see' the person sending the correspencence. As the tape is projected, the images will form in the air in front of him, so he will be able to see how his child looks, what's happening to the house, and how great his grandmother looked that day. It will be just as if he were standing there with them. Having used the 'projecting unit,' he can then use the 'photographing unit,' to do a similar thing himself, and send it home. To a certain extent, we are doing this even today through the practice of corresponding through tape and tape recorder."

    So it looks like Roddenberry did indeed contemplate small, one-man non-interactive holographic booths on board ship.
     
  15. JarodRussell

    JarodRussell Vice Admiral Admiral

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    But after THAT they introduced holograms so no one would melt than again! :guffaw:
     
  16. GSchnitzer

    GSchnitzer Co-Executive Producer In Memoriam

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    Naw, they kept the Antarian metal chess pieces.

    "Prove the opposite." ;)
     
  17. Marsden

    Marsden Commodore Commodore

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    Marsden is very sad.
    They needed those Antarian metal chess pieces to defend themselves if some alien snuck aboard and got rid of all of the phasers. They can load the chess pieces into bamboo tubes and shoot them at the intruders!


    Those pointy bishops really sting!
     
  18. not

    not Lieutenant Commander Red Shirt

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    I thought: science background
     
  19. Garrovick

    Garrovick Commander Red Shirt

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    If we are taking TOS movies into account, how about the little biplane fighter game seen in the bar in The Search For Spock? Those little planes looked hologaphic to me, although hardly detailed or realistic.
     
  20. Navigator_NCC2120

    Navigator_NCC2120 Captain Captain

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    They looked holographic to me too. Yes, they were crude three dimensional wireframe representations of biplanes. Here is a picture of it courtesy of trekcore.


    Navigator NCC-2120 USS Entente
    /\