I forgot about that. In STID, the Enterprise while at sublight could detect via a "proximity alert" a "ship heading right for us". What's interesting is that Sulu still had to wait a bit before he could determine that the ship was not coming from the Quonos. So it would seem that a ship at warp gives off something that allows a ship at or near it's destination the ability to detect it. But, it takes a while for the detecting ship to figure out which direction the warp ship is coming in from which is weird.
Thing to note about Federation starships - technology is ace... it's the people who are often PORTRAYED as being 'insufficient' thanks to Hollywood and their 'drama'.
Starships are loaded with sensors of all kinds with billions of parameters and can keep tracks of trillions upon trillions of things per second.
Humans by comparison hold a very small % of knowledge in their heads and cannot hope to match a computer in information retention and retrieval - however, given what SF officers are supposed to be exposed to in the first place (the knowledge, the training, etc.), they should definitely be far more competent than what they were portrayed in movies.
This is the equivalent of someone on the ground *hearing the sound* of an approaching airplane and has to wait a bit before he can figure out which direction the sound is coming from.
A more appropriate analogy would be more like hearing an approaching aeroplane but having 0 knowledge of what they are hearing in the first place.
After all, you cannot identify something that you have no knowledge about, and knowledge doesn't materialize out of thin air.
A computer scanner with necessary information knows what it is, but if you as a user don't know how to read it, it may as well be gibberish to you.
This is implies that Sulu might have been lacking in training, or someone else should have reported on the reading who knew how to read the sensors.
Sulu also made a very basic mistake in the 2009 movie of not disengaging the external inertial dampener as Spock said - though you would think that inertial dampeners are a GOOD thing, because they are supposed to protect the crew against extreme velocities that would otherwise turn the crew into mush.
For that matter, why would starships have 'external inertial dampeners'?
Wouldn't a more sensible question from Spock be something like: 'Have you disengaged the Warp drive standby mode?' (after all, the ship was docked and just departing the Starbase... so you wouldn't want a rookie or even someone by accident to accelerate to Warp through a Starbase).
In all likelihood they were probably discussing the subspace transporter, although it would seem that a simple equation change would suggest the existing 09 transporter was already subspace based. Khan probably used the same transwarp beaming technology.
Well, most Starfleet technology is subspace based, but transporters from the new movies were never mentioned to actively beam through subspace (as seen in TNG).
As such, it is more likely the system is a standard transporter.
However, subspace and transwarp transporters are technological OUTGROWTHS of the baseline technology... and it stands to reason you could modify the baseline technology to accommodate the TW function.
We have seen in TNG it took the crew some time to modify the actual hardware to support subspace beaming... which might indicate the technology is different compared to TW beaming and more easily interacts with baseline hardware through mostly necessary software adjustments.
However this is pure speculation, and a bit of a contradiction when you think about it because FTL technology in Trek is reliant on subspace to begin with.
Still, even though it was apparently 'decanonized' (though to be honest I really don't see why), Voyager's Threshold episode does seem to imply that achieving TW speed with baseline hardware is more than possible, albeit you do seem to need to reinforce the nacelle pylons and use a form of Dylithium that stays stable at higher warp frequencies.
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Definitely. If 09 Trek universe went with a more Star Wars hyperspace approach then they would need to keep this handicap of being blind to almost everything except for communications...
I disagree.
Star Trek is not Star Wars, and there's 0 reason in Trek to allow for this kind of handicap (which is utterly ridiculous) when travelling at much higher Warp speeds (for example 2 000 to 10 000 Ly's per day).
For Star Wars this is understandable since they are a proverbial Capitalism in space where technology is effectively stagnant over thousands of years, and if some other explanations are taken into account, Hyperspace was taken from a much older race known as the Rakata (along with most pre-established routes - so none of the contemporary races of Wars galaxy actually made the Hyperdrive or set out to explore too much on their own).
Trek illustrates scientific and technological progression and highly modular/versatile technology that was developed by Humanity, and dozens of other species working together.
To this end, 'handicapping' Trek while travelling at fast Warp velocities for the sake of it is simply silly.
There's 0 reason to think the sensors would be blind past certain speeds, or at any speed at all - that's just writers who don't really know how to write properly... or they do know that sensors wouldn't be blind, but its the other people who dumb it down for their version of 'drama' to work (because they have 0 clue on how to write for the universe and setting in place, so they need to bring it down to what is easier for them).
You would imagine that with all that time it took to make the actual movies, logic, reason, some actual science and not to mention consistency would easily be part of the story so that it's not easily or at all 'poked at' (such as Earth's gravity catching the Enterprise and the Vengeance from hundreds of thousands of km away and 0 Starfleet starship activity in SOL, plus a distinctive LACK of the Earth Starbase, or for that matter moon colonies, orbital perimeters, etc.)
If you watch the HISHE STID episode they do make fun of the transwarp beaming and other things that came out of STID as obsoleting starships and death.
Starships wouldn't necessarily be obsolete due to TW beaming.
One question that arises is whether the planets they beam to would be suitable for hosting life, etc.
But with TW beaming, you would imagine they would have access to TW scanning as well, giving them detailed data about the planets they want to explore.
Starships however still wouldn't be necessarily useless, as you can discover many things in deep space itself that can be observed close by such as nebulae (which a starship can physically go inside and start charting, encountering different phenomena and how they interact with it).
Space born lifeforms, etc.
Starships wouldn't necessarily be useless, they would likely be delegated to different functions and wouldn't really function inside or around any inhabited system (what with planetary shields, highly advanced sensors, automated orbital defences, etc. etc.).