Amazing, that anti-reflective treatment they clearly developed between the time of NewKirk's windows and Picard's windows. Probably some form of quantistabilized-rhodohydrodynium phantasmagoriasulide transrational matrix, huh?A monitor screen, on the other hand, clearly does reflect, as we've seen on real, on-set physical monitors in Star Trek series and films in the past.
In fact, sometimes monitor screens are so reflective in the 24th century that the crew has to tape black cardboard on them to cut down on the reflections.
And 24th century windows are so non-reflective that you'd swear there was no glass there.![]()

And I'm sure that those black cardboard pieces were being replicated by the hyper-advanced bioneural-gelpack-drive superwhoitsalinium transtator system.
After all... that's the only possible explanation, isn't it?
Otherwise, you might have to just accept that the damned JJPrise screen is shiny because Abrams thinks shiny is almost as cool as he thinks "brilliant white with lights shining in your eyes" is.

How dare you bring reality, and common sense, into this thread???A curved window doesn't distort an image.
Oh dear.
First of all, technically speaking ALL glass distorts the image (slightly).
With that caveat out of the way, I have seen many examples of curved glass that do NOT noticeably distort an image. I have been in office buildings with curved glazing that does not adversely distort the scene outside. I have bought deli meat from curved-glass-front deli cases that did not noticeably distort the look of the products on the inside.
Here are some examples:
http://salestores.com/trtc6cugldec.html
http://www.thelondonglass.co.uk/glassbends.asp
http://www.euroglass.co.nz/specialprojects/eurocurvespecproj/

Okayyyyyy....Originally Posted by Cary L. BrownDude, if you see a round hole where the rectangular window is indicated below, you may want to consider remedial lessons yourself.As for Enterprise having a window there... there are several images of the ship (in the trailer, and elsewhere) where you can see the front surface of the topmost deck of the Abramsprise. Can any one find an actual "window" there? No... a few folks have strained pretty majorly to associate another vaguely rectangular-ish shape to "the window" but the two items are utterly dissimilar in shape (and anyone who can't see that needs to work harder at trying to figure out why square pegs can't fit into round holes, something most of us figured out as small children!).
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Or perhaps you think that giant pane Spock's standing in front of is round.
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Either this is a really... stretching?... effort to be funny, or you're really, really out-of-touch.
Anyone besides this guy think I was calling the window round?
Anyone besides this guy fail to grasp the concept I was really referring to?
You know... this one?

Let's see if I can simplify it even further for anyone who really WAS "stumped" by this comment.
Any given shape is not the same shape as some different shape.
Hence, square pegs do not fit into round holes in the ubiquitous "child's toy" pictured above, used to measure the most basic level of intelligence.
Hence, the "window" seen on the bridge set is not the same as the sensor-slot seen in the preview trailer image.
"Not the same shape" = "not the same shape"
Seems like a remarkably simple concept to me.
