Even with white people there could be more diversity.
Picard was supposed to be French, but somehow he came across as British.
Picard was supposed to be French, but somehow he came across as British.
Even with white people there could be more diversity.
Picard was supposed to be French, but somehow he came across as British.
Very much agreed this isn't a why you hate star trek thread.But they're fantasy abilities, not science fiction.
Because psychic powers are the only thing in Star Trek that's more fantasy than science.
I don't think you're getting into the spirit of this thread. It's not about evaluating the version of Star Trek that we have, it's about asking what each of us would set aside if we were given the opportunity to reinvent it from scratch. It would be a pretty boring thread if we didn't each have different ideas about how to do that. So those differences of opinion are not something to roll our eyes at, they're something to welcome.
I'm always conflicted by these supreme being types.I know it's classic Trek, but I'm wary/weary of cosmic entities with otherworldly powers. Spaceborne lifeforms like Junior are cool, but others like Q really should be operating on a level that's incomprehensible by any means to the audience, or are just vague enough that magic applies (and even those entities are rather cryptic about their abilities, again despite the sci-fi aspects of the show).
I remember, while re-reading one of the first Titan novels, one character observing that aboard Titan key personnel are still human despite the diversity among the crew. So it would be nice to see more non-human admirals, captains and execs. In fact, I´d like to see more Hermats or Tamarians for instance.
Speaking of colonies (and separated/lost colonies), I wouldn't have placed TOS in the 23rd century, but instead three or four centuries later. This would given more time for Human expansion into the galaxy and provided more room for historical backstory.... I'd have it re-written so that they are in fact human colonies, possibly separated from the Federation or whatever.
Edit: Speaking of Romulans, I much preferred their TOS appearance as opposed to TNG and beyond (the forehead V-ridge). The Vulcans that traveled to Romulus would not have had enough time to develop the ridges, as only two-thousand years had passed by the time the Romulans became a player in galactic affairs. I know the writers wanted to avoid confusing the audience, but the inclusion of the ridge never made sense, IMO.
It's established that all humanoid life are relatively close in their relations, due to some panspermia-ancient alien ancestry.Even transplanted humans would be more plausible than the bumpy-headed alien of the week.Instead of constantly running into aliens of the week who are identical to humans or nearly identical to humans just with bumps on the forehead, I'd have it re-written so that they are in fact human colonies, possibly separated from the Federation or whatever.
Which was so over done that it is now tedious.
No reason he has to have a british accent when the show is dubbed in french.No reason he couldn't have gone to school in England and picked up the accent and culture there. After all, in an age of transporters and flying cars, it would've been extremely easy to commute between England and France.
Yeah I think that was the original idea.Speaking of colonies (and separated/lost colonies), I wouldn't have placed TOS in the 23rd century, but instead three or four centuries later. This would given more time for Human expansion into the galaxy and provided more room for historical backstory.... I'd have it re-written so that they are in fact human colonies, possibly separated from the Federation or whatever.
TNG and etc would be slid forward in time as well.
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The simple fact that everyone lives in a show that is essentially communist shows this.
Racially is a different story, however if the series was produced in japan/india/nigeria I wouldn't except to cast a whole bunch of foreigners just to maintain a racial quota.
There's a ton of baggage I'd like to see discarded if Trek were rebooted from scratch, all the stuff rooted in the '60s origins of the show and the earlier pulps that influenced it. The human-centrism, the predominance of characters from Western cultures with names of mostly British or Irish origin, the abundance of humanoid and human-appearing aliens, the lack of genetic engineering and transhumanism, the rarity of sentient or superintelligent AIs, the lack of advanced materials and molecular engineering, the inclusion of psi powers, etc. I'd also ditch the tendency to create new random aliens-of-the-week that are never seen again, and instead put more effort into developing a more limited pool of races and building a more cohesive picture of the Federation's members and neighbors.
Oh, and a more coherent treatment of sensors. No more treating them as something separate from visual observation (e.g. "We can see it but sensors don't register it"); surely sensors would include telescopes. Anything in the open on a planet surface could be directly, visually observed from orbit, as spy satellites can do today. No "sensor interference" would prevent that unless it were actual opaque clouds or something. Also, "sensor range" should be effectively limitless, allowing only for resolution and lightspeed lag; there are no horizons in space. Eventually, powerful enough telescopes should let us image and map alien worlds from parsecs away, so no more stories where the characters know nothing about a star system until they reach it. (And no more falling out of orbit when the engines go off. The Moon doesn't need engines. Orbit isn't powered flight.)
Holodecks were a late add on, and seem to make little sense relative to what we now understand as a more likely version of VR.
I'm not so sure about that anymore. I've read that there are some fundamental limitations to something like VR goggles or the Oculus Rift or the like, since our eyes are always going to focus differently on a close-up image than a distant one, so a close-up image pretending to be distant is always going to confuse the brain. Also there's the time lag between when we turn our heads and when the VR updates the image to follow, which can be made smaller but not eliminated entirely. So that kind of VR may never be perfectly convincing or comfortable, and could cause motion sickness or the like for some people. The same could conceivably go for direct sensory induction, since there's going to be a difference between what you're made to see/feel and what your body actually senses about its environment. So that would only work if your perception of reality were completely suppressed and overridden by the illusion, and that could be potentially hazardous.
So it might be that, once the technology is available, something like a holodeck would be a better, more convincing alternative than the kinds of VR you usually see in fiction.
If I did keep transporters, I'd ditch the dematerialization angle and make them wormhole-based. That would be simpler, more plausible (to a degree), and closer to how they're generally depicted as working anyway.Transporters on the other hand are much more an issue of production. Obviously craft launches and landings would of been too expensive without, however at this point seems to be a needless part of the show.
EDIT: Be
clear I'm not completely against transporters I just think they have been over used, and often get in the way of more interesting possibilities.
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