No, because real nerds use Linux.![]()
Well, MacOS is Unix based....
No, because real nerds use Linux.![]()
I thought those were more like Starfleet Marines?Well, MacOS is Unix based....
There is still a clear visual design continuity in the franchise. It never went away, except when it comes to the Connie in DSC. But I could easily see that being refit to what we see when Kirk is in command.
Eh? They're all consistent, except for the Shenzhou. But she was described as being an old ship, so she comes from a previous era of design language.
There is a tiny chance of seeing the Enterprise-E - most likely as a flashback for the Romulan supernova rescue mission - but all other ships are going to be new. I doubt they would even use the Akira as a background ship (even though it would fit 100% and it's an amazing design) - simply because it now resembles the NX-01 too much.
Because the powers that be changed inside the Empire and decided to go with a design that was easier to build multiples quickly.We go from ships like the ENT BoP and the D-5, to DSC Klingon ships that share zero attributes to those previous ships, then back to TOS and TNG with the design attributes from ENT. Why?
Because the powers that be changed inside the Empire and decided to go with a design that was easier to build multiples quickly.
One, could be an update to the ENT era design frame and easily upgraded to a D7. Two, attrition due to combat losses led the Klingons to seek a cost-effective battle frame. Given in TOS the Klingons report their worlds are "resource-poor" the cost part may come into consideration. Finally, L'Rell may have opted to utilize the design as a rallying point after the loss of the sarcophagus ship to unite the Great Houses.I haven't seen DSC season 2, so I'm assuming that was the in-show reason they gave? That makes zero sense to me. How does a DSC K'T'inga/D7/whatever take more or less time to build than the ships they already had?
One, could be an update to the ENT era design frame and easily upgraded to a D7. Two, attrition due to combat losses led the Klingons to seek a cost-effective battle frame. Given in TOS the Klingons report their worlds are "resource-poor" the cost part may come into consideration. Finally, L'Rell may have opted to utilize the design as a rallying point after the loss of the sarcophagus ship to unite the Great Houses.
There are multiple scenaoris in which such a design would be favorable for the Klingons, including if they had lost multiple ships and they were too expensive to replace, the deprivation of resources due to the war effort, and the need to quickly establish and secure new territory.No offense, but that all sounds like hogwash to me. The Klingons were winning the war and were about to destroy Earth when the war was halted. There was little need to build new ships, much less quicker ones based on 100 year old design aesthetics.
There are no ships in the 24th century that have nacelles like that.but with angular nacelles that look like they're straight out of a late 24th century ship.
There was no in-universe reason given in Season 2 as to why they made the D7. It feels purely like them fixing a mistake.I haven't seen DSC season 2, so I'm assuming that was the in-show reason they gave? That makes zero sense to me. How does a DSC K'T'inga/D7/whatever take more or less time to build than the ships they already had?
There are no ships in the 24th century that have nacelles like that.
There was no in-universe reason given in Season 2 as to why they made the D7. It feels purely like them fixing a mistake.
I mean, angular nacelles technically came with the refit Enterprise. Definitely not like the TOS .Boxy angular nacelles have been a staple of late 24th century Federation starships since First Contact.
I agree; just like giving hair to the Klingons.
Not like the ones on the Shenzhou. They're completely different from anything that has been in Trek before.Boxy angular nacelles have been a staple of late 24th century Federation starships since First Contact.
I haven't seen DSC season 2, so I'm assuming that was the in-show reason they gave? That makes zero sense to me. How does a DSC K'T'inga/D7/whatever take more or less time to build than the ships they already had?
As for Klingon hair, we know Klingons can grow hair. So, no explanation needed no will it be satisfactory for those bothered it.
Given T'Kumva's history I would not be surprised if he adopted that style early on.It wasn't that they didn't have hair that was the problem. It was the half-assed retcon explanation they gave (that they shaved their heads during wartime). Not only is that statement not in continuity with the rest of Star Trek, but T'Kuvma's flashbacks to when he was a child contradicted that as well.
Given T'Kumva's history I would not be surprised if he adopted that style early on.
Not really a stretch. It's like feudal Europe and their armies. Only great houses could support such construction so they were larger, more ornate and less cookie cutter.There is this one fan theory which I like (which is still far-fetched, but so far the most plausible one if we're pretending DIS is canon):
It's that all the supersized, massive spikey ships from DIS season 1 are actually generational ships of the big houses. That's why they're so big, so overpowered, and SO don't look like Klingon ships (because they got shit added to their hull over all these years) - but in reality, there are only comparatively few of them.
Whereas the more "Klingon" Klingon ships (the D7, BoPs, and all the ENT ships) are their newly built military ships. A single one might be weaker, but a central gouvernment can built hundreds of them, coordinate them, control a large space with them and is flexible in deploying them (and breaking up the houses by putting soldiers from different factions onto the same ships, now as one single army). Whereas the old houses basically only have their one flying fortress. Which protects the house. But which are also useless for the central gouvernment, which is why they're trying to phase them out.
(This also goes with my personal pet theory: That Klingon technology actually didn't evolve: A Klingon ship during ENT was almost exactly as powerfull as during TOS, the only thing changing being the size. But everyone else - humans, Romulans - have become more powerfull through innovation. And Klingons only started to innovate again after their treaty with the Federation/the Khitomer peace)
It's still a bit of a stretch... but so far the only theory that makes halfway sense.
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