I am not a fan of the nutrek films but I find them entertaining and I don't understand the blind hatred toward them.
For this thread my answer is underground caverns. Massively overused. I'm guessing they did it because it's much easier to paint some blocks of foam and plywood brown instead of creating an outdoor environment. Unfortunately it looks exactly like a foam and plaster set too.And a very well-lit one at that. Not just the tunnels but the people's faces too, somehow. Contributes even more to the fake look. Star trek had a LOT of horrible, incredibly fake sets and lighting IMO (and lots of other stuff too like camera work and directing). I guess there's a reason it never won any awards (don't mention the one or two - not significant) - not that winning awards means something is good.
My answer for this thread topic is in the slightly unbelievable category:
When (usually) Kirk accepts a fancy clipboard from a yeoman, glances at It, and signs it with what appears to be a (space) pen.
I am not a fan of the nutrek films but I find them entertaining and I don't understand the blind hatred toward them.
My answer for this thread topic is in the slightly unbelievable category:
When (usually) Kirk accepts a fancy clipboard from a yeoman, glances at It, and signs it with what appears to be a (space) pen.
They needed better consultants on the show - people who actually knew anything about technology. The original series was still mentioning tapes!![]()
In ST you get the occasional good idea for future technology but overall you can tell it's just that the writers have little knowledge or intelligence or imagination in that area - i.e. are English majors.![]()
My answer for this thread topic is in the slightly unbelievable category:
When (usually) Kirk accepts a fancy clipboard from a yeoman, glances at It, and signs it with what appears to be a (space) pen.
I dunno, but it just doesn't feel right -surrounded by all that futuretech - that things would be signed by hand. And if so, why didn't we see the Subspace Mail Room, where they scan and transwarp beam the paperwork to Start Fleet. Didn't see that room on the blueprints.
We invent a pen that writes in space, that costs multiple thousands of dollars to develop. The Russians use a pencil.
![]()
We invent a pen that writes in space, that costs multiple thousands of dollars to develop. The Russians use a pencil.
![]()
We invent a pen that writes in space, that costs multiple thousands of dollars to develop. The Russians use a pencil.
![]()
Also, that's a lie.
http://www.snopes.com/business/genius/spacepen.asp
My answer for this thread topic is in the slightly unbelievable category:
When (usually) Kirk accepts a fancy clipboard from a yeoman, glances at It, and signs it with what appears to be a (space) pen.
I dunno, but it just doesn't feel right -surrounded by all that futuretech - that things would be signed by hand. And if so, why didn't we see the Subspace Mail Room, where they scan and transwarp beam the paperwork to Start Fleet. Didn't see that room on the blueprints.
We invent a pen that writes in space, that costs multiple thousands of dollars to develop. The Russians use a pencil.
![]()
That's why getting a Russian in orbit costs like a hundredth of the sum it takes for an American...
^This is sad.
Yeah America has fallen in love with "Gotta have the shiniest and best" Bullshit since the 70's and it's really starting to bite us in the ass in some major places now because of the cost.
We didn't want to use standard rockets anymore because it was expensive and a waste to only use them once. So we came up with the space shuttle a reusable vehicle that would be much cheaper.
Only it turns out it wasn't. The shuttle was expensive as hell because it was so complex, NASA fed us this line "Well as the program progresses the costs will come down" Which never happened.
Plus the thing was so complex and poorly designed in some ways we lost 40% of the shuttles built (not counting the never in space Enterprise) and 14 lives. And if you do some serious reading into it NASA was damn lucky all 5 weren't destroyed because many missions had an incident where disaster was avoided by the narrowest of margins. The only real benefit of the shuttle was it's carrying capacity which IMHO wasn't enough to cover the cost in $ and lives.
The Saturn V was a far superior craft and no astronaut, of any country, that has ever died did so because a conventional rocket blew up on take off or reentry. Hell the Saturn was so strong that Apollo 13 had a large part of it blown away and it survived. The Challenger was lost because of a commonly used rubber ring and the Columbia because it was so fragile that a piece of foam hitting it at high speed knocked a big hole in it's carbon skin.
Shuttle defenders can get as mad as they want but the truth is before the Space Shuttle America had never lost an astronaut during an actual mission, and we were using some pretty primitive rockets for a while. By the time the program ended we had lost 14 people and 2 ships that costs billions. But hey, we had to have the newest toy, couldn't just keep using expendable rockets.
The military is the same way. Literally 4 hours ago I read an article that they estimate China has passed us in # of subs in their fleet. Why? Because we couldn't be content with improving the Los Angeles class subs. We had to build Seawolf, which was top of the line but cost a shit load so there were only 3 built. They down scaled to a cheaper nuclear sub but still way more expensive than quality diesel electric subs that are far cheaper and can be produced in large #'s. The Navy defends this by saying....yeah but ours are better. Uh don't care when you're outnumbered 5 to 1 I don't think the quality is going so save you.
Same thing with carriers. Nimitz class are the most powerful warships afloat, no other country is close. Nope gotta develop a new class the Gerald R. Ford.....for a cool $15 billion (The last straight Nimitz class ship, George Washington, cost $5 billion.) For comparison a 1960's era conventional powered super carrier, which when you get down to the bottom line has pretty much the same destructive force as a Ford does, although it's not as sophisticated and not nuclear powered...cost about 1.5 billion in today's $ to build.
I don't give a shit how great the Ford class is. I'm positive that if you put 1 of it up against 10 conventional super carriers modernized to carry current aircraft (which they were doing when they were retired) you'd have the most expensive shipwreck ever on the ocean floor in short order.
The US military better get over this 1 of the top of the line is better than 10 less capable, but still very good, weapons soon...numbers do matter, not just having the shiniest and best.
Another irony from the DS9:It's the same crap that happened with the M-16. The military couldn't be content to take the AK-47 design, maybe improve it some and make it the standard issue. God forbid we use some "Commie design" even if it was excellent.
Instead they had to design the most expensive fancy rifle they could. Unfortunately "fancy" often fails in combat and the M-16 was a disaster for much of the Vietnam War and got its ass totally kicked by the AK which is still the most popular assault rifle in the world today despite being nearly 50 years old.
A guy I knew from Vietnam told it like this. You could take an AK-47 put it underwater, jump on it a few times, throw it into a box of sand and mud, shake it around, let sit a day and when you put in a clip there's a 90% it would fire.
On the other hand he said 50% of the M-16's wouldn't even make it to the box because the water and jumping would break them and of the 50% that came out of the box about 10% of them would fire immediately.
The military always tried to argue that the M-16 issues were negated by the fact it was "more accurate and carried a lighter round so soldiers could carry more ammo" Than the AK-47.
Talk to guys who served in Vietnam and ask them their opinion of the two weapons.......I'm fairly certain most of the responses will be along the lines of "The M-16 was a POS that cost a lot of soldiers their lives. Would have traded it for an AK in a second."
KIRA: This is a standard issue, Cardassian phase-disruptor rifle. It has a four point seven megajoule power capacity, three millisecond recharge two beam settings.
ZIYAL: How do you know so much about Cardassian weapons?
KIRA: We captured a lot of them during the occupation. It's a good weapon, solid, simple. You can drag it through the mud and it'll still fire.
Now this. (Federation phaser rifle.) This is an entirely different animal. Federation standard issue. It's a little less powerful, but it's got a more options. Sixteen beam settings.
Fully autonomous recharge, multiple target acquisition, gyro stabilised, the works. It's a little more complicated, so it's not as good a field weapon. Too many things can go wrong with it.
Yeah America has fallen in love with "Gotta have the shiniest and best" Bullshit since the 70's and it's really starting to bite us in the ass in some major places now because of the cost.
We didn't want to use standard rockets anymore because it was expensive and a waste to only use them once. So we came up with the space shuttle a reusable vehicle that would be much cheaper.
Only it turns out it wasn't. The shuttle was expensive as hell because it was so complex, NASA fed us this line "Well as the program progresses the costs will come down" Which never happened.
Plus the thing was so complex and poorly designed in some ways we lost 40% of the shuttles built (not counting the never in space Enterprise) and 14 lives. And if you do some serious reading into it NASA was damn lucky all 5 weren't destroyed because many missions had an incident where disaster was avoided by the narrowest of margins. The only real benefit of the shuttle was it's carrying capacity which IMHO wasn't enough to cover the cost in $ and lives.
The Saturn V was a far superior craft and no astronaut, of any country, that has ever died did so because a conventional rocket blew up on take off or reentry. Hell the Saturn was so strong that Apollo 13 had a large part of it blown away and it survived. The Challenger was lost because of a commonly used rubber ring and the Columbia because it was so fragile that a piece of foam hitting it at high speed knocked a big hole in it's carbon skin.
Shuttle defenders can get as mad as they want but the truth is before the Space Shuttle America had never lost an astronaut during an actual mission, and we were using some pretty primitive rockets for a while. By the time the program ended we had lost 14 people and 2 ships that costs billions. But hey, we had to have the newest toy, couldn't just keep using expendable rockets.
The military is the same way. Literally 4 hours ago I read an article that they estimate China has passed us in # of subs in their fleet. Why? Because we couldn't be content with improving the Los Angeles class subs. We had to build Seawolf, which was top of the line but cost a shit load so there were only 3 built. They down scaled to a cheaper nuclear sub but still way more expensive than quality diesel electric subs that are far cheaper and can be produced in large #'s. The Navy defends this by saying....yeah but ours are better. Uh don't care when you're outnumbered 5 to 1 I don't think the quality is going so save you.
Same thing with carriers. Nimitz class are the most powerful warships afloat, no other country is close. Nope gotta develop a new class the Gerald R. Ford.....for a cool $15 billion (The last straight Nimitz class ship, George Washington, cost $5 billion.) For comparison a 1960's era conventional powered super carrier, which when you get down to the bottom line has pretty much the same destructive force as a Ford does, although it's not as sophisticated and not nuclear powered...cost about 1.5 billion in today's $ to build.
I don't give a shit how great the Ford class is. I'm positive that if you put 1 of it up against 10 conventional super carriers modernized to carry current aircraft (which they were doing when they were retired) you'd have the most expensive shipwreck ever on the ocean floor in short order.
The US military better get over this 1 of the top of the line is better than 10 less capable, but still very good, weapons soon...numbers do matter, not just having the shiniest and best.
Stepping back into fiction for a moment, isn't that what hapened with the Dominion War?
Starfleet had a proven ship with the Defiant, but instead of creating a large dedicated fleet, they still focused on creating advanced ships like Enterprise E, and the Prometheus.
The problem was, both seemed to be single prototypes, with no other ships being produced. And the Akiras, Steamrunners etc, were made in very limited numbers.
The Mirandas and Excelsiors may not have been upgraded and just thrown into the war, but that just wouldn't make much sense.
Another irony from the DS9:It's the same crap that happened with the M-16. The military couldn't be content to take the AK-47 design, maybe improve it some and make it the standard issue. God forbid we use some "Commie design" even if it was excellent.
Instead they had to design the most expensive fancy rifle they could. Unfortunately "fancy" often fails in combat and the M-16 was a disaster for much of the Vietnam War and got its ass totally kicked by the AK which is still the most popular assault rifle in the world today despite being nearly 50 years old.
A guy I knew from Vietnam told it like this. You could take an AK-47 put it underwater, jump on it a few times, throw it into a box of sand and mud, shake it around, let sit a day and when you put in a clip there's a 90% it would fire.
On the other hand he said 50% of the M-16's wouldn't even make it to the box because the water and jumping would break them and of the 50% that came out of the box about 10% of them would fire immediately.
The military always tried to argue that the M-16 issues were negated by the fact it was "more accurate and carried a lighter round so soldiers could carry more ammo" Than the AK-47.
Talk to guys who served in Vietnam and ask them their opinion of the two weapons.......I'm fairly certain most of the responses will be along the lines of "The M-16 was a POS that cost a lot of soldiers their lives. Would have traded it for an AK in a second."
KIRA: This is a standard issue, Cardassian phase-disruptor rifle. It has a four point seven megajoule power capacity, three millisecond recharge two beam settings.
ZIYAL: How do you know so much about Cardassian weapons?
KIRA: We captured a lot of them during the occupation. It's a good weapon, solid, simple. You can drag it through the mud and it'll still fire.
Now this. (Federation phaser rifle.) This is an entirely different animal. Federation standard issue. It's a little less powerful, but it's got a more options. Sixteen beam settings.
Fully autonomous recharge, multiple target acquisition, gyro stabilised, the works. It's a little more complicated, so it's not as good a field weapon. Too many things can go wrong with it.
The Voyager episode "Prime Factors" has an alien tech which beams Harry Kim 40,000 light years.
So, basically, it's okay except for when it happens in the new movies![]()
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