Cary L. Brown:
Your programming analogy is flawed. Simpler IS a matter of perspective, even there. I'll explain.
There was a certain degree of complexity in developing the personal computer in the first place. Then, in developing a file system and disk operating system and command-line programming languages. Then, in developing GUIs and visually-oriented programming languages. Not to mention all the steps needed to develop ARPAnet into the World Wide Web we know today. Were you to look at all of the actual code involved in executing a simple "Hello World" website at every level of its operation, on both the server and the machine viewing it, it is incredibly complex. But from my perspective as the page author, I typed a couple of lines into Notepad and saved them to the right location, and from the viewers perspective, they clicked a button. Simple.
If I had to build a comm system like I described before, now, it would be pretty complex. There would be all sorts of technologies that would have to be developed from the ground up, and dangerous surgeries to be performed on the recipients once that was done. In the 23rd century shown on Star Trek, transporters and nanites have been developed, and by TNG, they are routinely used for surgeries, eliminating almost all of the pain, danger, and hassle of that part of the process. The comm tech already exists and is routinely employed, and ditto for the extremely dense and tiny power tech used to power it. Having everything inserted, from the comm system itself to the nerve taps for subvocalization and the optic system would be .... simple. Something the (incredibly complicated through it's history of development, but now working very intuitively off of simple vocal commands) ship's computer could probably even do without anything more than being asked to do so.
But those people probably also would not be in Starfleet, much as it is almost unheard of to have Rastafarians in the United States military, since they are utter pacifists who smoke pot as part of their religious practice.
Your programming analogy is flawed. Simpler IS a matter of perspective, even there. I'll explain.
There was a certain degree of complexity in developing the personal computer in the first place. Then, in developing a file system and disk operating system and command-line programming languages. Then, in developing GUIs and visually-oriented programming languages. Not to mention all the steps needed to develop ARPAnet into the World Wide Web we know today. Were you to look at all of the actual code involved in executing a simple "Hello World" website at every level of its operation, on both the server and the machine viewing it, it is incredibly complex. But from my perspective as the page author, I typed a couple of lines into Notepad and saved them to the right location, and from the viewers perspective, they clicked a button. Simple.
If I had to build a comm system like I described before, now, it would be pretty complex. There would be all sorts of technologies that would have to be developed from the ground up, and dangerous surgeries to be performed on the recipients once that was done. In the 23rd century shown on Star Trek, transporters and nanites have been developed, and by TNG, they are routinely used for surgeries, eliminating almost all of the pain, danger, and hassle of that part of the process. The comm tech already exists and is routinely employed, and ditto for the extremely dense and tiny power tech used to power it. Having everything inserted, from the comm system itself to the nerve taps for subvocalization and the optic system would be .... simple. Something the (incredibly complicated through it's history of development, but now working very intuitively off of simple vocal commands) ship's computer could probably even do without anything more than being asked to do so.
This is the only valid point I've seen you bring in objection, and it is one that I have considered before. Some people may be disinclined to have this done for historical or religious reasons, or just a personal feeling of discomfort.Perhaps you simply have an objection to mutilation... you want to keep yourself "human," in other words, instead of becoming a "wetware" component of some mechanism.
But those people probably also would not be in Starfleet, much as it is almost unheard of to have Rastafarians in the United States military, since they are utter pacifists who smoke pot as part of their religious practice.