“The Ultimate Computer” *****
The Enterprise serves as a testbed for a revolutionary computer system.
This is a great episode... the one I was looking most forward to when they gave the remastering project the green-light.
Boy was I disappointed.
“The Ultimate Computer” *****
The Enterprise serves as a testbed for a revolutionary computer system.
Yes, you touch on two points I overlooked mentioning. Yes, Commodore Wesley is the only one (other than some remote Starfleet Admirals) that doesn't bug out and displays actual competence. And I do wish they could have managed something else in Starfleet designs for variety in the task force rather than just cut-and-pasting reused long shots of the Enterprise.
The thing with Uhura's memory at the end of "The Changeling" has always struck me as silly, and I can't say I'm totally convinced by Warped9's rationalizations.
I always had a problem with the coincidence factor of this ep. Not only is Kirk's old captain's son serving on the Enterprise but Kirk doesn't know it (!) until they re-encounter the exact creature responsible for his father's death.“Obsession” ****
Kirk is driven to destroy a creature he believes he encountered once before.
Life can be full of weird coincidences. And I suppose it's not impossible that a particular Ensign can be assigned to your command and with all the other stuff you've got to deal with on a daily basis it might not register right off.I always had a problem with the coincidence factor of this ep. Not only is Kirk's old captain's son serving on the Enterprise but Kirk doesn't know it (!) until they re-encounter the exact creature responsible for his father's death.“Obsession” ****
Kirk is driven to destroy a creature he believes he encountered once before.
Way to pay attention, Jimbo.
That said, Ensign G. was certainly the coolest "redshirt of the week" that we ever met. I wish he'd had a recurring role.
Yeah it doesn't always work out. In TNG they gave us the Nebula-class in "The Wounded" and that was one ugly looking kitbash.
To be fair, though, the FJ designs were really kitbashes themselves although of the 2D variety.
Another interesting thing about "The Ultimate Computer" is how M5 goes down. No pyrotechnics or freezing itself with illogic. It just stops and turns itself off, essentially the closest thing to what a computer today might do. Today a computer would freeze and then you have to reboot it. Of course M5 was an AI so it just turned itself off. Interesting.
And regardless of how the tests turned out I'm sure there'd still be lots of positive things to be learned from the M5 and the work Daystrom put into it.
Over the years I've dabble with some designing for different purposes. I was going through some of my files and Photobucket images and thought I'd share some of this stuff.
An early destroyer/scout design.
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TOS era destroyer/scout.
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So... When the TNG crew went to the effort to save a planet (that was appropriately advanced) they were being police?It is also interesting to compare TOS with later Trek. In TOS allowing a less advanced culture to perish or be taken over by another more advanced one was unacceptable even under the PD. In later Trek (TNG is the one I know best) interference is considered a greater evil than allowing a civilization to be destroyed.
It takes effort to save a civilization... and most of the 24th century Starfleet just aren't effort kind of guys.![]()
Give it up...you're not convincing anyone. Even in TOS's time they knew they couldn't be or were not tasked to be the police men of the galaxy.
RAMA
I always loved bottle shows, actually.Even if they're bottle shows the fact that the stories are not yet another parallel planet idea holds a great deal of appeal...assuming they're well told.
I guess the reason this episode works is because I never feel embarrassed for the characters. The character dynamics work very well among the regulars. And there is very little "Ah, some sort of primitive slug throwing device. I've heard about them in school books." It's more "Hey, that was the sound of a machine gun bolt. We're in trouble!" Yeah there was the "concrete galoshes" but Scotty says it with such pride!“A Piece Of The Action” **
An entire planet is found to have been corrupted into a gangster society.
Yes, I laughed quite a bit during this episode, but I also cringed over some of the absurdity.
I still dig this episode. It is interesting at how serious the first half is (scariest red shirt death EVER!) and how light the second is. This is pretty much the definitive "Spock, baffle them with logic. Bones, find their medical weakness. I'm going to seduce the high priestess!"“By Any Other Name” ***
Aliens from the another galaxy hijack the Enterprise to return home.
I've never been crazy about this episode. But Nimoy playing the bad guy is more than worth the price of admission. And "Risk is our business."“Return To Tomorrow” *****
The Enterprise is led to a dead world where ancient beings still exist.
“The Ultimate Computer” *****
The Enterprise serves as a testbed for a revolutionary computer system.
Aye. All hail Bob Wesley, Governor of Mantiles! Yes, one of the few non-idiots in the Federation that isn't on the Enterprise.This episode is also notable for giving us the only competent, sane, stable, and alive starship CO not in command of the Enterprise. Commodore Bob Wesley is awesome!
EDIT: One thing to add: the battle in this one is pretty well paced and exciting. Seeing that many sister ships of the Enterprise at once was a real treat. One thing I noticed was that the way Kirk let Wesley know that the Enterprise was no longer a threat (running with the shields down) was what got Kirk into trouble in TWOK. Guess you can trick the trickster!
I always liked (and still like) that it is four ships more or less just like the Enterprise. There are no variables as to speed, weaponry, etc. The Enterprise is by definition outmatched. Plus, going by the writer's guide (and Roddenberry's own tendencies) there are no ships more powerful than our E. So you can have a handful of lesser ships, or four of the "real deal". And I still think that formation shot of the four is terrific. I don't think they matched the scale of it with TOS-R. (Again, I'm not saying the TOS shot can't be improved. I just don't think it was.)And I do wish they could have managed something else in Starfleet designs for variety in the task force rather than just cut-and-pasting reused long shots of the Enterprise.
Lol. I was actually disappointed when I finally saw the episode he shows up in and he was a governer of some backwater planet. In my mind he should have still been out there kicking ass in his throne of a captain's chair on the Lexington. Maybe if he was a little less competent he would be...Aye. All hail Bob Wesley, Governor of Mantiles! Yes, one of the few non-idiots in the Federation that isn't on the Enterprise.
I always liked (and still like) that it is four ships more or less just like the Enterprise. There are no variables as to speed, weaponry, etc. The Enterprise is by definition outmatched. Plus, going by the writer's guide (and Roddenberry's own tendencies) there are no ships more powerful than our E. So you can have a handful of lesser ships, or four of the "real deal". And I still think that formation shot of the four is terrific. I don't think they matched the scale of it with TOS-R. (Again, I'm not saying the TOS shot can't be improved. I just don't think it was.)
^^ I haven't yet seen the TOS-R version of this episode so I'll have to check it out.
^^ I haven't yet seen the TOS-R version of this episode so I'll have to check it out.
“The Ultimate Computer” *****
The Enterprise serves as a testbed for a revolutionary computer system.
There are some conceptual shortcomings in this, but nonetheless it's a very well told space adventure in similar vein as "The Doomsday Machine." William H. Marshall gives a wonderful and somewhat quirky performance as Dr. Richard Daystrom, the M5 computer system's creator.
To some extent the story is an allegory for the human fear of losing one's job or one's place to a machine, a genuinely felt concern in the 1960s and throughout the early part of the industrial age. That concern seems much less prevalent today as society appears to embrace each new advance in computer technology.
The episode takes the view that relinquishing total control of our lives to machinery inevitably leads to disaster. Of course, there's the important point that M5 was built inherently unstable since it's Daystrom's quirky personality that serves as the basis for M5's operating system or "mind" for lack of a better term. And that's where I see a conceptual flaw. Whether real artificial intelligence is ever achieved is anyone's guess, but the sophistication of computer intelligence is only going to get ever better. Assuming continuing progress then by the 23rd century computer intelligence should be very sophisticated, and certainly likely capable of operating a starship largely autonomously in many situations. Indeed contemporary space probes are being designed to operate ever more autonomously simply to help overcome the time lag of trying to control them from Earth---the more distant the probe in space the greater the time lag in sending a signal and receiving feedback that the action has been initiated. The probe's likelihood of survival increases dramatically if it can deal with unforeseen variables on its own rather than having to wait for responses and instructions from Earth.
My essential point is that if this story were being written today M5's abilities wouldn't seem quite so extraordinary because the Enterprise crew would already be quite with familiar A.I. on some level or other.
All that aside, though, I find this a very engaging and well told story.![]()
Yeah it doesn't always work out. In TNG they gave us the Nebula-class in "The Wounded" and that was one ugly looking kitbash.
To be fair, though, the FJ designs were really kitbashes themselves although of the 2D variety.
Another interesting thing about "The Ultimate Computer" is how M5 goes down. No pyrotechnics or freezing itself with illogic. It just stops and turns itself off, essentially the closest thing to what a computer today might do. Today a computer would freeze and then you have to reboot it. Of course M5 was an AI so it just turned itself off. Interesting.
And regardless of how the tests turned out I'm sure there'd still be lots of positive things to be learned from the M5 and the work Daystrom put into it.
Not to get the thread too far off track, I think that one of the reasons for the Nebula's popularity was that it was related to the Reliant's design. The Reliant was a popular ship, far more than the Excelsior, and the Nebula fed what I remember as a desire to see the 24th century equivalent. One thing in the Nebula's favor was that it did look pretty good when it showed up at the end of Generations.
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