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Teaser online in better format

RAMA said:
Clip_15fscf.jpg


:p

And your point is ?

I think the camera is pointing down at the top of the saucer here actauly, it's hard to tell what's going on here really....

Like I said we need Denny Crane to look into this ;)

- W -
* Sticks his tongue out back at you playfully *
 
One thing I really like about this is the ship is being built BY HAND. We have all the automotive technologies available to us and yet they use dock workers to do the job.

Great stuff.
 
USS Excelsior said:
So now it's Boxing Day.

Yeah, one of the trailers had that. The trailer on the official site still says Christmas. It would be weird to delay the release by one day.
 
Woulfe said:
^ No pallets, no forklifts, no trucks hauling materials in and out of the worksite ?

We need some experts to chime in ;)

It's a colorful metaphor metaphor! :rolleyes: :p

Actually, it's a rather monochromatic metaphor. :)

Other threads have rationalized the 1-g construction with answers ranging from anti-gravity devices to compensate for the lack of aerodynamics to the ship being built to handle greater loads at warp than it has to in 1-g. Personally, I'll accept those answers, but I'm not comfortable with them.
 
Year of Hell said:
One thing I really like about this is the ship is being built BY HAND. We have all the automotive technologies available to us and yet they use dock workers to do the job.

Great stuff.

Well we've never really seen worker-bots in Star Trek - that would stick out even more I think. And I don't know about you but I'm more comfortable with actual human hands putting this together since its far from a car where all the pieces just get snapped into place over and over and over on a line.

Skyscrapers are still built by hand, so are boats and even the space shuttle I think for that matter submarines though done on a line there are human hands getting down and dirty putting the puzzle together - I dated a girl who did the wiring at Electric Boat for our subs.

Sharr
 
Holy crap, the one from youtube the other day...I couldn't see any of this.

I had no idea they were actually showing all those pieces of the ship.
 
Woulfe said:
Arlo

So we're now officially calling it Gabe Cowl ?

- W -
* If so I can live with that *

The Glans.

We're calling it The Glans.

Though that name is still unofficial.
 
Woulfe said:
RAMA said:
Clip_15fscf.jpg


:p

And your point is ?

I think the camera is pointing down at the top of the saucer here actauly, it's hard to tell what's going on here really....

Like I said we need Denny Crane to look into this ;)

- W -
* Sticks his tongue out back at you playfully *

Judging by the box-with-circle thing, I'd say we're looking directly overhead either the port or starboard edge of the saucer. Where the red/green running lights would be.
 
One thing I'm curious about, it shows old 21st century welding going on. Surely you would think they would have improved construction techniques by then?

When things work why change them? I really don't get this mindset among Trek fans - worse thing GR did was abandon buttons and zippers just to scream out and say: "Look we're advanced."

In that regard velcro hasn't replaced either buttons (which date back hundreds of years but now instead of bone we make them from plastic) or zippers now.

The construction techniques that work tend to get carried on. Plus just looking at it its hard to say how those welders function.

Sharr
 
my ex told me she went to see cloverfield (she hated it). she always hated sci fi and the fact that i watch trek. but she saw the teaser and she said she will see the film.

The marketing dept. got it right i guess... bringing in people like her
 
^Yep. I've seen a number of comments from people elsewhere exclaiming their interest in the movie, despite having had almost zero exposure to Trek in the past.

Good stuff.
 
Sharr Khan said:
One thing I'm curious about, it shows old 21st century welding going on. Surely you would think they would have improved construction techniques by then?

When things work why change them? I really don't get this mindset among Trek fans - worse thing GR did was abandon buttons and zippers just to scream out and say: "Look we're advanced."

In that regard velcro hasn't replaced either buttons (which date back hundreds of years but now instead of bone we make them from plastic) or zippers now.

http://www.triz-journal.com/archives/1999/09/b/index.htm

Scroll down to the section titled "fasteners". The zipper and button are far from the final, perfected, bestest in the universe design. Roddenberry had it just right -- something else will happen along. It always does.

I can't get this passion for keeping everything the way it is in a movie about the future. Everything, that is, except anything from the original Star Trek. :rolleyes:
 
Sharr Khan said:
When things work why change them? I really don't get this mindset among Trek fans - worse thing GR did was abandon buttons and zippers just to scream out and say: "Look we're advanced."

If that's true, then why don't they use Glocks instead of phasers? Why don't they use microwaves instead of replicators? Why don't they wear watches instead of somehow knowing what time it is?

It's called "progress." I can understand something like boots & clothing not changing much but from a technological standpoint, having people weld together pieces of the Enterprise like a WWII battleship just seems out of place in the 23rd century.
 
Guys, I just edited a few posts. Remember not to hotlink your pictures from other sites, it's stealing their bandwidth. Load the pictures you want to show on to Photobucket or another picture hosting site. Also, remember not to stretch the page with large pictures. Kind of makes it a pain to read threads.

Thanks a lot.
 
I don't get the problem with hand welding. There are many advanced alloys (titanium ones especially) that just can't be done properly by machine. Sometimes there is just no replacement for a skilled craftsman.
 
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