Uhm. ALL the flat panel displays were a mix of touch screen and physical buttons...
I don’t recall anyone in Enterprise using any of those screens as touch screens. Maybe the PADDs. Even T’Pol’s more advanced Vulcan tricorder had buttons.Uhm. ALL the flat panel displays were a mix of touch screen and physical buttons...
The designer of the ship would disagree with you. He put those details in there to make the ship look less advanced than the TOS Connie. He worked backwards from the TOS Connie and Matt Jefferies thought process for designing it.Only if you adhere to a design assumption that equates visible aztecing and rust-colored livery with "less refined." These are just visual shorthands with no real link to how advanced the ship is or is not.
i can’t cite a precise example, but those screens only had something like 6 buttons, hardly enough to input anything meaningful.I don’t recall anyone in Enterprise using any of those screens as touch screens. Maybe the PADDs. Even T’Pol’s more advanced Vulcan tricorder had buttons.
i can’t cite a precise example, but those screens only had something like 6 buttons, hardly enough to input anything meaningful.
which is why I totally support the idea they had some other kind of input as well, one that is not obvious to our eyes.The TOS tricorder had only three control knobs, but they were able to do plenty with those.
which is why I totally support the idea they had some other kind of input as well, one that is not obvious to our eyes.
Enterprise had plenty of buttons. They had tv screens all around their bridge. Looks much more cramped with archaic tv screens than the less cluttered TOS bridge. They also did a nice subtle update of the TOS bridge for in A Mirror Darkly. Including touch screen usage.
The Connie in Discovery had touchscreens, and is divergent from the continuity set in TOS & The Cage
Continuity is about story and characters, not set and prop design. The makers of TOS would've gladly put in touchscreens if they'd had the budget. Heck, those clipboards that the yeomen kept handing to Kirk were meant to be touchscreens, essentially -- electronic tablets written on with a stylus, approximated using a simple electrostatic sheet like the "Magic Slate" toy.
The makers of TOS did not want us to believe that 23rd-century technology looked like 1960s technology. They wanted us to use our imaginations to go beyond the limitations of what they could achieve and imagine something that was even more futuristic. They would be glad to see that later productions have come closer to achieving for real what they could only roughly suggest.
I’m not saying that; I’ve see fan remakes of the TOS bridge with the TOS cast updated to today using CGI and its awe inspiring. But I was asking where the touch screen was on the Connie in IAMD. It would be nice to verify that that is in fact true.
Where exactly is the touch screen? The Connie in Discovery had touchscreens, and is divergent from the continuity set in TOS & The Cage, likely a refit after The Cage and has those updates removed when Kirk took command. The Connie in ENT had buttons and follows continuity set by TOS & The Cage, since its set in proximity to "The Tholian Web".
Awe inspiring?I’m not saying that; I’ve see fan remakes of the TOS bridge with the TOS cast updated to today using CGI and its awe inspiring
How would you describe it?Awe inspiring?
Better. But, I recall when that was done and it is impressive in terms of what they did, and showcased the potential within the TOS set. "Awe" is not quite a word I would use, but then I am highly selective with that wordHow would you describe it?
All the displays in TOS were flat, they didn’t look analogue.
I don’t recall anyone in Enterprise using any of those screens as touch screens.
Sci said:Only if you adhere to a design assumption that equates visible aztecing and rust-colored livery with "less refined." These are just visual shorthands with no real link to how advanced the ship is or is not.
The designer of the ship would disagree with you. He put those details in there to make the ship look less advanced than the TOS Connie.
Clearly visible hull panelling with rivets and all that. Exposed technology on the surface of the ship, Instead being smoothed out and mostly confined within the ship itself like in TOS.
The smooth exterior of the TOS Connie wasn’t because of budget, it was because of Matt Jefferies thoughts on how starships would work in the future, nearly everything you’d work on would be on the inside of the ship, no need to go out on space walks all the time to access the technology to work on it.
Yes yes yes. And either way, this tells us nothing about how "advanced" or "unadvanced" a ship is, it just tells us about Matt Jeffries's hope that a ship could be designed in such a way as to avoid the need for extravehicular activity.
except the Ent-E didn't have the same kind.after having previously hoped the audience would react the opposite way to the visual hull paneling of the 1701-E.
except the Ent-E didn't have the same kind.
Good story, completely unnecessary.
Not presented/designed in the same way it is on the NX-01.No two starship classes have had the same kind of aztecing, but the fact remains that visible hull paneling has occurred in ships that were supposed to be more advanced than the 1701 and in ships that were supposed to be less advanced than the 1701. Visible hull paneling is just a form of visual shorthand, but it has been used as shorthand for opposite assumptions.
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