Dusty Ayres said:
Cyke101 said:
Dusty Ayres said:
StarMan said:
From your memory, what is the most obscene use of technobabble? I'm talking about disgusting, lazy technospeak that saves the crew or scenes involving an unbearable amount of gibberish.
Compared to the medibabble on
ER, Chicago Hope, Grey's Anatomy, St. Elsewhere, House, Quincy ME, CSI and the legalbabble on
Law & Order and every other cop/lawyer show, what Star Trek did is a minor sin. It was just part of their universe, much like the terms on the old
BSG.

Again, big deal!
The big difference there, though, is that those shows usually don't make up medibabble or legalbabble. They're mostly confined to using actual terms, labels, and concepts that are in modern use. Not so with Trek
But the technobabble is related to the kind of science that would exist in that time that the show exist in. Who knows what we will develop in the future, for example? And I'll bet that the technobabble is based on current day science-science that most North Americans don't give a shit about except when it applies to cell phones, sat TV, and all the other junk that we flood our living rooms with. No wonder space travel and the space program isn't doing well with the public as it should.
Balthier makes a wonderful point, though, something that all the Trek spinoff series are guilty of on a few occasions: technobabble as conflict resolution.
You watch Law & Order and the conflict resolution doesn't depend on Title 15, Chapter 3 of the Tax Evasion code, the conflict resolution depends on the cops and lawyers outwitting the accused, or a supporting character fessing up, or the accused's guilty conscience. In ER, the conflict isn't solved with a Triple Coronarial Renal Transplant, but rather how the doctors get through their personal issues and ethics.
Besides, talk to any scientist who grew up with Star Trek, who was inspired to pursue their careers because of the show, and they'll out-and-out tell you that the show uses almost no scientific fact at all whatsoever. They love it to death, for sure, but it's more along the lines of Science Fantasy than Science Fiction. There's also Babylon 5, Farscape, Firefly, and the Stargate franchise, which use very little amounts of technobabble and are all very highly regarded despite your rolling-eye smiley.
Let's use Star Trek VI as an example of how technobabble really isn't needed: Uhura comes up with the idea of tracking Chang's cloaked ship by its exhaust fumes. Spock and McCoy proceed to modify the torpedo. The most technical words used in that exchange were 'plasma,' 'ionized gas,' and probably 'echo bar.' We see Spock and McCoy work on it, we hear Kirk desperately demanding that torpedo. Heck, we even hear McCoy with some colloquial speech. The torpedo fires, tracks the ship, hits it.
At no point in that entire sequence did we ever hear an exchange like, "Photon torpedo tracking charged ionized impluse trail with eighty-seven percent accuracy! Torpedo will hit in approximately five seconds at a speed of twenty kilometers per second! Projected yield calculated at 30 gigatons!"
No, Uhura came up with the plan, we *see* Spock and McCoy at work, we hear Kirk yell out basic orders. That's all we needed, really, and the lack of technobabble greatly helped with the pacing of that wonderful scene. And I doubt we would've learned anything realistic about ionized gas, either.