Resource Aesthetics Management Officer. The person responsible for onboard redesigns of rooms, uniforms and equipment.

"Just wait until you see what I've done with the ready room!"
Resource Aesthetics Management Officer. The person responsible for onboard redesigns of rooms, uniforms and equipment.
Navy quartermasters have nothing whatsoever to do with supply.Is that the same as a QuarterMaster?
The Quartermaster/Cargo Chief/Supply Officer would look after the freight, whilst the RAMO would be the one who is constantly re-carpeting or repainting rooms, swapping out old furnishings, tweaking uniforms, combadges, tricorders, phasers, etc.Is that the same as a QuarterMaster?
During the ENT-era at least Starfleet utilised the army definition for the post (see "Affliction").Navy quartermasters have nothing whatsoever to do with supply.
https://www.thebalancecareers.com/to-be-a-quartermaster-3345857
During the ENT-era at least Starfleet utilised the army definition for the post (see "Affliction").
It's a quote from an episode of Red Dwarf, in case anyway is unfamiliar with it.Morale officer? so like that tartdigrade on Orville getting the lattest porn?![]()
Ignorance on the writers' part, plain and simple.
Diplomatic/First contact officer.
Now, with T'ryssa Chen in the books, to me, her job is wrong. She is the first contact specialist, but any other time she's just a go fer or other jobs officer. As a Contact Specialist, she would be busy unless its a 3 month study of a nebula unless they find a planet. Her job would be to look forward into the mission plan, and research the planets that are to be visited, even if there not first contact. Her job would be to brief the command officers before they get to the next system, on who is there, what is happening in the system,what kind of observations she has on customs, etc. Basically he/she would be an researcher on whats comming, and sometimes go with the away team on missions, or be called in if an away team member pulls a Westley, and breaks some law, or some kind of dust up. She would be the lawyer/diplomat that would be the "expert" on whatever planet they are visiting.
On a first contact mission, she would be busy with going over all the transmissions from the surface, seeing ther customs, there current fashions, laws, how to greet someone properly. etc. and she would take the third seat on any contact on the bridge, pulling the captain aside to inform him on anything he/she needs to know.
I think Star Trek needs a reboothttp://scriptsearch.dxdy.name/?page=results&query=({line|quartermaster,})
Given that 'quartermaster' has been consistently used for supply officer and depot managers in Starfleet and Federation civilian jobs since Tomorrow is Yesterday (TOS) I think the ENT writing team can be forgiven on that one (particularly as the "Naval Quatermaster" was identified as being called "Navigator" no later than The Corbomite Maneuver (TOS)).
How much freight would a ship on a five year mission have, especially with replicator tech? They would not be very busy.The Quartermaster/Cargo Chief/Supply Officer would look after the freight, whilst the RAMO would be the one who is constantly re-carpeting or repainting rooms, swapping out old furnishings, tweaking uniforms, combadges, tricorders, phasers, etc.
During the ENT-era at least Starfleet utilised the army definition for the post (see "Affliction").
Ignorance on the writers' part, plain and simple.
Another idea from the books: a linguist/choreographer.
I think Star Trek needs a reboot
An intelligence officer. The ships are always being infiltrated by alien intruders. ALso, Starfleet does more than its fair share of secret missions on alien ships and planets. You need somebody to plan this stuff.
They need better computer security, its too easy to break into the system
Even splitting the role in two seems like an insufficient number to me: There needs to be a Security Chief, a shipboard weapons officer, and *at least one* Remote Operations specialist who remotely drives guided torpedoes, drones, probes, etc.In 24th-century Trek, I'd split the security and tactical functions into two distinct roles. I get that they were going for "one guy/gal handles all the shooting," but that was a horribly simplistic lumping together of what should be two distinct specialties, especially on ships with crews numbering up to 1000.
I added one of these to my fan fiction crew, in reaction to a new psychic and shapeshifting adversary that I came up with that made having one aboard ships more advisable.Chaplain.
Where Data is from, we call that a Master Royale.Is that the same as a QuarterMaster?
Choreographer?! Is that for those aliens who communicate via the Lindy Hop or whatever?
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