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"Enterprise" too advanced for 22nd Century

I did that in my first Department of Temporal Investigations novel, Watching the Clock. It was pretty damn hard to come up with a coherent, unifying explanation for all the Temporal Cold War stuff in ENT, and I'm still not entirely satisfied with what I went with, but at least I tried.
Well, I'll have to add that to the list.
 
I don't think the basic concept of the TWC was a terrible one, but the execution could have been much stronger. And the logic of it all was never right. Which, granted, usually is a problem with time travel stories, but it was much more noticeable in this case.

I always felt like it'd be a good way to explain some of the inconsistencies away to reveal that Daniels and the Temporal Agents weren't protecting the timeline, but were basically a temporal Section 31 type organization seeking to use time travel tech for their own agenda.
 
That, or it was different versions of Daniels and Future Guy almost every time. They managed to change history (for them, but corrected it from our point of view) and they changed with it. Archer's crew is the only group that is experiencing time in a linear fashion in the show, thus the Temporal Cold War sides and combatants could change depending on which timeline it trying to change the events of Archer's reality. That Archer manages to "end it" might be more a simple pattern of breaking out of a period of time that can be changed. Other periods of time might be protected (be it by the future's own best interest, temporal phenomenon that prevent effective time travel to that time periods. ...The Doctor is in? Something) this after a certain event, the TCW can't effect the area anymore directly, and will have to wait until, for late of a better phrase, the time is right.
 
Other periods of time might be protected (be it by the future's own best interest, temporal phenomenon that prevent effective time travel to that time periods. ...The Doctor is in? Something)

The model for that is Azimov - "The End of Eternity" 'The Hidden Years'...
Stops the 'adjustment bureau' messing
 
I agree!

One of the things that did put me off the series, other than my initial dislike for a pre-TOS series and the screwing up of established Trek history was that it did ooked too advanced.

If they wanted to do a pre-TOS series, then it should have looked more like TOS, the same computers, replicators, uniforms, yes EVERYTHING should have looked like TOS, maybe even more primitive.

Instead we got a ship which looked more like 24th century Voyager than a pre-TOS ship.

That's what I meant, Lynx. Who cares if the current production values are meant to be more sleek and modern compared to our time, I wanted more of a TOS-style feel of the show instead of the advanced look that we got, if the show was meant to be set in a pre-TOS series.
 
That's what I meant, Lynx. Who cares if the current production values are meant to be more sleek and modern compared to our time, I wanted more of a TOS-style feel of the show instead of the advanced look that we got, if the show was meant to be set in a pre-TOS series.

I still don't get what you mean by "advanced look." If anything, the ENT tech looked less advanced to me. It was closer to the technology we have today, closer to a NASA-style design (indeed, the designers were heavily influenced by NASA cockpits, jumpsuits, and the like). It was more familiar, less exotic. The TOS technology design, once you look past the limitations on production capabilities and materials in creating it, looks farther removed from modern technology, more streamlined and simple in the way that more advanced technology tends to be, more fanciful in a way that suggests it's based on unfamiliar principles that haven't been invented yet. Same with the costume design -- the ENT uniforms were of a familiar style, NASA-type jumpsuits with zippers and pockets and baseball caps, while the TOS uniforms were more exotic and futuristic, with no apparent fasteners (the actual costumes' zippers were hidden under the shoulder seams, to imply that they were fastened by some more advanced means).
 
That's what I meant, Lynx. Who cares if the current production values are meant to be more sleek and modern compared to our time, I wanted more of a TOS-style feel of the show instead of the advanced look that we got, if the show was meant to be set in a pre-TOS series.
Ent isn't a prequel to TOS, it's a prequel to all the shows, and a sequel to "First Contact."
 
Also, the thing about the word "prequel" is that it's essentially a portmanteau of "preceding sequel" or "previous sequel." It is a sequel, a story that's created later and is a narrative followup and elaboration on the earlier work; it's just a sequel that's set in a time preceding the earlier work. It's earlier in terms of story events but later in terms of the narrative and creative development of the series. So it's not the same thing as just an earlier story, and it has elements that an earlier story wouldn't have.
 
I have many, many issues with Enterprise, but the level of technology isn't really one of them. Just like Discovery, they had to do a show that was realistically in our future while still trying to make it in the 'past' of the preceding shows. A difficult task, especially without a hand wave like the Kelvin incident to explain away changes. They did alright within those constraints.

And the area I think they did best was the uniforms. Updated NASA jumpsuits with design features of later shows which gave it a Star Trek feel. One of Trek's best costume designs, in my eye.
 
For me. "In A Mirror Darkly" cemented everything together. It brought together both the 22nd-Century and the 23rd-Century and showed that it was just a matter of different designs between the two eras and that there need not be a direct evolution between them. But as far as capability, a Constitution-class ship totally beats a NX-class ship in every way, IMO.
 
For me. "In A Mirror Darkly" cemented everything together. It brought together both the 22nd-Century and the 23rd-Century and showed that it was just a matter of different designs between the two eras and that there need not be a direct evolution between them. But as far as capability, a Constitution-class ship totally beats a NX-class ship in every way, IMO.
Precisely precisely!
 
Yes, but most of the shows that had series finales back then (and there weren't that many) were sitcoms. As I said, I was only aware of two '60s dramas that had finales.

There were five series of the '60's (four of them dramas) that had definite endings:

Leave It To Beaver

Route 66

The Fugitive

The Lieutennant

Hank
 
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Discovery shouldn't reference aliens or elements from others series? Isn't the series plot based on something referenced in TOS?
 
Discovery shouldn't reference aliens or elements from others series? Isn't the series plot based on something referenced in TOS?

Where do you get "shouldn't" from what I said? I'm just saying I doubt the creators of this show will limit themselves exclusively to rehashing TOS minutiae, because that would be lazy and derivative, and surely that's the last thing we want from a Star Trek revival. As for Talos IV in particular, the events of "The Cage" were highly classified by Starfleet, so I very much doubt the crewmembers of the Discovery or Shenzhou will be chatting about them around the water cooler.
 
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