Not just the Excelsior, the Enterprise also featured triple bunks (shown when luring Valeris to Sickbay)This was also the case with the Excelsior in STVI, shame we didn't see more of it in later shows.

Not just the Excelsior, the Enterprise also featured triple bunks (shown when luring Valeris to Sickbay)This was also the case with the Excelsior in STVI, shame we didn't see more of it in later shows.
I would go for "completely canonical," but I can't go with a qualified "completely" option, when I don't agree with the qualification.
LDS episodes are not like lost Doctor Who episodes restored with animation, because LDS episodes were never filmed before.
Not just the Excelsior, the Enterprise also featured triple bunks (shown when luring Valeris to Sickbay)
He was a department head. And, yes, he should been promoted. Especially given the circumstances.Harry Kim was only a couple of months out of the Academy, so in what specific way(s) was he more amazing than a corridor full of Cerritos bunkmates? He was content to remain an ensign for seven years, even though he could have become a lieutenant commander or even a commander if he was that accomplished, without the promotions costing Janeway anything.
They can't? They are there to serve in Starfleet and where the need is. California is one type, stations like DS9 another, and Intrepid class still another. Not a matter of status as much as a matter of need.But ensigns can’t accept such stark differences in accomodations without also perceiving them as indicative of their status, so we are back to asking what accomplishments (at the Academy) made Harry Kim so different from ensigns bunking in that corridor.
The problem is, even the live action fudges things and gets it wrong visually or in sound here and there. There have been production errors on every show, as well as compromises made in order to present things on television (and in film).I don’t dispute that LD is canon, just that its detailed continuity translates literally into live action (audiovisual changes only where live action can’t physically follow).
They can't? They are there to serve in Starfleet and where the need is. California is one type, stations like DS9 another, and Intrepid class still another. Not a matter of status as much as a matter of need.
The problem is, even the live action fudges things and gets it wrong visually or in sound here and there. There have been production errors on every show, as well as compromises made in order to present things on television (and in film).
We are also in the position now of having two canonical and differing visualizations of Pike-era people, places, and things, including the Enterprise herself, both inside and inside.
None of it translates literally; none of it could, because it's all made up by humans.
I'm so over the idea that it's as if we are looking at historical documents. That's so last millennium for me.
By extension, whether the show is live-action or animated is also irrelevant.
And the California class is not premium posting. So, when one is assigned to such a ship then the accommodations will be such. So, it's either lesser positing due to inexperience (as in everyone does the night shift in their career) or it is simply that based upon ranking in the Academy and academic achievement. Or a combination of factors.We know it’s not totally arbitrary whether one is assigned to the Enterprise-D or elsewhere. The ship was said to be a premium posting. Riker didn’t want to move. O’Brien went to DS9 so he could be the equivalent of chief engineer there.
No, they don't.Yes, and those have to be reconciled in their own ways if there is an interest in maintaining the shared continuity.
Until its events are verified to be canonical, I see Lower Decks as a parody. A very fun parody, but a parody. I just wish some existing episodes in other Treks could be declared the same. Starting with Threshold, A Night in Sickbay, and Sub Rosa.
I say this as a heavy parody writer, so I know the signs.
The same ones that made Kelvin Timeline Kirk a captain before he graduated andBut ensigns can’t accept such stark differences in accomodations without also perceiving them as indicative of their status, so we are back to asking what accomplishments (at the Academy) made Harry Kim so different from ensigns bunking in that corridor.
If I may be so bold, it was a mistake for you to briefly lose the afro. Commanding a starship as Carl Spock is your first, best destiny: anything else is a waste of afro.I wish I had his swag.
And hair.
Either Kirk.
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