Like I said, pure fanwank.
What you're asserting has never been definitively stated in the entire history of Star Trek.
Never stated on screen. But the Okudas did state that they generally created them in chronological order.
Like I said, pure fanwank.
What you're asserting has never been definitively stated in the entire history of Star Trek.
I really wished that I agreed. The show is tedious thus far, with characters making stupid mistakes to move the plot forward, characters contradicting themselves, characters contradicting information they had already given us.
For me, the show is an unabashed mess on contradictions. Something that wants to be Battlestar Galactica (2004) with arrowhead badges.
Like Georgius telescope that survived the battle.
The spinning saucer is indicative of a show that had a ton of money to spend. Too bad they didn't spend more on the writing.
I think the biggest factor impacting the writing is how the writers seem more focused on ticking fanwank boxes than crafting a rich story.
One problem is that they aren't going the right way about that. You can see where they're trying to do that, but those checked boxes open up more questions, as opposed to checking the obvious ones.I think the biggest factor impacting the writing is how the writers seem more focused on ticking fanwank boxes than crafting a rich story.
That's how I have always seen it, a continuous line of registry numbers in sequence with some exceptions here and there.Saying it definitively doesn't make it true. NX 74205, NCC 74656, NCC 72905, versus NCC 1701, 1031, 0514, 2000, 1017, etc.
There are definitely exceptions to the rule, but broadly it certainly appears indicative of age.
Since the space scenes are all CG, it's probably cheaper to spin the saucer than it was to make Voyager's engines pop up.The spinning saucer is indicative of a show that had a ton of money to spend. Too bad they didn't spend more on the writing.
And the idea that Starfleet went back to the Shenzhou and collected the telescope but left a key piece of tech and then didn't even investigate T'Whothehellcares ship is a real head scratcher.
I'm sort of frightened how low the lowest common denominator in the audience really is... What sort of a brain can come of with this sort of convoluted nonsense and then blame the writers?
I mean, yeah, sorry about the insult and all that. But you started it, by insulting the intelligences of pretty much everybody involved. And it's not as if standing up in defense of the writers could be done without insulting you back.
Timo Saloniemi
Actually, you'll find it can be, quite easily. You could, for example, offer an alternative interpretation with an explanation.And it's not as if standing up in defense of the writers could be done without insulting you back
I'm sort of frightened how low the lowest common denominator in the audience really is... What sort of a brain can come of with this sort of convoluted nonsense and then blame the writers?
I mean, yeah, sorry about the insult and all that. But you started it, by insulting the intelligences of pretty much everybody involved. And it's not as if standing up in defense of the writers could be done without insulting you back.
Timo Saloniemi
The whole Starfleet technical hygiene or whatever Burnham called it was non-sense. And the idea that Starfleet went back to the Shenzhou and collected the telescope but left a key piece of tech and then didn't even investigate T'Whothehellcares ship is a real head scratcher.
Maybe you can tell me why it is smart writing to retrieve a telescope yet leave the exact piece of equipment that the Klingons need to restore power to their ship? Why it was smart writing for the Klingons to just float there for six months? Why it was smart writing for Starfleet not to investigate the ship that can appear and disappear that is laying a few thousand kilometers from the Shenzhou and in their territory? Why it left the Shenzhou floating when they are supposed to have impeccable technical hygiene?
It’s also somewhat emberassing for some of the true believers, which can cause them to lash out with personal attacks. IMHO anyways.
I won't speak for other TV series like The Expanse (which I like a great deal), but I do know that in terms of Star Trek series and movies, there's is not a single one of them that is not chock full of little technical or continuity errors like this regardless of the quality of the writing. My main issues with the writing on DSC don't extend to minor quibbles like the telescope. I'll point them out in a review of the episode or in a forum discussion, but it plays little part in the overall grading of the episode. Dialogue, plotting, and characterization are far more important than little technical issues.A well written show doesn’t have these inconsistencies.
And making the crew space sick!Unfortunately, Starfleet banned the spinning saucers as they were distracting to other starships.
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