...Trek's futurism is symbolic. It's about the idea that we can build a better future, that our science and our wisdom will improve our lives if we trust in them, that we should be nostalgic for tomorrow instead of yesterday. So if Trek clings to depicting its future technology in exactly the same way that shows 30 or 50 years ago did, that's a retro, nostalgic element that gets in the way of the message.
I'm not saying "exactly the same way." I am saying, however, that a show depicting the visual elements of the TOS-era Trek setting the way they've been depicted before — upgraded with current production values and effects, naturally, but not
redesigned — would work just fine on its own merits,
not merely as an exercise in nostalgia.
(I'd apply the same reasoning to story elements, as well... there's nothing inherent about holographic comms and a bridge window vs. viewscreens, as I commented to Greg... or for that matter about intraship beaming, or widespread cloaking in the 2250s, or a massive war with the Klingons... that's inherently "more futuristic" than anything from TOS, or makes for inherently better storytelling at either the allegorical level or even the plot level.)
If you really think a take that's closer to TOS
would be primarily an exercise in nostalgia, though... or more to the point, if DSC's creators really thought that... then positioning the show as a near-term prequel to TOS seems like a pretty quixotic choice in the first place. That's just not something it's possible to do without people comparing the setting from one show to the other.
Science fiction does not "predict." Like I said, that's taking it way too literally. ... Science fiction writers are not attempting anything of the sort. We don't "predict," we speculate. We extrapolate. We explore possibilities and engage in allegory. So it's not about the superficial, literal surface level of things. It's about the underlying ideas and messages.
But that's precisely my point. SF
doesn't predict the future, and its effectiveness in story terms has nothing to do with whether it does so. Given that, why does anyone argue that it's somehow necessary to "update" Trek to make it an allegedly more plausible extrapolation of "our" future in order for its stories to work? It shouldn't matter at all.
Well, I think that's a rather sad and lonely perspective on the world. Fandom is a community, something a lot of us value being a part of and sharing with other people. I would've thought that anyone who chose to participate in a discussion board would have at least some interest in the opinions of other people.
Allow me to clarify: of course I enjoy the sense of community that comes with fandom. I enjoy sharing Trek (and other enthusiasms) with others, and introducing it to people who haven't seen it before. I enjoy discussing my enthusiasms with people, even when they involve differences of opinion. None of that, however, entails any concern for the ongoing continuation of Trek or any other property
as a "franchise"... nor does it require me to appreciate creative choices made to appeal to "new audiences" whose tastes differ significantly from mine. Neither of those things adds one jot to what makes Star Trek enjoyable in the first place.
I'm a Sherlock Holmes fan as well, for instance, and I still enjoy reading and talking about the character... even though a new Holmes story hasn't been written in 91 years, nor ever will be again. (Not including pastiches and adaptations, of course, which are sometime entertaining but don't really "count," and even at their best certainly aren't
necessary for the original canon to merit ongoing appreciation.)