I wonder...how would we re-imagine the neck-tie Gene wore when he was stumping to sell "The Cage" to the network reps...
Forget the tie, go with a turtleneck and sport jacket.
I wonder...how would we re-imagine the neck-tie Gene wore when he was stumping to sell "The Cage" to the network reps...
I wonder...how would we re-imagine the neck-tie Gene wore when he was stumping to sell "The Cage" to the network reps...
Forget the tie, go with a turtleneck and sport jacket.
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If it must be updated, I must say the Motorola Krave design immediately made me think of the communicator.
Well, I've got a "Master Replicas" communicator and honestly, from a "human interaction" standpoint, I think it's a nearly perfect size and shape. Wah Chang was a very smart guy, and he designed it to fit the human hand. I actually wish more "cell phone" manufacturers would follow suite today... the average cell phone is actually less comfortable to hold in the hand than this thing is.Let's assume you had a shot at either the forbidden TOS Year 4 or TMP.
How would you re-imagine the TOS hand-talkie communicators?
I've read that some people think that since cellphones in our Consumer Culture offer more functionality, the TOS hand-talkies seem out of place. I can see the point, but I'm not entirely in agreement. I see the 23rd century TOS communicators as deliberately limited-purpose field gear: simple, minimally functional, and easy to fabricate or maintain. Look at how easy Spock re-assembled a communicator in "Patterns of Force", with no equipment to work with!
A Starfleet-issue communicator is obviously a subspace transceiver; it can apparently transmit over interplanetary and perhaps extra-star-system distances. ("Mudd's Women", "Metamorphosis"). Does this sound plausibly sufficient, or should Captain Kirk have an iPhone 233G? Remember, out on the frontier, there are no cell towers...
Which is utterly useless without a massive satellite infrastructure in place, and are pretty large (again, those pesky laws of physics coming into play!) and so forth.^
You know you can go out and buy a satellite phone right now.
Well, I've got a "Master Replicas" communicator and honestly, from a "human interaction" standpoint, I think it's a nearly perfect size and shape. Wah Chang was a very smart guy, and he designed it to fit the human hand. I actually wish more "cell phone" manufacturers would follow suite today... the average cell phone is actually less comfortable to hold in the hand than this thing is.
well they changed the Enterprise...lets see how they screw up everything else we hold dear
The problem with this is that there are real, "laws of physics" issues you have to deal with. Energy storage may be improved dramatically (using those mystical "sarium krellide" magic crystals), and computational power will inevitably become so dense and great that you could put the entire computing power of contemporary Earth's combined computers into a single hand-held box (meaning that the LOGIC functions of a communicator would be able to dance on the head of a pin!)I hope it's slimmed down just a bit and made to look less like a toy.
People keep bringing up the fact that it's far more powerful than
any cellphone we have now, but everything is going to be far more
advanced in two hundred years, I think they would be able to put it
in a bit more economical box.
That sort of RF transmission power simply cannot be reduced in size to a "chest badge." (And if, by some magical method, it WERE reduced that much, you'd barbeque the user's chest hair every time you used it anyway!)
While I'm willing to give you the "real world points" on the TOS communicator's RF capabilities ... when was it ever shown that the TNG-and-later-era commbadges were ever capable of anything but subspace communication?
There is no such thing as "Star Trek technology" except within fiction, though. There is REAL science, and then there is fantasy.I think you guys are severely underestimating Trek technology.
I stand by my previous comment.
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