I like that he had a beard.Wow. I also had no idea. It looked CGI. That takes the alien emissary from the end of Close Encounters of the Third Kind to the next level, and this sort of animatronic technology was already pretty impressive by 1977.
![]()
I like that he had a beard.Wow. I also had no idea. It looked CGI. That takes the alien emissary from the end of Close Encounters of the Third Kind to the next level, and this sort of animatronic technology was already pretty impressive by 1977.
![]()
They did enough to make both of those aspects work story wise, which is what counts!I enjoyed the musical part. It's great when they use real science and logic, which Trek virtually never does.
Yeah, it's oversimplified, like the sublimation and climate seeding. But so what, that's Trek standard.
Sure sounded like it to me! And strangely, it appears using whatever phonetic compiler to assemble her dialogue made it sound a bit choppy, just like the ship's computer in TOS.Was that Majel’s voice as the computer? Are they finally using the phonetic recordings she did just before she died.
For me, stated is better than written.
More of a reference to the size of the crew than the size of the ship, IMO.Ortega even went out of her way to say it was a small ship.
Didn't notice Babs in the credits.. I’ll rewatch it I’m sure in the next couple days, so I’m not certain, but I don’t remember seeing M’Benga at all this episode (I watched it fairly late and tired, so I admittedly could’ve just missed him).
Was that Majel’s voice as the computer? Are they finally using the phonetic recordings she did just before she died.
Rewatch the relevant DSC ep again. Ash's child says the crystal he grasps will show him his future, but only if he takes, breaking it off from the main body it will that future be, for want of a better phrase, set in stone. he saw his future, reeled back in horror... and then grasped it anyway. That is the action of a brave, brave man.They are supposed to be the best of the best and he is written to be a snowflake pansy with no grit or even shrug of the shoulders and refusal to take any action. Making him look helpless...
unfortunately this is not correct. What Spock said about harmonics *is* correct, but what they did in the episode was done within the parameters of the tempered system, which is a system that has developed in Europe in relatively recent times, is still not the only one used today, and is only one of a virtually infinite number of possible systems. It sounds pleasing to us because we are used to it, but it wouldn’t to say ancient Greeks or modern people that don’t know it (at this point basically people living in lost tribes or something like that, I guess).
How did the universal translator instantly translate the language of the Shepperds when they had never spoken before?1?!
Regardless, the size and grandeur of his cabin seems incongruous. But, like I said, it's not a big problem and I've certainly enjoyed the series!More of a reference to the size of the crew than the size of the ship, IMO.
They're not, we've seen them in trailers.
They've been using beams in the new series on (large) ships that since DSC Season 2.
Small ships, shuttles and fighters like ships are still using bolts. Though Seven's ship in Picard S1 had beams.
I did the research for the numbers and put it in a list for simple compare & contrast.I have no idea where those numbers are from. Is the SNW number in particular official in any sense?
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.