Couldn't have said it better.
The only difference is that i love season 1 too. The show was anything but bland during the early years imo. Wish the later seasons had more of the dangerous and haunting tone of season 2.
Wasn't it Maurice Hurley who really took the reins for season 2's more dangerous, haunting, exploring true unknowns
alone style? Michael Pillar's style for season 3 onward is also rich and steeped but season 2's format really is underrated, only because of residual slack from season 1. 2's top-50% episodes really nail a format that I wish had stayed a bit longer as well.
Technobabble didn't start until season 5 or 6. Often times the science was so silly, and the technobabble was just an excuse to tell a high concept Brannon Braga story. Most these episodes were good save for the technobabble, which took the awe and believability out the story.
In Yesterday's Enterprise the rift in time and space is explained as the result high levels of energy centered in a single area of space, created by intense phaser fire. If it was a Season 6 episode there would have been some long BS fake science explanation involving tachyon emissions or subspace dampening fields.
Utterly agreed! Season 6 (if not starting at 5) went overboard with excessive attempts to make the setup feel real - when season 3 did just enough to feel satisfied with a balance between real science and fake TV show creative liberty that makes it feel more plausible than waving any old magic wand or whipping out a laser sword. Sci-fi is still fantasy but it takes and makes more of an effort to feel plausible while having some spectacle. Fantasy is more just about the spectacle (often for the sake of un-exciting plot advancement), but I'm preaching to the choir...
The 2nd clip, I too felt, was more integral and reasonable to the plot (and technically accurate with the real life terms used without going into la-la land) but that first clip-- such a compilation of cringe at times. For one thing, processors don't fluctuate as such. Energy to them might... even taking into account "positronics" as a theoretical replacement for electronics, there are still some real life constants. Never mind if there's a primary speech processor, this rather implies secondary, tertiary, or how many other more processors of which proper error checking protocols given Data's stated processing speed from previous episodes ("Datalore", "The Measure of a Man", et al) combined with basic common sense means an error check and reroute to a working processor would occur
before the melodramatic crowd-pleasing moment kicks in... if Data has multiple processors for a dedicated task for contingency purposes, then algorithms to preemptively check would surely be commonplace as there's no 640KB limitation, never mind some algorithms can be a single block of code that can be ran from any other functions (e.g. OOP, the mid-20th century vernacular but even mid/late 20th century home computers (e.g. 1977, when real disco reigned) had BASIC and other beginner languages containing commands like GOSUB that did a simular same thing but more clumsily). Especially as Data has a backup archive of the operating system ("Contagion") and a convenient off switch ("The Measure of a Man"), etc, for something self-repairing and autonomous there's no reason for any lack of error checking protocols. Speech synthesis is still an important enough function...
And EM bursts (or EMPs) would do more than temporarily knock out communication signals, depending on intensity and relative position to various devices...