Agreed. And sometimes, we'll just have to accept our baby isn't growing up to be as beautiful, clever and intelligent as we thought it would be, compared to the next generation.
I think you've missed the point entirely.What trick are you trying to pull, exactly? In modern terms, you can send an amphibious warfare vessel to land a bunch of troops on some crappy little island country and perform a lightning raid for a hostage rescue or whatever. The same vessel can also drop 3000 troops and support the first stage of a major invasion/occupation mission.How long do you want to leave Enterprise and her "army of scientists" in orbit around that planet? Six years or so might do the trick...
Now Starfleet does not invade planets or occupy them, so what we have here is the "carrier exploration group" so to speak. It's designed to deliver expeditionary missions to their operations area and support them from orbit with shuttlecraft and material support. This can either be short term "scout and look" missions in preparation for a larger ship, or it can be the first stage of a longer term exploration mission after which Enterprise will leave orbit sans twenty shuttlecraft and twenty five hundred persons (not to mention a subspace communications rig and a few hundred tons worth of sheetmetal and insulation).
Um... you happen to know how interstellar exploration of alien planets works in real life?Nah... that's not how it works in real life, and I don't want to see it work that way in fiction, either.![]()
Do I really think that a ship can deliver a huge number of researchers to a planet in a short period of time? Yes. Do I really think that a ship can support the efforts of those researchers for a sufficient enough time that they can become at least short-term independent? Absolutely yes. At issue here is whether the ORIGINAL ship could have accomplished this as well as the new one given its much smaller size. I explained why I don't think so, because the original would be extremely limited in the extent and thoroughness of its report and in any case doesn't have the capacity to land and support an operation this size; indeed, it doesn't seem to be DESIGNED for that anyway.Do you REALLY think that a job like that can be done by a single ship, in a short period of time?
Not designing rationally is illogical. But if that is not "kewl" throw reason out?
Even though it's an ugly one who poops and pisses.
Actually, I'm now persona non grata with ILM, just because of this non-article and the fact that I called Steve K of their PR dept. on his shenanigans. Funny how nothing like that never happened as a result of anything I wrote and sold about them.
Even though it's an ugly one who poops and pisses.
The prettiest of babies do that too, as you may find out one day.
Except, of course, for the Original Dancing Baby, because he's CG.![]()
It was a blog post, but it wasn't Eaves'. And the blog that posted it deleted the entry so we're not even sure of that anymore.
John Eaves, March 16, 2009 at 1:15 pm
I did make it on the new one!!! My friend Geoffry Mandell and I were some of the only folks that worked on any of the previous Treks to get on the new one. One day Geoff had to scale the Enterprise and he did so by picturing the new ship in comparison to the previous ships,, He was let go the next day for being to attached and close to the older shows,,,,, I stayed very very quiet after that dark day I can tell you!!! HAAAA!
Actually, I'm now persona non grata with ILM, just because of this non-article and the fact that I called Steve K of their PR dept. on his shenanigans. Funny how nothing like that never happened as a result of anything I wrote and sold about them.
Well if you treated them with the attitude you've been displaying in your posts these last few months, I can see why they no longer want anything to do with you.
It does, though. You can dismiss it all you like with your "I wrote a bunch of articles for a bunch of magazines," but the ships in Trek XI look big, while the ships in TMP (though gorgeous) look like plastic models in comparison.
This is true. trevanian continually makes assertions on the subject of CG versus practical models that aren't well-founded in current fact so much as in an extreme attachment to an obsolete set of conventions and outdated observations - "it doesn't look like the way movies used to look" is not synonymous with "it doesn't look real." Some of what he says was true a decade ago, but the experiences of the vast majority of people who actually watch movies simply belie his fixed opinions. Nor does dismissively quoting dialogue from old TV shows or bad no-budget movies of the 1970s constitute supporting argument.
Heh... that IS kinda funny.
I wonder if Mandel got fired for starting some kind of "It violates teh canon!" argument with Abrams?
Well here's something else that I found online it's a cutaway of the new Enterprise done by Robert Saint John based on the 725m size. From what he's done the size seems to make sense and it puts the deck count at 33. http://www.startrekmovie.com/forums/showthread.php?t=7485&page=9
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