McCoy's miracle pill that can regrow kidneys.Trekmed operates at the need of plot.
McCoy's miracle pill that can regrow kidneys.Trekmed operates at the need of plot.
Robots won't work if it's something that only activates to organic interation.Now you understand why everybody sends Robots IRL when you need to Touch Something Weird or something that goes Boom!
If the Robot goes down, nobody bats an eye, just calls it cost of doing business.
If you loose a poor Ensign like Gamble, that's a tragic loss that the family has to suffer through for the rest of their natural lives.
Or they drop the glass orb and it breaks into pieces, some people can be "Butter Fingers" when on remote controls.Robots won't work if it's something that only activates to organic interation.
This is my first time here.
You may have commented on it, or maybe not, but when they showed the illuminated boards with text in the temple/prison, the text looked familiar to me. I paused the frame and was surprised to see that the letters were Tibetan, albeit facing in different directions and at times written in a slightly calligraphic style.
I wonder if they were used randomly as less familiar characters or if this theme will be developed further...If I find the time, I may transcribe them and see if there is any meaning that can be translated...
Well, remember his eyes actually did fully regenerate in the feature film ST: INS.Geordi was blind from birth, he had nothing to repair.
Never watch TitanicThe problem I have with episodes like this is there's no tension for most of the characters. We know that all the main characters are obviously alive for TOS so there's no risk to them.
From the internets ... (specifically here https://www.photo.net/forums/topic/206629-lense/)Kind of surprised that as of today, at least on my P+ app, they still haven’t corrected the spelling of “Lens”. Surely somebody’s noticed by now? (I wondered if perhaps there’s an archaic spelling with an “e” somewhere, but haven’t turned any up.)
You can see one of the creatures from this episode during Spock's mind meld with Batel in Episode 3.
Most people, including me, thought it was a Gorn, but if you freeze frame it, it's not a Gorn, it matches what Spock sees in the sphere in this episode.
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I took screenshots of them both last night so I could compare them, once I get off work today I'll maybe see about getting the episode 5 screenshot hosted somewhere so I can post it here too.You can see one of the creatures from this episode during Spock's mind meld with Batel in Episode 3.
Most people, including me, thought it was a Gorn, but if you freeze frame it, it's not a Gorn, it matches what Spock sees in the sphere in this episode.
So whatever Genetic material left from the Gorn inside Captain Marie Batel, it seems to be some sort of "Ancient Genetic Memory"?You can see one of the creatures from this episode during Spock's mind meld with Batel in Episode 3.
Most people, including me, thought it was a Gorn, but if you freeze frame it, it's not a Gorn, it matches what Spock sees in the sphere in this episode.
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…fine. Though I’ll note one has to go back twenty years just to find that.From the internets ... (specifically here https://www.photo.net/forums/topic/206629-lense/)
"Posted December 10, 2005
Lense is an old variant of lens, going back over a century. Also technical lens designers often were math wizzes, with a lesser speellingcapacity.
…fine. Though I’ll note one has to go back twenty years just to find that.
I can find several other references saying the same thing as grammar.comWhen do we use “lense”?
Never! “Lense” is simply a misspelling of “lens”, appeared because of the confusion we discussed above. You should never use “lense” in any message or expression, because this word does not exist in any notorious English language dictionary and is always considered a wrong spelling.
It kind of reminds me of the Cloverfield monster or those Cthulhu but not expressly called Cthulhu things from that movie Underwater.You can see one of the creatures from this episode during Spock's mind meld with Batel in Episode 3.
Most people, including me, thought it was a Gorn, but if you freeze frame it, it's not a Gorn, it matches what Spock sees in the sphere in this episode.
![]()
Don't you know? People in Star Trek aren't allowed to get PTSD because that's lazy writing and against Gene's Vision. The writers need to earn their paycheck by making in a sci-fi thing like an alien infection that manifests itself with PTSD like symptoms instead.Pretty sure Ortega's was just PTSD, and not related to Batel's thing.
He had a full set of eyes. What's not to repair?Geordi was blind from birth, he had nothing to repair.
Trekmed operates at the need of plot.
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