So? You think it's plausible that in the middle of the movie, the viewscreen is turning at a very slow place, equivalent to 1 degree every 5-10 seconds for the stars to blur so incredibily little? Surely it's FAR more plausible that the ship is simply moving through space? Think about it.
You need to think about that. There is one camera on Spock, the view screen outside is from a different "camera." If it is doing a pan scan then Spock doesn't have to be "blurring" just because the stars are.
Do you think I'm 12 years old? You seriously don't need to explain that basic fact to me. My point was... it's far more likely that the ship is travelling through space, whilst there's a conversation going on on the bridge. Rather than... the viewscreen is looking for something at slug's pace by turning very gently from left to right, while Spock has his back against it.
Show it to us on the Enterprise-Teaser which we see a clear outside view of the bridge? There were no windows on the outside of the bridge.
The teaser that was made more than a year ago? Do you honestly think that NO design changes happened since they first made that model and the finished product?
Why not? It's a generation before the Enterprise. They had one nacelle on the Kelvin and two on the Enterprise. The Kelvin is not The Enterprise.
I know the Kelvin is not the Enterprise. I know the Kelvin has one nacelle. Congratulations on pointing out that incredible fact.
Starfleet ships have warp nacelles, they have saucers, they have red impulse engines, they have deflector dishes, they have bridge modules on the top of the saucer, they have registry numbers on the top of their saucer. These are all ubiquitous design decisions that can be found on all Starfleet ships. Considering we've never seen Abrams' ships before now, and given that the Kelvin has a big long rectangular window... and given the Enterprise viewscreen has suddenly become a big long rectangular thing where you can see the saucer at the bottom... I think it's safe to say it's a window (
that can turn into a viewscreen when needed). It's cooler, and makes for a better set.
What "physical similarities?" You are just saying "Its a window because the Kelvin has one" but you aren't giving any evidence why this view is a Window.
'What physical similaries'? As mentioned, they're both long, and rectangular. And look similar.
Old viewscreen:
Long rectangular windows/viewscreen:
If it was ONLY a viewscreen, we wouldn't see the saucer at the bottom. It would make no sense, why waste all that viewing space on the ship itself when the whole view could be utilised for space.