Because starfleet is a military. They would have specialized equipment that civilians wouldn’t have any need to use.But what makes you think civilians don't use communicators, tricorders and PADDs, among other things?
Because starfleet is a military. They would have specialized equipment that civilians wouldn’t have any need to use.But what makes you think civilians don't use communicators, tricorders and PADDs, among other things?
About that...Because starfleet is a military.
Has not stopped most discussions here, since we don't really have a metric for what the "audience" thinks is "cool."About that...
In any case, this whole discussion is stupid. I really do not think most of the audience cares about such things. They don't care about it in Star Wars either. And no, they most definitely do not care about SW not actually being in the future while ST is. If the stuff looks cool to them, it's fine.
That would be a kind of silly way of thinking about it, but considering that literally IS the whole point of stacking all those PADDs on the desk like that, it actually fits.So it's like a metaphor; the character doesn't really have several PADDs?
I do wonder if phones exist in the Star Trek universe. I think the closest we ever saw to one is some schmuck seemingly videoing the burning USS Vengeance saucer as Khan and Spock ran by in Into Darkness. In some of the novels, civilian characters have "personal comms" which are phones in all but name.And?
You seem to be under the impression that it's obvious that they're military equipment. Phasers, I get. But what makes you think civilians don't use communicators, tricorders and PADDs, among other things? You have no frame of reference to claim this.
And I'm sure today's military _does_ use ipads outside of battlefields.
To weigh in on this one: I have always assumed (and have indicated in fanfics) that the Starfleet communicator is just an impact/radiation hardened version of a standard civilian communicator, which in turn is just a standard Universal Commset (made by Motorola). The Starfleet version just has slightly longer range, built-in encryption and a more extensive translation library than the civilian version.I do wonder if phones exist in the Star Trek universe. I think the closest we ever saw to one is some schmuck seemingly videoing the burning USS Vengeance saucer as Khan and Spock ran by in Into Darkness. In some of the novels, civilian characters have "personal comms" which are phones in all but name.
Because starfleet is a military. They would have specialized equipment that civilians wouldn’t have any need to use.
Every single word in that post is wrong. Starfleet is not military per se....
"Happy all?"This link goes into great detail do describe how Starfleet is not military as envisioned but it also does many things that only militaries do.
So yeah, Starfleet is military and is not at the same time. Happy all?
Why do civilian need a comm unit that independently accesses subspace frequencies?
I want to call my mom on Io from the shuttle station waiting line.
It necessarily is not shit technology. You have just decided it is. That the people use several PADDs is in no way or form indication that they could not have all those files and programs windowed in one PADD, if they for some reason wanted to work in old fashioned way.Every single word in that post is wrong. Starfleet is not military per se, and that doesn't prevent them from using consumer equipment either way. Finally, there is nothing in the PADD that indicates in any way, shape or form that it has special military applications. It's an Amazon Kindle. But even if everything you said was true, it absolutely doesn't address the question of why the PADD is such a shit technology.
There are human colonies all across the Alpha Quadrant.Why do civilian need a comm unit that independently accesses subspace frequencies? Not certain about a built in UT.
Because the writers wrote it that way.it absolutely doesn't address the question of why the PADD is such a shit technology.
It necessarily is not shit technology. You have just decided it is. That the people use several PADDs is in no way or form indication that they could not have all those files and programs windowed in one PADD, if they for some reason wanted to work in old fashioned way.
Yeah, and I have friends and family thousands of miles away, but my cell phone only has a range of a couple dozen miles, tops. My home wi-fi network has a range of a a few hundred feet. I, as a civilian living in a built-up technological infrastructure, don't actually require equipment capable of transmitting three thousand miles to actually contact someone three thousand miles away.There are human colonies all across the Alpha Quadrant.
No, it is just that you have outdated (even by today's standards) views about how pads/computers/etc are used. I have told you this several times already. People use multiple devices right now in 2018!Well you've moved the problem to "the characters are stupid".
You must be new to this forum. That indeed probably was the real reason, but it doesn't mean we need to interpret it that way, especially as they accidentally got it right.Why no one seems willing to accept that it was just that people in the 80s couldn't predice that our tech would get a lot better in such a short time is a mystery to me. There HAS to be a in-universe explanation.![]()
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