Something like this could have also worked better.
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Now--wasn't that the one pointed at Scotty by the Vengeance guard?
Something like this could have also worked better.
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Not quiteNow--wasn't that the one pointed at Scotty by the Vengeance guard?
It's got three barrels (er, lenses), so I'm guessing the little one is for 'tool' setting (which is 'using the phaser for things besides shooting people), the medium one is for 'stun', and the big one is for 'remove from premises'.
Of course, in-continuity they were using something called phase pistols a hundred years beforehand.
The sidearms in "The Cage" are called lasers instead of phasers. That's why it's an "issue" for some people. Doesn't matter what they were used for in that instance, as lasers were clearly what they used for guns.
Pike seemed pretty sure that his pistol would drill a nice hole in a Talosian.
OTOH, The big piece of artillery that Starfleet borrowed from the C57-D is not, to the best of my recollection, referred to as a laser at all; only as "ship's power" as in "we can transmit the ship's power against it."
IOW, laser cannons aren't canon.
The sidearms in "The Cage" are called lasers instead of phasers. That's why it's an "issue" for some people. Doesn't matter what they were used for in that instance, as lasers were clearly what they used for guns.
Pike seemed pretty sure that his pistol would drill a nice hole in a Talosian.
But they call the hand weapons "hand lasers", so I tend to think we are supposed to consider what they beamed to the planet a giant laser.
But my point is that they never used the things they called lasers for guns. Instead, they used the things they called lasers for drilling.
These were their sidearms. Guns, like every other character on American TV in the 1960s carried and seemed to think were their essential tools for resolving story conflicts.
Pike threatened to blow the Keeper's head off with his hand laser, because he seemed to think that his laser was something to be used for killing people.
This isn't complicated, and I don't find convoluted and preposterous rationalizations and logical back-flips in the service of making every tiny detail in Star Trek fit consistently into a seamless whole either productive or entertaining.
Is it possible that they were only mentioned as "lasers" in the context of Tyler, the Navigator, saying it in a heated, off the cuff moment? Just something blurted out?
Beyond that, they're mentioned that way in "The Cage". Everything else in Trek has been a phaser or phase pistol (meaning the same thing: phased energy emitted from the weapon).
The laser/phaser thing is a non-issue that isn't worth discussion. It was a real world decision to go with more futuristic wording to avoid binding Trek technology to the limitations of 60s technology.
I'm wondering if these phasers work by the control on the back, like the TOS phasers. Then the emitter on the front will rotate into position based on setting....What I'd want to really know is whether the makers of STIS intend to train the actors to use the rotating working ends of their guns in some sort of a consistent manner.
Timo Saloniemi
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