The first few episodes had some great stuff, like the crew rushing to the windows to see a new planet or taking a group photo on the new planet and so on. And the recorded message back to the school kids on Earth. I wish they had done more of that.
Good point.
Let's look at the 2 WHYs scifi on tv covering many years acts the way Gotham Central explained.
1 is that you have to tell a story the audience can get into. Sorry, its a business, and whatever brings in the viewers is what gets done. Hence, UPN insisting on a transporter for that element of familiarity w/the audience.
2 More importantly, even the most far-seeing creator has a tough time with the future and how it would look because the "world" we know gets turned upside down all of the time-but we turn with it, so it seems familiar. Spider Robinson made a pretty good point of this in his short story, The Time Traveler.
Point is, as a hypothetical number, if the world turned upside down (changed what everyone considered familiar) say , every 30 years, and you're trying to portray how it would look 500 years in the future, by the time you successfully pulled it off(if you could) NO ONE would be able to relate to the results. There wouldn't be any common reference points. So to portray humanity millions of years in the future(on Dr Who) or 29th Century tech (on Voyager) you'd have to make something so outre the audience wouldn't even know what they were watching. How would a viewer born in the 1500's know what an "electric broom" was, that is, a Dust Devil?There wouldn't be any common reference point. And as we slide into the nano-tech, bio-engineered future and leave the Industrial Age behind I'm thinking the changes are going to be so vast that in a few hundred years the shape of Humanity would be unrelatable to a 21st Century man, little less the devices we will one day create.