Baggage you wish Star Trek could be free of?

Discussion in 'General Trek Discussion' started by Autistoid, Apr 26, 2015.

  1. Autistoid

    Autistoid Captain

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    Alright we all know that star trek wasn't developed with modern standards in mind, nor was there unlimited amount of resources to develop the series.


    So what are some pieces of baggage that annoy you, with respect to carry over.


    I personally don't like holodecks or transporters.

    Holodecks were a late add on, and seem to make little sense relative to what we now understand as a more likely version of VR.

    Transporters on the other hand are much more an issue of production. Obviously craft launches and landings would of been too expensive without, however at this point seems to be a needless part of the show.

    EDIT: Be clear I'm not completely against transporters I just think they have been over used, and often get in the way of more interesting possibilities.
     
  2. Christopher

    Christopher Writer Admiral

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    There's a ton of baggage I'd like to see discarded if Trek were rebooted from scratch, all the stuff rooted in the '60s origins of the show and the earlier pulps that influenced it. The human-centrism, the predominance of characters from Western cultures with names of mostly British or Irish origin, the abundance of humanoid and human-appearing aliens, the lack of genetic engineering and transhumanism, the rarity of sentient or superintelligent AIs, the lack of advanced materials and molecular engineering, the inclusion of psi powers, etc. I'd also ditch the tendency to create new random aliens-of-the-week that are never seen again, and instead put more effort into developing a more limited pool of races and building a more cohesive picture of the Federation's members and neighbors.

    Oh, and a more coherent treatment of sensors. No more treating them as something separate from visual observation (e.g. "We can see it but sensors don't register it"); surely sensors would include telescopes. Anything in the open on a planet surface could be directly, visually observed from orbit, as spy satellites can do today. No "sensor interference" would prevent that unless it were actual opaque clouds or something. Also, "sensor range" should be effectively limitless, allowing only for resolution and lightspeed lag; there are no horizons in space. Eventually, powerful enough telescopes should let us image and map alien worlds from parsecs away, so no more stories where the characters know nothing about a star system until they reach it. (And no more falling out of orbit when the engines go off. The Moon doesn't need engines. Orbit isn't powered flight.)


    I'm not so sure about that anymore. I've read that there are some fundamental limitations to something like VR goggles or the Oculus Rift or the like, since our eyes are always going to focus differently on a close-up image than a distant one, so a close-up image pretending to be distant is always going to confuse the brain. Also there's the time lag between when we turn our heads and when the VR updates the image to follow, which can be made smaller but not eliminated entirely. So that kind of VR may never be perfectly convincing or comfortable, and could cause motion sickness or the like for some people. The same could conceivably go for direct sensory induction, since there's going to be a difference between what you're made to see/feel and what your body actually senses about its environment. So that would only work if your perception of reality were completely suppressed and overridden by the illusion, and that could be potentially hazardous.

    So it might be that, once the technology is available, something like a holodeck would be a better, more convincing alternative than the kinds of VR you usually see in fiction.


    If I did keep transporters, I'd ditch the dematerialization angle and make them wormhole-based. That would be simpler, more plausible (to a degree), and closer to how they're generally depicted as working anyway.
     
  3. Melakon

    Melakon Admiral In Memoriam

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    I get tired of "fans" demanding what they want or don't want to see in Star Trek.
     
  4. Makarov

    Makarov Fleet Captain Fleet Captain

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    Baggage hmm that's a hard one, I personally like the transporter/holodeck a lot. Maybe the borg? Love the borg but I get a little tired of them after voyager and want a new bad guy race. Their stories with 7 of 9 became baggage to me after a while. Wouldn't mind if they showed up in JJ's trek but I also kind of want a new enemy.

    But I pretty much enjoy the new movies and there's not much in them that I'd want filtered out from the old shows. If anything I want them to use more of the old stuff.
     
  5. Christopher

    Christopher Writer Admiral

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    But that's what fans do. That's called engaging critically with the work rather than just being a passive sponge. Most creators would rather have their audiences be engaged to think about the work, ask questions, and give constructive feedback. If your audience has no opinions about your work other than passive acceptance, that's something most creators would see as a failure.
     
  6. Melakon

    Melakon Admiral In Memoriam

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    I just remember people saying "We're going to boycott Wrath of Khan if Spock dies".
     
  7. Shaka Zulu

    Shaka Zulu Commodore Commodore

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    Me too, and I wish that said 'fans' would find something else to be a fan of.
     
  8. Kilana2

    Kilana2 Vice Admiral Admiral

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    I think the holodeck has its use. I think of the training/education of physicians or medical staff. Training with holograms could be more realistic than with dummies.

    There is a lot Christopher mentioned, I support unconditionally. I would throw overboard stereotypes that still exist (people of German origin all being tall, blond with blue eyes for instance). I have a friend from Egypt. He is a christian, having a biblical first name. Some people think he is Muslim like the majority. He always has to explain himself, refering to his biblical name.

    I appreciate the multicultural approach aboard Titan. It is what fascinated me about it in the first place, even though I had my problems with picturing some of the aliens.

    As to psi powers: Kes with her developing psi powers scared me sometimes. And her MU counterpart with uncontrolled abilities all the more. :rolleyes:
     
  9. Orphalesion

    Orphalesion Rear Admiral Rear Admiral

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    I agree that the Holodeck has its uses; Hollow Pursuits is an excellent episode that uses and explores the implications of a device like that.
    In other episodes it was used to recreate a "crime scene" such as in "Identity Crisis" which is also an excelent use of the device as are "farewell messages" like Tasha's of Jack Crusher's.

    However I don't need episodes like "The Big Goodbye" or a "Fistful of Datas" (or Janeway's holonovel) where the characters just LARP a story from an entirely different genre.
    If I wanted to see Victorian Gothic, a hardboiled Detective story or a Western I would watch or read something from those genres. When I watch Star Trek I want spaceships and aliens, so don't replace my spaceships and aliens with Picard's shitty private detective fanfic.

    Other than that I can't really say I want Star Trek to be completely rid of any of it's "baggage" I love the complex and rich shared universe that has been built over the movies and shows.

    And if you want Star Trek without baggage then you are in luck as well, the Abramsverse is prety much Star Trek without it's "baggage".
     
  10. Kilana2

    Kilana2 Vice Admiral Admiral

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    Dixon Hill, Flodder or Captain Proton are questionable. Some of the episodes sucked, others were entertaining. But I don´t need that to be overused. You could use the holodeck for your daily workouts, including swimming in an olympic sized pool or riding a horse, which you can´t normally do aboard a starship. I appreciate Picards fondness of books. Of real ones made of paper, no data padds, ebooks etc...... Holodecks have one disadvantage: you can get addicted (like Barclay).
     
  11. Mr. Laser Beam

    Mr. Laser Beam Fleet Admiral Admiral

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    Ain't that the truth.

    As for baggage I'd love for them to get rid of:

    - "No money."
    - Acting like sanctimonious assholes when talking about, or even to, people from the past.
    - Section 31.
     
  12. Kilana2

    Kilana2 Vice Admiral Admiral

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    I´m not a friend of Section 31 either, but I´m curious about how Bashir and Douglas will fight it. I don´t know how they will accomplish that, thought. Fact is, this organization exists without admitting to do. It reeks of Machiavellism.
     
  13. Mr. Laser Beam

    Mr. Laser Beam Fleet Admiral Admiral

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    Almost forgot: The Borg Queen.

    In fact I wouldn't half mind if they got rid of the concept of 'assimilation' as well. Of people, anyway. Let the Borg be what they were in "Q Who": Interested ONLY in technology.

    And speaking of Q? Get rid of them too.
     
  14. Christopher

    Christopher Writer Admiral

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    That has nothing to do with this conversation, though. The extremism of a few does not discredit the more moderate and reasonable majority. Intelligent engagement and critique does not equal kneejerk denunciation. There are always going to be people who use fandom as an excuse for bitterness and hostility, but we shouldn't let them ruin the conversation for the rest of us.



    Maybe we don't, but unfortunately, the shows did, for the same reason that TOS needed improbable Earth-duplicate gangster planets and Nazi planets and Roman planets: to save money by reusing existing props, sets, and costumes from period productions. In an ideal world, we wouldn't have had any of these things, but commercial television is a realm of compromises, not ideals.

    One could try to discard that baggage in a new production, but we'd probably end up with new baggage, like a galaxy where every planet looks like the woods around Vancouver.


    It should've been, but it isn't really. Into Darkness in particular is laden with baggage left over from the Prime universe. Though hopefully Beyond will be able to shake free of it.
     
  15. Kilana2

    Kilana2 Vice Admiral Admiral

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    Could you please elaborate on that?
     
  16. Mr. Laser Beam

    Mr. Laser Beam Fleet Admiral Admiral

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    ^ TNG. "The Neutral Zone." 'Nuff said...

    And another thing. You all knew I'd get to this eventually... ;) I hated that reference to baseball no longer existing by the 23rd century because supposedly people don't like to play competitive sports anymore. The HELL? Get rid of that crap on the double. Indeed, go whole hog in the other direction. Show a state-of-the-art future ballpark, with room for hundreds of thousands of fans. And who knows how many teams exist in Trek's time? There could be hundreds of them. And an 'Interplanetary World Series' to boot. (The Cubs probably still haven't won... :evil: )
     
  17. Captain Clark Terrell

    Captain Clark Terrell Commodore Commodore

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    • Antagonists and anti-heroic characters with black-and-white value systems (even Gul Dukat loved his daughter, and Khan, his wife). I'd much rather have the regular cast pitted against someone who's their equal in every possible way, not someone boasting that week's weapon of mass destruction who's plans get foiled because someone stuffs a wad of chewing gum in its firing mechanism.
    • Along the same lines as above, I'd be okay with the Federation occasionally losing an important battle two, or even a prolonged war; one of the things I liked about DS9 was that Sisko took it on the chin a couple of times, a much more realistic depiction of what life in outer space is probably like.
    • Two-dimensional space battles. Space is big. Space does not have a horizon; therefore, it follows that ships can attack each other from various angles and vantage points. Not every confrontation has to involve vessels staring each other down as if they're about to have a playground fist-fight.
    • No windows on the bridge. I've never understood why ships that can travel at several times the speed of light can be fooled by sensor glitches or pockets of nebular gases. But as that seems to be the case, why not have an actual window on the bridge that the characters can see out of when their ship's sensors aren't working? There's no reason why the main viewer can't be a reinforced window to which overlying tactical displays and other items may be added with the push of a button.
    • Promotions are bad. It makes zero sense to have a character have the same job and rank for twenty years. I know that James Kirk much preferred sitting in the captain's chair to filing reports or filling out evaluations, but even high-ranking officers must accept the duties they've given. I've never understood why Kirk couldn't have been commanding a fleet of ships, with the Enterprise serving as his flag-ship (with Spock either in command or serving as Kirk's XO).
    --Sran
     
  18. T'Girl

    T'Girl Vice Admiral Admiral

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    The holodecks were definitely overused. I like the way DS9 often does it, where Miles and Julian say they were going to use the holodecks, but we the audience didn't have to "suffer" by actually seeing them in the holodeck.

    I would prefer the transporter was just a transportation device, and had no other special abilities.

    ESP and "psychic powers" have been the basis of more than a few good scenes and episodes, these would be lost. The Vulcan mind meld would be gone.

    You don't like people voicing their opinions?

    Which would be their privilege, they can choose to take their box office dollars elsewhere, and tell others that this is what they're going to do.

    [​IMG]
     
  19. Kilana2

    Kilana2 Vice Admiral Admiral

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    As a German I don´t share your baseball passion. It is soccer. Hux will confirm it. It´s odd, but I liked the DS9 baseball episode. It wasn´t so much about the game itself but about teamwork and having fun. And they didn´t overuse baseball. President Bacco and Kasidy Yates are big fans.

    People in the future obviously lost interest in sports like swimming or athletics. Sports like Parrises Squares and Velocity are trendy.
    New games are normal, but it annoys me when they treat established sports as old-fashioned and conservative.

    I´d like to see a swimming race involving Aili Lavena!!!!!
     
  20. hux

    hux Rear Admiral Rear Admiral

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    My only problem with the holodeck was that it developed almost into a form of physics defying magic. When Riker threw that stone at the wall to demonstrate it's scientific limits as a technology, that made it seem reasonable and grounded in some kind of reality

    A few seasons later however and it had advanced far too much into a technology that could almost do anything without any constraints. I don't mind holodeck based episodes but the technology shouldn't be allowed to do anything it wants just to make episodes more interesting

    The only baggage I'd like to see removed is the baggage of "taking damage during a fire fight". In other words whenever the ship gets shot at, everyone on the bridge wobbles across the ship and consoles explode. Maybe after shields have gone but when they're only down to 76% or something, the impact of an attack shouldn't be that troublesome for the ship.

    It made sense in the original series (a good visual for the audience) but I think we should have moved on with the later series. At this point it's not only baggage but has also become a shorthand way of parodying Star Trek (the rocking from one side of the ship to the other) time to drop that