Okay, we all know 24th century touch screens are made by the ACME Company for Starfleet because they keep blowing up in peoples faces, but what other technology portrayed in any of the Trek series is now surpassed by current real world technology?
1701 computer data is badly indexed and uncross referenced?Depending on the writer's lack of imagination, 23rd-24th century computers can be much less powerful than what we have today. For example, in both "The Cage" and "The Naked Now", the Enterprise library computer is depicted as basically a giant microfilm library. The idea that the information in it might be indexed and searchable never even occurred to the writer of "The Naked Now", which is why the only way to locate a particular starship log entry was to have Data browse through all of them at super speed.
But a little over a year later in "Contagion", Picard asks the computer scan through the recently-downloaded USS Yamato logs and show him entries with specific keywords (verbally, not by typing in strictly-defined search terms), which it does almost instantaneously; something that modern computers are only just now starting to be able to do.
Okay, we all know 24th century touch screens are made by the ACME Company for Starfleet because they keep blowing up in peoples faces, but what other technology portrayed in any of the Trek series is now surpassed by current real world technology?
Computers in real life have surpassed Data's processing capabilities by the year 2000 (or was it 2010)... but its possible that how many calculations Data may process isn't as integral to his overall functionality as the overall properties of his positronic matrix (seeing how it still dwarfs a human brain in memory retention and speed of processing/access by many orders of magnitude).
I would say that smartphones are approaching the level of functionality of a tricorder (in fact, a smartphone with a spectrometer was invented, and you can actually buy an external multi-spectrometer to connect to the smartphone via USB to analyze objects for their overall contents - its just a matter of integrating bluetooth into it or fully integrating the technology into smartphones as a standard).
One downside is that smartphones and tablets need access to the internet to be of relative use... they don't have their own database integrated (yet)... but storage was already invented which can hold the total sum of human knowledge in a very small space for a very long time (thousands of years)... so I guess its just a matter of reducing it in size further or just putting in a database that's of relevance.
Data is able to process quantum level calculations that he was able to "Lock out" the main computer and re initialize in mere seconds and a Sovereign class vessel is as advanced than Intrepid.
An Intrepid class ships main computer can sustain; 575 trillion calculations per nanosecond, 575 Sextillion calculations per second. In a computer core the size of about 763 cubic meters.
By 2020, The most powerful computer is the Fugaku supercomputer in Japan at 442 Petaflops (442 quadrillion calculations/operation per second) on a server farm of several acres. Voyagers computer is 1.3 Million times more powerful, on 1/300th the area.
Can you as a human do billions of calculations per second?
Current estimates put human brains at 1 exaFLOP, or a billion billion calculations per second. Older estimates had us in the "X trillion" range.
So, yes.
My point is can you do MATHEMATICS in your head where you can provide a result instantly?
No.
You're slower than a snail in formulating a response when compared to Data.
And you're worse than a bee at navigation and as blind as a bat in the dark when a bat... isn't.
Expert systems can get stuffed. We're generalists.
We need to time travel back and inquire Tasha Yar as to how Data's performance in bed was.But in the context of Trek, Data was far better than humans at pretty much everything.
We need to time travel back and inquire Tasha Yar as to how Data's performance in bed was.
There is no need there at all.We need to time travel back and inquire Tasha Yar as to how Data's performance in bed was.
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