One that's new to my wish list is a book set in the
Star Trek: Online universe featuring the new
Enterprise-F and her crew. Never played
Online--nor have any intention to--but seeing the winning fan-based design that CBS and Cryptic Studios finally settled on really kind of stirred up my post-24th Century imagination again.
Design differences between the
Enterprise-E and the
Enterprise-F:
(warning: really huge photo)
http://img194.imageshack.us/img194/9875/enterprisecompare.jpg
Odd surface texture on that design. It makes it look like a diecast toy of a starship rather than a huge starship.
How very sexist of you to feel that the only reason Marvick would want the ship named after Miranda Jones is because she's his girlfriend. Couldn't she have done something that would warrent havign a ship named after her that would be more fitting that naming it after a, to them, fictional character? Did she make first contact with the Medusans? Or bring the Federation and the Medusans closer? Why would the only reason be that Marvick was in love with her? It could be seen as acknowledgement of deep admiration for her achievements that, unknown to her, as grown into love.
What the
hell?! Before you go around hurling such a hateful accusation at someone you've never even met, you should try WATCHING THE DAMN EPISODE. Or reading
the transcript at least. In "Is There In Truth No Beauty?," Marvick is irrationally obsessed with Miranda Jones. She's rejected multiple marriage proposals from him and yet he still pursues her. He doesn't give a damn about her accomplishment with the Medusans; he begs her not to go with Kollos even though it's her life's work, and is so fiercely jealous that he attempts to murder the ambassador. He's so irrational that he doesn't even protect himself with a visor, despite being forewarned of the danger.
So it's right there in the script. Marvick has no respect for Miranda's career or her accomplishments or even her right to say no. He's obsessed with her as an object of romantic desire and is willing to murder the being that he thinks is keeping him from possessing her. And you think the sexism here is coming from
me?! What the
hell!
I'm not saying that it's the most likely explanation, just that I'd prefer that the names refer to real people more that a character from a book. What does that say about the number of people that you could honour with naming a ship after them when a ficitonal character is deemed more deserving.
First off, as has already been stated, Miranda is also the name of a moon of Uranus. The
Luna-class ships such as
Titan are also named for moons within the Sol system; is it so implausible that it might not be the only class thus named? And what about the runabouts named after rivers? Or the ships named after cities like the
Bozeman and the
Melbourne?
Second, if a class of ship were named after a person, it would not be on a first-name basis. Come on, the nuclear-powered aircraft carriers belong to the
Nimitz class, not the
Chester class. Ships named after people are given their surnames or their full names, not just their first names. So if the
Miranda class were named after a person, it would have to be someone whose
last name was Miranda.