Better that than an AI teaching a bunch of cavemen how to fly 1000-year-old fighter jets in an inexplicably pristine condition so that they can fight the cabal of evil alien therapists that had created the AI in the first place.And they know kung-fu.
Better that than an AI teaching a bunch of cavemen how to fly 1000-year-old fighter jets in an inexplicably pristine condition so that they can fight the cabal of evil alien therapists that had created the AI in the first place.
Better that than an AI teaching a bunch of cavemen how to fly 1000-year-old fighter jets in an inexplicably pristine condition so that they can fight the cabal of evil alien therapists that had created the AI in the first place.
I don't get what this is a reference to.
The battle scene in question:^ The Battlefield: Earth movie.
Perhaps 32nd-century Starfleet technology is, by its very nature, easy to learn by many different species and cultures? So even a crew which comes from 900+ years ago would have little trouble learning it.
Lt. Willa did say that the new programmable matter stations on the Discovery would adapt to their users' preferences. So I think it's likely that 32nd-century tech is specifically designed to be easy to learn how to operate, no matter who's making the attempt. Hell, any one of US could probably learn it.![]()
Of course, the story changes when you also have to be able to repair a device. Most modern-day average users can't and simply ship it off to a specialist, but you would need such people aboard most self-reliant starships.
Basically, they had choices and could make choices around them. Never underestimate the power of a sense of control in new circumstances.I think the crew would get a handle of 32nd Century technology because they were eased into it and they're not too old to pick it up.
Contrast that with Scotty in "Relics" who was old, set in his ways, wasn't willing to re-train ("I'm not 18. I can't start out like a raw cadet!"), and wasn't eased into anything because he just barged into Engineering acting as if he could pick up right where he left off. Then was in for a rude awakening when he found out he couldn't.
The crew of Discovery knew they had to learn a bunch of new technology, they were open to it, and Starfleet kept the inside of Discovery looking the same, down to the same interfaces, so the crew could have a smooth transition as they acclimated.
I think the crew would get a handle of 32nd Century technology because they were eased into it and they're not too old to pick it up.
Contrast that with Scotty in "Relics" who was old, set in his ways, wasn't willing to re-train ("I'm not 18. I can't start out like a raw cadet!"), and wasn't eased into anything because he just barged into Engineering acting as if he could pick up right where he left off. Then was in for a rude awakening when he found out he couldn't.
The crew of Discovery knew they had to learn a bunch of new technology, they were open to it, and Starfleet kept the inside of Discovery looking the same, down to the same interfaces, so the crew could have a smooth transition as they acclimated.
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