^They did mention having dolphins onboard in "The Perfect Mate." According to the Tech Manual, they were navigational consultants -- more of those civilian scientists the show usually forgot were onboard.
One thing I remember is that in the technical manual they had some mention of an entire deck devoted for aquatic species or something like that, but due to budgetary constraints they could never put that on the show in any way. At least in the Titan series they realize some of those ideas of crew cabins designed for crew-members of species that are not able to inhabit regular Earth-type environments.^ I found the references that the Enterprise-J could have a full university aboard it the most unusual though.
Don't see why not. Heck, I've always thought of the Enterprise-D as essentially a university village in space -- at least as TNG's creators originally conceived it, before the later producers largely forgot about the large complement of civilian researchers aboard.
(just avoid mentioning the planet Vulcan and you can leave the timeline ambiguous).
(just avoid mentioning the planet Vulcan and you can leave the timeline ambiguous).
Or Romulus.
I would tend to assume that Romulus gets destroyed in both timelines. The meddlings of a couple time travelers wouldn't really affect the destiny of a supernova.
I'm more curious about the far-future Enterprise from the novel "Federation" than the Enterprise-J, to be honest. (Non-canon? Perhaps. But the Ent-J will not, technically, exist either, since its timeline has been wiped out, so it's no more OR less real than that one.)
"Science tanks"? "Translator tanks"? I wonder what those are like...
^Well, there is a script, art and storyboards for the unmade animated webseries Star Trek: Final Frontier (which is referenced ever-so-slightly in the first DTI novel). Click HERE .
Wish the pitch of the planned "Star Trek Federation" Series would be available to be read on the internet! I read all the information about it and want more![]()
Wish the pitch of the planned "Star Trek Federation" Series would be available to be read on the internet! I read all the information about it and want more![]()
The only concept from that one I really digged into is the transformation of the Klingon Empire into a society of monastic warrior monks, rather than Mongolian/Viking warriors. It seems like a credible way for Klingon society to become civilized while staying true to themselves. We got a glimpse of that with the secret order that pushed Martok to realize his potential as the Leader of Destiny in DS9: The Left Hand of Destiny.
Wish the pitch of the planned "Star Trek Federation" Series would be available to be read on the internet! I read all the information about it and want more![]()
The only concept from that one I really digged into is the transformation of the Klingon Empire into a society of monastic warrior monks, rather than Mongolian/Viking warriors. It seems like a credible way for Klingon society to become civilized while staying true to themselves. We got a glimpse of that with the secret order that pushed Martok to realize his potential as the Leader of Destiny in DS9: The Left Hand of Destiny.
Otherwise, the idea of the Federation becoming a Humanized club (again) that is decadent on top of that - too cheesy. I can see a morally challenged time like it was implied in DTI: Watching the Clock but not Romanesque decadence.
I'm more curious about the far-future Enterprise from the novel "Federation" than the Enterprise-J, to be honest. (Non-canon? Perhaps. But the Ent-J will not, technically, exist either, since its timeline has been wiped out, so it's no more OR less real than that one.)
"Science tanks"? "Translator tanks"? I wonder what those are like...
I imagined the crew of that Enterprise were post-Singularity post-humans, and I thought of the "translator tanks" and "science tanks" as group minds, organic rather than cybernetic a la the Borg.
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