But she will run into encrypted communications, something that happened a few times in TOS.3. Cryptography? Uhura was the radioman on the bridge, not a codebreaker. Not her job.
That's why you have a cryptography division. You don;t have your radioman do it,But she will run into encrypted communications, something that happened a few times in TOS.
That's not a story. That's a situation. As Gene R. would say, "Where's the action? How are our people involved?"Here is a possible story idea. Uhura discovers that some people's communications are encrypted, but she finds a way out of that. She finds out who is talking to who, and that leads her to discover who are the most important people in that society.
Uhura isn't chained to her station. She can be officer of the watch and she can take charge of the cryptography division. The issue is more that she was rarely allowed to do anything more than be the radioman despite the possibilities.That's why you have a cryptography division. You don;t have your radioman do it,
That's not a story. That's a situation. As Gene R. would say, "Where's the action? How are our people involved?"
But she will run into encrypted communications, something that happened a few times in TOS.
Intercepting and deciphering the communications of someone who doesn't want you to have their information, and having the background knowledge to put it into context to figure out what it really means, is really a different discipline that what Uhura was shown doing.
I had friends who worked intelligence/crypto in the Navy, and they never manned a switchboard or did radio stuff.Uhura isn't chained to her station. She can be officer of the watch and she can take charge of the cryptography division.
Grace Lee Whitney said she was the advocate for the miniskirt,
Herb Solow and Robert. Justman back this up in Inside Star Trek: The Real Story.
So not just her say so.
In my mind Uhura's background was more in the technical fields than in linguistics. That's why you saw her doing things like repairing her console or taking over the navigator's station. That would also explain the red uniform - her normal duties were more related to engineering than command.
To make the situation more palatable to our modern way of thinking it would have been good to see women having the pants option - having some female extras wearing pants on occasion in most episodes.
We also have to consider 23rd century computers probably change the way cryptography works . With quantum cryptography requiring a computer and being very difficult to crack. Cryptography is probably one nerd and a coffee machine.I had friends who worked intelligence/crypto in the Navy, and they never manned a switchboard or did radio stuff.
Sulu and Chekov sit at a desk all day, Kirk spends a lot of his day sitting, plus with the shortness of the skirt he'd have far greater ease of movement without worrying about his trousers tearing when engaged in Kirk-Fu.I suppose if most of your job involved sitting at a desk all day, you might not mind it. Whatever's comfortable.
That's not restricted only to McCoy, although it's much more pronounced with McCoy. There are many other examples of crew members basically being insubordinate to Spock. A theme running through the whole series is that Spock must be repeatedly challenged on his perceived lack of humanity and compassion. I don't know whether that was intentional or just something that many writers latched on to and exploited.Spock's biggest mistake was letting McCoy get away with his behavior - but Kirk always allows McCoy to do whatever he wants so perhaps Spock thinks he's got to do it too.
[End of rant]
I totally agree. McCoy was always busting Spock's chops over the way he ran the ship. Easy to criticize when someone else is having to make the tough decisions.
I had friends who worked intelligence/crypto in the Navy, and they never manned a switchboard or did radio stuff.
Yeah I confess, I always viewed her as a technician but in the one episode where she does technical work, she says she hasn't done it since the academy and I can't recall any other occasions where she helped anybody else on engineering tasks, despite opportunities. So canon-wise, she should probably have remained in yellow as a command officer.
Taking as granted the fact that Nichelle really did look better in red than in gold-colored avocado, and moving on to try to posit an in-universe explanation, I would guess that communications involved electronics, maybe duotronics, certainly subspace technology, and so technical stuff. Uhura was certainly trained to repair and modify her own console under the hood, even though she hadn't needed to do it in years ("Who Mourns for Adonais?").How or why communications ends up in red in TOS is anybody's guess. It might be that green is flight and weapons control, blue is science (including medical science) and red is "everything else." Communications, propulsion, security, transporters, historians, lawyers etc. don't seem to line up naturally otherwise. Of course, when TMP expanded the divisions, Uhura got yellow, the same as Sulu. But whatever color she wore, it would certainly have been welcome to see her in charge on the bridge at some point.
Uhura was certainly trained to repair and modify her own console under the hood, even though she hadn't needed to do it in years
Quite true.There's usually a handy engineering person nearby who can do it for her, and an auxiliary backup she can use until the primary is fixed.
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