Forgotten Trek

Discussion in 'Web Sites/Design' started by Ottens, Feb 3, 2022.

  1. publiusr

    publiusr Admiral Admiral

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    Has anything else surfaced with regards to Planet of the Titans?
     
  2. Ottens

    Ottens Commander Red Shirt

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  3. Henoch

    Henoch Rear Admiral Premium Member

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    Later in The Enterprise Incident, the improved cloaking device caused a great concern in Starfleet Intelligence, even willing to sacrifice the Enterprise to get one. The Romulan D7 (I wouldn't characterize "stripped-down, bare-bones") and the Enterprise "easily" cloaked.
     
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  4. Christopher

    Christopher Writer Admiral

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    Which doesn't mean they intended to use the tech themselves; it could simply mean that they needed to study the device so that they could determine a means of penetrating a cloak and preventing Romulan sneak attacks. There's always an arms race between stealth and detection.

    Really, if you think about it, Spock's claim that the Romulans couldn't track their own cloaking technology is ridiculous, something the writers didn't think through. Of course they should be able to penetrate it; they invented it. At most, they might not quite have figured out a way yet, but surely they would sooner or later. And at that point, there'd be no advantage to Starfleet in using it. Just as there'd be no advantage to the Romulans in using it if Starfleet figured out how to penetrate it.

    Trek fans tend to assume that cloaking is a single technology, but that doesn't fit what we've seen -- multiple iterations of cloaks being treated as a new invention, and of detection methods being developed and then vanishing. In "Balance of Terror," motion sensors could penetrate cloaks, but in "Incident," they couldn't anymore. In ST III, you could see a cloaked ship through its visual distortion, but never again later on. In ST VI, they found a way to detect cloaked ships through their engine emissions, but by TNG, no such tech existed. And then there's the DS9 Mirror Universe, where "The Emperor's New Cloak" claimed that Mirror Klingons had no cloaking tech even though we'd seen their ships decloak in "Crossover."

    The simplest way to reconcile those inconsistencies is merely to recognize that any given cloaking technology would be rendered obsolete as soon as a way to penetrate it was found, requiring the invention of a whole new form of cloaking. So cloaking isn't one technology, but a succession of different ones, each of which has a limited shelf life. So to maintain cloaking as a viable technology on a continuing basis requires dumping a lot of your military R&D budget into stealth research on a continuing basis, which has got to be a drain on resources. It's something you'd consider worth doing if you're a paranoid, warlike culture, or if your government is in the pocket of the defense contractors that specialize in cloaking, but I think the Federation wouldn't see the value of wasting so much effort on it when there are more constructive things to pursue.


    I never said it was impossible, just that it wasn't something practical to use on a typical Starfleet vessel on a regular basis. The way it's generally been portrayed, certainly in DS9 with the Defiant, is that you need to minimize power usage when cloaked, for what should be a self-evident reason: the more power you're generating, the harder it is to hide its signature, so the more power you need to put into cloaking, which rapidly reaches a point of diminishing returns. That's just common sense.

    Obviously the makers of "Incident" didn't intend it that way, but in retrospect, we need an explanation for why Starfleet didn't keep using the technology afterward. I think this is the most plausible explanation.
     
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  5. Unicron

    Unicron Boss Monster Mod Moderator

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    That's fair. :) Sometimes of course characters will act because the plot requires it, like Admiral Haftel wanting to remove Lal somewhat arbitrarily in "The Offspring." There are some unused lines of dialogue in the script that would have given him a broader context for that, had they been filmed.
     
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  6. Ottens

    Ottens Commander Red Shirt

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    He often gets included as an "insane" admiral, but I disagree. He was heartless, at least at first, and I think he was wrong to think scientists - even the best in the Federation - could have raised Lal better than Data. But he also had a fair argument, which is that it was risky putting two unique lifeforms together on the same starship.
     
  7. Unicron

    Unicron Boss Monster Mod Moderator

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    The extended dialogue in Picard's ready room, had it been filmed, would have made a nice addition IMO. During that conversation, Haftel brings up the M-5 debacle and how it occurred partly because Dr. Daystrom wanted to supervise all major work on the M-5 himself, often in effective isolation (a phrase Haftel uses with less of this context in the final version). Daystrom's instability is clearly another factor, but Starfleet's concern has to do with the possibility that Lal could malfunction dangerously, even under careful supervision, and there's already one such Soong android (Lore) who has that problem even though he's not mentioned. :D
     
  8. Ottens

    Ottens Commander Red Shirt

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    I didn't know! That's interesting. Would have been a nice callback for TOS fans.
     
  9. Unicron

    Unicron Boss Monster Mod Moderator

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    You can read those scenes here, and there are several other TNG/DS9 scripts that have similar extended scenes. :) The other extension for "The Offspring", in both the ready room and Data's lab, is Picard pointing out that the Enterprise crew is uniquely qualified to judge "normal" behavior for Soong type androids because of their familiarity with Data - a level of experience that a group of Starfleet researchers wouldn't benefit from.

    Interestingly, there's also an earlier version of "Loud as a Whisper" where several scenes from the final version are missing, and Geordi has a much larger role in place of the emphasis on the relationship between Troi and Riva.
     
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  10. Ottens

    Ottens Commander Red Shirt

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  11. Henoch

    Henoch Rear Admiral Premium Member

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    Finally, not only bathrooms but both a men's and women's bathroom! I've been holding it for 55.5 years! :ack:
     
  12. Christopher

    Christopher Writer Admiral

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    Interesting that Probert drew the briefing room more like a small auditorium or classroom than the usual around-the-table setup. And it was a nice idea to have a small bedroom and bath adjoining the ready room -- I guess if there were a long shift where the captain needed to be on hand right away in case things went down but had time to take a nap in the interim, or something.
     
  13. Ottens

    Ottens Commander Red Shirt

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    I assume by the 24th century all restrooms are unisex ;)

    Probert's early drawings indeed show the briefing room as a classroom-like auditorium. He also toyed with attached a transporter room directly to the bridge, as you can see this in floor plan:

    [​IMG]

    I'm speculating, but I'm guessing in the beginning they didn't have a plan for the briefing room at all yet. Designing the bridge was Probert's first job for TNG.

    It seems to have taken about a month to arrive at the final configuration. The early-Dec 1986 plans have the classroom-like briefing room. By late December, we get that cutaway with the "conf. lounge" behind the bridge and a few steps down from it.
     
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  14. Ottens

    Ottens Commander Red Shirt

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  15. Ryan Thomas Riddle

    Ryan Thomas Riddle Vice Admiral Admiral

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    I liked how season one showed us more of these lounges throughout the ship. But once 10-Forward was built these went completely away.

    And thank you for the shout out and link to the "Word of God" comic by @Mark 2000 and I!
     
    Last edited: Apr 3, 2022
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  16. Ottens

    Ottens Commander Red Shirt

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    I agree, although to be fair Ten Forward was a much nicer set than the various ad-hoc lounges they made during Season 1. For variety, though, I think they should have still occasionally shown others. Starting in Season 2, you get the impression there's only one social space on board the entire ship!

    You are quite welcome! I was thrilled to see you guys used that early Probert design in your comic, which I always felt was more appropriate size-wise than the bridge we got in the show. (Although I liked that one too.)

    I also loved your visualization of the huge arboretum, which I included in The Unseen Enterprise-D. I know yours was for an Ambassador-class ship, but I like to imagine the Galaxy class has a similar large arboretum in the back of the saucer section.
     
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  17. Ryan Thomas Riddle

    Ryan Thomas Riddle Vice Admiral Admiral

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    Yeah Mark wanted to show more public space and I had the idea that what if Riker walked into a parkland space in the middle of the ship to find Data instead of the holodeck.
     
  18. Christopher

    Christopher Writer Admiral

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    The TNG Blueprints box set identifies the two rectangular window arrays between the main shuttlebay and the saucer separation line as the arboretum windows on the exterior dorsal view, but fails to depict the arboretum at the corresponding place on the interior blueprints (apparently deck 7), showing it as just a generic storage area.
     
  19. cardinal biggles

    cardinal biggles A GODDAMN DELIGHT Moderator

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    The arrangement of the different parts of the warp core and the shape of the concentric rings (and interestingly, you can still see the finned shape of the TMP warp core behind it) looks like it might have been an influence for the engine rooms of the Defiant and especially the Enterprise-E. Very cool concept.
     
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  20. Maurice

    Maurice Snagglepussed Admiral

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