My only major argument with what you just said is that, let's be honest here, people today are no more "tech savvy" than they were then.Therin of Andor said:
xortex said:
J.J. should really concentrate on other things than that which went right for TOS instead of substituting his own idea for what is more right than Roddenberries' TOS.
It's not that Abrams thinks he is "more right" than Roddenberry. TOS was made for the sensibilities of a TV audience of the 1960s that had not yet seen man conquer the moon. ST XI is being made for the cinema-going, tech-savvy general public of 2008.
Yes, the average man-on-the-street has an IPod and a cell phone. But he (or she) has NO IDEA ON EARTH HOW IT WORKS.
Yes, the average person knows how to click a mouse. But has no idea what actually happens inside of a computer.
Yes, the average person knows how to stick a key in the ignition and press down the pedals to make the car go, but has no idea what's actually happening inside of the various mechanisms under the hood.
Actually, from that standpoint, if anything, the "average person" today is a lot LESS "tech savvy" than they used to be. At least back then, most guys knew how to adjust the timing on their engine, properly gap their spark plugs, etc. Today, most men are incapable even of that sort of simple stuff.
Yes, the technology has moved ahead, but for MOST people, they're further-removed from understanding it, not closer to understanding it. It might as well be MAGIC for all the understanding that your "average person on the street" has of how these things work.
As is so well illustrated by the innane comments by Berman and Co, and by many on this board for that matter, that today's cell phones are "more advanced" than the classic TOS communicator.

Hell, most people here can't even apply basic reasoning, it seems... based upon the fact that so many people seem not to see why making everything "touch screens" isn't necessarily an improvement over having tactile controls.
I don't fundamentally disagree with your posted point... only with the proposition that "today's audiences are more tech savvy." In my experience, most people today are every bit as clueless, and IMHO are usually MORE clueless, about their "magical toys" than people were a few decades ago.