If you contributed at Lieutenant Junior Grade or above, they should have sent you an e-mail.You mean the ones who gave to their Kickstarter? I don't remember hearing about that. Or is it something else?
If you contributed at Lieutenant Junior Grade or above, they should have sent you an e-mail.You mean the ones who gave to their Kickstarter? I don't remember hearing about that. Or is it something else?
A decade later when Star Trek episodes started becoming available on VHS and Betamax, it became possible to assess the Plans for "accuracy" and thoroughness. Back then, there was still no crazy notion of "canon violation," and in-universe meticulous consistency was something that people didn't lose any sleep over. There was no real way to be dissatisfied with the blueprints in a pre-VHS era.
Hey guys... thank you SO much for your enthusiasm! Just FYI, part of our understanding when we let financiers see the episode early is -- like with any TV production -- secrecy. I hope you guys understand.
Discussion about the episode online -- here or anywhere else -- even with the tag "SPOILER ALERT" in the title -- isn't allowed per your arrangement with us. That's what you're agreeing to when we send you the link and password as financiers.
I sincerely hope you enjoy the episode, and discuss it as much as you like -- AFTER May 29.
P.S. -- It goes without saying that if, as Greg suggests, the link and password "slip out," the episode will have to be pulled. That should be understandable.
Same here. I thought they were great! Remember, that was back in the days before the internet and the plethora of material we have today. Back then, anything new was precious.I still remember the first time that I saw the FJ plans when they were first released. I was stunned and excited; they were fantastic back in the day.
Agreed.Hey guys... thank you SO much for your enthusiasm! Just FYI, part of our understanding when we let financiers see the episode early is -- like with any TV production -- secrecy. I hope you guys understand.
Discussion about the episode online -- here or anywhere else -- even with the tag "SPOILER ALERT" in the title -- isn't allowed per your arrangement with us. That's what you're agreeing to when we send you the link and password as financiers.
I sincerely hope you enjoy the episode, and discuss it as much as you like -- AFTER May 29.
P.S. -- It goes without saying that if, as Greg suggests, the link and password "slip out," the episode will have to be pulled. That should be understandable.
James is correct: please do not discuss the content of STC's "The White Iris" before it is released to the public at large (currently slated for May 29th). After it is publically released (whenever that actually happens), the "White Iris" thread would be the perfect place to discuss the episode; please remember to use the board's spoiler tagging function.
A small point of clarification: I don't actually suggest that insider preview links or episode details will slip out in advance of the episode's public release--in the sense that I hope the link and details do slip out so we can get a jump on discussing the episode here at the TrekBBS. I merely predict that the link and plot details will slip out--against the production's (and this moderator's) wishes. Please do all that you can to honor our wishes and please refrain from discussion of the episode until after the episode's public release.
The FJ blueprints are still fantastic today. As a former architectural engineering student (and now a software architect) I appreciate the enormous task that he set out for himself: Lay out and logically fill the volume of a 947-foot fictional starship according to everything that Star Trek told us about these vessels over the course of 79 episodes. And he did it not only in the pre-TiVo/VHS era, he did it in the pre-CAD (computer aided design) era!I still remember the first time that I saw the FJ plans when they were first released. I was stunned and excited; they were fantastic back in the day.
The FJ blueprints are still fantastic today. As a former architectural engineering student (and now a software architect) I appreciate the enormous task that he set out for himself: Lay out and logically fill the volume of a 947-foot fictional starship according to everything that Star Trek told us about these vessels over the course of 79 episodes. And he did it not only in the pre-TiVo/VHS era, he did it in the pre-CAD (computer aided design) era!I still remember the first time that I saw the FJ plans when they were first released. I was stunned and excited; they were fantastic back in the day.
This guy managed to design the internal arrangement of the starship Constitution BY HAND using traditional drafting techniques. Amazing. My hat is off to you, Franz Anton Joseph Schnaubelt.
Is it May 29th yet?!?!![]()
Say no more!Just watched "The White Iris"!
It would be funny if they showed the bowling alley as a background and there were a formal dance going on, with no explanation.
That sounds like it was fun!Back in the day. we used my FJ blue prints as a dungeon for a game of Dungeons and Dragons. It was great fun! The backstory was the ship had landed on the D&D world and had been infested with D&D characters, including a dragon in the shuttle bay.
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