From Cracked: Transwarp beaming makes starships obsolete(?)
Huh...not sure *when* Scotty discovered transwarp beaming in the Prime Universe (it's likely that he did *after* being transported to the future - since it didn't seem to exist by early TNG's time, as far as we've seen)...but in any case, now that it was introduced in TOS' time - at the very least a few decades earlier if not a century - then by TNG's time, starships would be unnecessary for travel from star to star (but I would argue they still would be needed for exploration of worlds and systems we don't know much about)...
Anyway, from Cracked.com:
Huh...not sure *when* Scotty discovered transwarp beaming in the Prime Universe (it's likely that he did *after* being transported to the future - since it didn't seem to exist by early TNG's time, as far as we've seen)...but in any case, now that it was introduced in TOS' time - at the very least a few decades earlier if not a century - then by TNG's time, starships would be unnecessary for travel from star to star (but I would argue they still would be needed for exploration of worlds and systems we don't know much about)...
Anyway, from Cracked.com:
#6.
Star Trek (2009 version) Has Eliminated the Need for Starships
After young Kirk gets marooned on an ice planet, he enlists the help of Spock Classic and young Scotty (who are there for no adequately explored reason) to teleport aboard the Enterprise.
Hang on a second ...
For about 40 years, smartasses have been saying, "If the transporters have the ability to teleport people from place to place, why do they need ships?" And, through every episode and every film since the 1960s, the show explained it away as the transporters having some basic limitations: namely that they have a relatively short range -- only 40,000 kilometers, max. Essentially, it's useful only for getting on and off the Enterprise without the producers having to acquire the kind of budget they would need to animate the ship actually landing.
Now, the 2009 film has a major plot point where Kirk needs to be teleported onto the Enterprise, but the Enterprise is moving at warp speed at the time. Scotty figures out a way to do it, and the movie celebrates this achievement as being the first time anyone has ever been transported to an object moving that fast. But that isn't the point.
The Enterprise is shooting off at Warp 3 just before Scotty and Kirk beam aboard. Warp 3, by the way, is 27 times the speed of light. Or 5 million miles a second. That means that by the time Kirk has finished saying, "I really liked you in Shaun of the Dead," the Enterprise would be out of the solar system. A distance Scotty has no trouble overcoming with his transporter.
So, uh, why do we need spaceships again?
For the same reason we need classic cars and the Beastie Boys.
The characters don't seem to realize that what Scotty has actually done for space travel here is what e-mail did for the envelope industry. Any means of transportation that has more than zero mass and moves slower than literally instantaneously has suddenly become obsolete. We're only halfway through the first film of a new Star Trek franchise, and already we don't need the Enterprise anymore. By the time Picard is born, spaceships will be a relic of an older era.
Basically, they'll be the Star Trek equivalent of Betamax.
Read more: http://www.cracked.com/article_1903...world-changing-discoveries.html#ixzz1FCFDWBpe
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