I demand that the Enterprise-A schematic conform to the canonical on-screen evidence that the ship is 78 decks tall. Anything else is a fanwank, and the book will be an abomination.
Okay. All I know is it would be nice if the interior content is more accurate than the cover. But if that shuttlecraft page is a sample then I'm not hopeful. I'll still get it out of curiosity, but it's disappointing. If dedicated fans with limited resources can do incredibly faithful and well thought out renderings then why can't these guys do it with TPTB granting them access to all sorts of extensive resource material?Startrek.com has a Q&A with a Haynes editor about the book here: http://www.startrek.com/article/inside-the-haynes-enterprise-manual
There's also a sample page, showing some views of the Enterprise-B: http://www.startrek.com/uploads/assets/articles/3e6f5461718bda8d227c647a466cc6e58ffec690.jpg
Word initially was that this manual would span as far as the Enterprise in the J.J. Abrams reboot film. It doesn’t…
Smith: It doesn’t, at least not in any depth. The Abrams Enterprise, as we all know, is very obviously different externally and much less is known about it internally. There are perfectly valid reasons why the creators would not want anyone to invent or extrapolate based on what has been seen in just one movie. We had to respect that.(Emphasis mine) But also, it’s a different timeline and this meant we had to think very carefully about how we handled it in a book that is firmly rooted in the prime timeline. However, we have a section in the book dedicated to Parallel Universes, in which we discuss alternate realities of which this is one.
Anybody else catch this bit?
Word initially was that this manual would span as far as the Enterprise in the J.J. Abrams reboot film. It doesn’t…
Smith: It doesn’t, at least not in any depth. The Abrams Enterprise, as we all know, is very obviously different externally and much less is known about it internally. There are perfectly valid reasons why the creators would not want anyone to invent or extrapolate based on what has been seen in just one movie. We had to respect that.(Emphasis mine) But also, it’s a different timeline and this meant we had to think very carefully about how we handled it in a book that is firmly rooted in the prime timeline. However, we have a section in the book dedicated to Parallel Universes, in which we discuss alternate realities of which this is one.
JJ and Co. are making a concerted effort to make sure nobody else gets to play in their sandbox.
"Well, duh," is the obvious answer, but think about this for a bit. One of the fun things about Star Trek is how people rushed in from all corners to fill in the gaps and play with the universe (always with the understanding that their efforts really didn't go much further than their own entertainment; even before "THE MEMO" it was always understood that only what's onscreen counted). With Bad Robot shutting down all these ancillary efforts, that's gonna cut into the audience generating any interest in their product.
The JJVerse may crash and burn sooner than expected.
Anybody else catch this bit?
JJ and Co. are making a concerted effort to make sure nobody else gets to play in their sandbox.Word initially was that this manual would span as far as the Enterprise in the J.J. Abrams reboot film. It doesn’t…
Smith: It doesn’t, at least not in any depth. The Abrams Enterprise, as we all know, is very obviously different externally and much less is known about it internally. There are perfectly valid reasons why the creators would not want anyone to invent or extrapolate based on what has been seen in just one movie. We had to respect that.(Emphasis mine) But also, it’s a different timeline and this meant we had to think very carefully about how we handled it in a book that is firmly rooted in the prime timeline. However, we have a section in the book dedicated to Parallel Universes, in which we discuss alternate realities of which this is one.
"Well, duh," is the obvious answer, but think about this for a bit. One of the fun things about Star Trek is how people rushed in from all corners to fill in the gaps and play with the universe (always with the understanding that their efforts really didn't go much further than their own entertainment; even before "THE MEMO" it was always understood that only what's onscreen counted). With Bad Robot shutting down all these ancillary efforts, that's gonna cut into the audience generating any interest in their product.
The JJVerse may crash and burn sooner than expected.
If people make these distinctions between "Original Trek" and "JJTrek", it's mostly Abrams & Co's fault. If this doesn't change by the second movie, the "new, fresh and exciting" universe will pretty soon be forgotten about, I guess. There will be two further movies by Abrams, Orci & Co, and then it will be gone and rebooted again. No spin offs, no tie ins, nothing.
And as of yet, nobody could provide me with figures that show that Star Trek 2009 has refreshed the franchise in any way. Everyone says so, but nobody has backed that up with numbers. Rise in DVD, book and merchandise sales of TOS, TNG, etc, anything? The movie itself and its novelization were highly successful, yeah. And the next movie will certainly break a billion worldwide. But I see that as a completely separate franchise, no side effects to the "original" one. And if it's gone after the third JJTrek movie, then it was also just a straw fire.
I see they've made the Galileo a little more accurate, but still lacking an aft compartment though.
Anybody else catch this bit?
JJ and Co. are making a concerted effort to make sure nobody else gets to play in their sandbox.Word initially was that this manual would span as far as the Enterprise in the J.J. Abrams reboot film. It doesn’t…
Smith: It doesn’t, at least not in any depth. The Abrams Enterprise, as we all know, is very obviously different externally and much less is known about it internally. There are perfectly valid reasons why the creators would not want anyone to invent or extrapolate based on what has been seen in just one movie. We had to respect that.(Emphasis mine) But also, it’s a different timeline and this meant we had to think very carefully about how we handled it in a book that is firmly rooted in the prime timeline. However, we have a section in the book dedicated to Parallel Universes, in which we discuss alternate realities of which this is one.
"Well, duh," is the obvious answer, but think about this for a bit. One of the fun things about Star Trek is how people rushed in from all corners to fill in the gaps and play with the universe (always with the understanding that their efforts really didn't go much further than their own entertainment; even before "THE MEMO" it was always understood that only what's onscreen counted). With Bad Robot shutting down all these ancillary efforts, that's gonna cut into the audience generating any interest in their product.
The JJVerse may crash and burn sooner than expected.
If people make these distinctions between "Original Trek" and "JJTrek", it's mostly Abrams & Co's fault. If this doesn't change by the second movie, the "new, fresh and exciting" universe will pretty soon be forgotten about, I guess. There will be two further movies by Abrams, Orci & Co, and then it will be gone and rebooted again. No spin offs, no tie ins, nothing.
And as of yet, nobody could provide me with figures that show that Star Trek 2009 has refreshed the franchise in any way. Everyone says so, but nobody has backed that up with numbers. Rise in DVD, book and merchandise sales of TOS, TNG, etc, anything? The movie itself and its novelization were highly successful, yeah. And the next movie will certainly break a billion worldwide. But I see that as a completely separate franchise, no side effects to the "original" one. And if it's gone after the third JJTrek movie, then it was also just a straw fire.
I see they've made the Galileo a little more accurate, but still lacking an aft compartment though.
No, it's there. You can see the door to the aft compartment right behind the "N" in "NCC".
But I dont mean to complain, I actually like both versions, just not screen accurate is all.![]()
Hmm... http://www.trekbbs.com/showthread.php?t=119088But I dont mean to complain, I actually like both versions, just not screen accurate is all.![]()
Well, technically, it is impossible to have a screen-accurate shuttlecraft exterior and interior... without evoking TARDIS technology.
So far from what I've seen of the book (in samples), I'm not really wowed here. I could probably get all the info online at Memory-Alpha, Memory-Beta, and Ex Scientia, and it be a damn sight better to boot.
Anybody else catch this bit?
JJ and Co. are making a concerted effort to make sure nobody else gets to play in their sandbox.
"Well, duh," is the obvious answer, but think about this for a bit. One of the fun things about Star Trek is how people rushed in from all corners to fill in the gaps and play with the universe (always with the understanding that their efforts really didn't go much further than their own entertainment; even before "THE MEMO" it was always understood that only what's onscreen counted). With Bad Robot shutting down all these ancillary efforts, that's gonna cut into the audience generating any interest in their product.
The JJVerse may crash and burn sooner than expected.
If people make these distinctions between "Original Trek" and "JJTrek", it's mostly Abrams & Co's fault. If this doesn't change by the second movie, the "new, fresh and exciting" universe will pretty soon be forgotten about, I guess. There will be two further movies by Abrams, Orci & Co, and then it will be gone and rebooted again. No spin offs, no tie ins, nothing.
And as of yet, nobody could provide me with figures that show that Star Trek 2009 has refreshed the franchise in any way. Everyone says so, but nobody has backed that up with numbers. Rise in DVD, book and merchandise sales of TOS, TNG, etc, anything? The movie itself and its novelization were highly successful, yeah. And the next movie will certainly break a billion worldwide. But I see that as a completely separate franchise, no side effects to the "original" one. And if it's gone after the third JJTrek movie, then it was also just a straw fire.
Yeah, I don't get where people are saying it's refreshing the franchise either. To me, at least, it appears that they're actively trying to draw a hard line between the two franchises. And in doing so are will to let the first franchise wither on the vine-- save for comics and novels.
Here's what I think they're doing. They're creating 2 distinct sandboxes. Their hope has got to be that fans will buy from each sandbox, not just one.
If they wanted the NuUniverse to be distinct....It would have been a full reboot.
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