That's moving the goalposts, and inaccurate to boot.True, but Star Trek only features miners in a few isolated episodes, it's not the premise of the entire show.
That's moving the goalposts, and inaccurate to boot.True, but Star Trek only features miners in a few isolated episodes, it's not the premise of the entire show.
I provided three links and could have much more regarding the science behind the show.Where is the rebuttal to using human miners for asteroid mining hundreds of years in the future, or ever, for that matter?
It doesn't take much ingenuity to accurately depict the dwarf planet after it's been recently explored, a child can do it after reading a Wikipedia article. It does, however, take incredible stupidity to imagine human miners there in the distant future. I concede that Star Trek also had some miners here and there, but it wasn't the premise of the show nor was there much focus on this idiocy.
By the way, seems like your googling skills leave much to be desired, I've provided the two relevant links for the said companies in the post you quoted, should you wish to acquaint yourself with the prospects of asteroid mining in the near future. You can also find articles and talks with Peter H. Diamandis on the subject.
Such as what? The basis of Star Trek is a United Earth building a faster than light engine. Right now, that's an insurmountable problem with the light speed barrier.Indeed, but it makes every episode of that show preposterously unrealistic. At least with Star Trek there is a good quantity of episodes that explore ideas that could be manifested in some form in the future.
Dude, that's not true. Isolinear gravametric tetryon arrays are totally a thing. I know. I have one. I made it out of aluminum foil, cardboard, and straw. Oh. And Dixie Cups. Gotta have Dixie Cups.But, Star Trek gets science wrong all the time and people are still entertained by it. Not sure why the Expanse suffers so harshly when it at least works on the basis of current science and speculates towards the future.![]()
I'm always the last to know. Stupid outdated technology.Dude, that's not true. Isolinear gravametric tetryon arrays are totally a thing. I know. I have one. I made it out of aluminum foil, cardboard, and straw. Oh. And Dixie Cups. Gotta have Dixie Cups.
But, Star Trek gets science wrong all the time and people are still entertained by it. Not sure why the Expanse suffers so harshly when it at least works on the basis of current science and speculates towards the future.
I provided three links and could have much more regarding the science behind the show.
As for asteroid mining, the goals that I have read are to supply cities in space. As part of that, there is a need to physically analyze the asteroid and have a sense for the best way to harvest its resources. As part of that, some of it will involve humans going out there. That's the nature of humanity, often very stupid. From what I read, there are other companies who are looking at different facets, including human miners. It's currently still a work in progress, so the idea that it can predicted in any meaningful way is, at best, guesswork.
But, Star Trek gets science wrong all the time and people are still entertained by it. Not sure why the Expanse suffers so harshly when it at least works on the basis of current science and speculates towards the future.![]()
Such as what? The basis of Star Trek is a United Earth building a faster than light engine. Right now, that's an insurmountable problem with the light speed barrier.
There are also a huge amount of aliens who all look like humans. Again, odds are not good for that according to contemporary evolutionary theory.
Resources are nearly unlimited-a post scarcity world. Interesting to explore, but realistic? Well, possibly, given that in Trek history there are two massive wars that left many dead.
Yes, which is why a 2014 article that I read about asteroid mining talked about human workers?The point is that going as far back as 10 years ago, we had a very good idea of how asteroid mining is going to look like, from both a business perspective and the physical extraction, processing and utilization. There are now two large corporations investing millions of dollars and actually sending prospecting probes out. To get this one central part of this show so wrong is unacceptable. The writers didn't even need to guess what it will look like, it's out there, they just had to google it and it's this kind of laziness is deplorable in modern Science Fiction.
I'm the first one to point out all the flaws of Star Trek and how it came short of being a perfect Sci Fi show, while it certainly had the potential to be just that. However, Star Trek, in its essence, is plausible. You need to stretch some theories and often arrive at unlikely scenarios, but it's not fantasy. The Expanse is not plausible. There's just noway that after we colonize the Solar System there'll be manual labor workers working in the Asteroid Belt. I can see someone make this projection maybe 60 years ago, but in 2011? Pathetic.
Fair enough.
My larger point remains that Star Trek's premise is already set, and it was good for the science of the time, but there is a lot more implausible in that premise now than in the Expanse.
Secondly, as much as I respect experts in the field, "The Expanse" has been recognized by a Physics Today for its work, hardly an editorial or uniformed publication. Also, NASA has speculated on the possibility of human missions to mine asteroids. Again, not an uniformed source. It's speculative right now, but
Finally, again with due respect to the experts in the appropriate fields, there was a time megabytes of data storage was imagined to be the maximum that private individuals would need. The idea that 100% accuracy about the future of asteroid mining or human activity in space can be predicted is ridiculous on its face.
Also, just to be clear, I don't think "The Expanse" is the pinnacle of science fiction, nor do I have any dog in the fight of it succeeding or failing. Like other science fiction works, it gets some things right and gets some wrong. I also don't think Discovery should follow the Expanse mold. I think Discovery should do its own thing.
I'm complaining because I don't want the new Star Trek to be a terrible show.
Peace and long life. My PM box is always open to discussion.I strongly disagree with these points, but I think it's time to drop this. Live long and prosper.
TNG looked more realistic than Space:1999. Which looked more realistic than TOS.
I watched a space battle from The Expanse on Youtube the other evening. It was about a thousand times more plausible than anything in Star Wars or Star Trek, though the rendering was not nearly as sophisticated.
Don't think it'd sell a lot of popcorn as the climax of a skiffy movie, though.
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