No, don't be THAT sarcastic, but I truly don't get the problem so many have with the joystick from Insurrection. Someone, let me know why it failed.
It's supposed to be a manually operated steering column. How much more advanced could it possibly get? It's GOING to look like a joystick.
Well, that and the fact that it didn't look cheap and plastic-y as hell.Funnily enough, when George Kirk flew his ship with a joystick in the 2009 movie, it spectacularly failed to look like a gaming device and managed to look like military hardware (and something from a pseudo-1960s military to boot!)...It's supposed to be a manually operated steering column. How much more advanced could it possibly get? It's GOING to look like a joystick.
It's supposed to be a manually operated steering column. How much more advanced could it possibly get? It's GOING to look like a joystick.
Funnily enough, when George Kirk flew his ship with a joystick in the 2009 movie, it spectacularly failed to look like a gaming device and managed to look like military hardware (and something from a pseudo-1960s military to boot!)...
Simplicity was key to that.
Timo Saloniemi
I'm just curious why the darn thing was needed to begin with. We've seen a variety of Starships do a lot more complicated maneuvers (Defiant for instance) than simply turning a bit to starboard. You could have had Riker simply punch some buttons on the helm station and the scene wouldn't have been different.
I guess if you want the six year old explanation, the reason for the joystick was for theatrics. You know your space action scene is lacking when the idea of making it more exciting is by having the joystick pop out of nowhere so you can take the center stage.
Well, if it was used like a Wii controller...Personally, though, I sort of wished they had the TNG Tech Manual at hand--which implied that a ship could actually be flown by someone walking down a corridor with a PADD (as it could be reconfigured as a conn interface like any console could). But I suppose someone steering the ship with a hand-held device wouldn't be dramatic-looking enough...
Which actually shows another point against the joystick because manual control can be accessed from almost any console during TNG. Picard was able to fly the Enterprise-D under manual control (also without any computer involvement) from the conn station in "Booby Trap." No joystick was required then...^ But that would presuppose that the computer is still controlling the ship's movements. The joystick, OTOH, was for pure manual control, without any computer involvement.C.E. Evans said:Personally, though, I sort of wished they had the TNG Tech Manual at hand--which implied that a ship could actually be flown by someone walking down a corridor with a PADD (as it could be reconfigured as a conn interface like any console could). But I suppose someone steering the ship with a hand-held device wouldn't be dramatic-looking enough...
It's supposed to be a manually operated steering column. How much more advanced could it possibly get? It's GOING to look like a joystick.
To be fair, didn't that camera capture layers of skeleton, muscle, etc. when it took pictures of people? I'd love to see a contemporary digicam that can do that and is only a few inches square.
We've seen the evolution of the joystick
An "uncanny valley" for props. Interesting idea.ST:INS seems to have dropped deep down the "uncanny valley" here: if something is almost realistic, it doesn't convince anybody, but if it's completely fake, it gets a much better reception.
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