In In Theory, Keiko commented about putting O'Brien's socks in the "cleaning processor".
Cleaning processor. Dynamite writing, that.

In In Theory, Keiko commented about putting O'Brien's socks in the "cleaning processor".
The ONE time anyone mentions doing laundry, it's an Asian woman. There's something there....In In Theory, Keiko commented about putting O'Brien's socks in the "cleaning processor".
Cleaning processor. Dynamite writing, that.![]()
Given that replicators did not exist in ENT or TOS, those Enterprises must have had a standard laundry however, just like in ST6, we saw the galley on the EntA.
Given that replicators did not exist in ENT or TOS, those Enterprises must have had a standard laundry however, just like in ST6, we saw the galley on the EntA.
In The Cost of Living, Worf complained to Troi about Alexander: "Before being allowed to play, he was to put his soiled clothing in the garment reprocessor." That does sound like de-materializing and re-materializing to me ("reprocessing").
However...
In In Theory, Keiko commented about putting O'Brien's socks in the "cleaning processor". It seemed to me at the time that was basically a space age washing machine. So perhaps you could put anything in there and it would come out clean.
It's one of those Great Mysteries...
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In "Patterns of Force," Kirk tells Uhura, "Patch historical computer into uniform section. I want McCoy outfitted as a Gestapo doctor Nazi Germany, old Earth date 1944. Make him a colonel."TOS Enterprise must have had something that worked like a replicator for clothing. Either that or they carried around WWII era Nazi uniforms "just in case" they ran into someone with a similar fashion sense.
This reminds me of a quote from The Flintstones. Wilma is toting a basket full of dirty clothes and complaining, "Wash day. If there's anything I hate, more than anything else in the whole world, it's doing the laundry."My daughter asked an interesting if somewhat trivial question at lunch today: Starting with TNG, when a crewperson takes off their clothes, I think the assumption is that they stick them in a dematerialization bin, and then replicate a new set for the next time they get dressed. (If I recall correctly, this assumption is backed up by at least one time when the replicators being on the fritz resulted in someone's uniform being the wrong size or similar.) And they probably do the same thing with their bedclothes and all sorts of other things. Well, alright, that seems logical, but what if a crewperson has a *unique* item such as a quilted blanket that has been in their family several generations, or a sweater knitted by an aunt, or whatever: how do they get them cleaned?
Do crew quarters have washer/dryers and we've just never seen them? Is there a secret laundry section of the ship that isn't on any of the schematics I've seen? Will hanging up the item in the shower and using the sonic function that I'm only presuming it has get items clean? Would they go to an open cargo hold and use the cargo replicators to replicate a washing machine and dryer to use, and then put THAT in the dematerializer each time? Would they use a scan of the item from when it was clean, and ask the transporter operators to beam away everything that wasn't in that scan? (Is this part of what O'Brien does with his time?)
No, it would just be a copy.Would a replicated antique truly be antique?I've been wondering what prevents anything from being stored as a replicator file. Including antiques and such.
I think Picard is one of those guys that talks the talk but walks his own walk. It's the only plausible explanation for why he is such a vocal proponent of 24th century values but buries himself in Victorian-era fantasies.
Resurrecting dead threads. If you find a thread that has not had a post in it in over a year, don't post in it. Start a new thread instead. You can, if necessary, link back to the old thread if something crucial is in the thread.
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