^Well, you can simplify that to "dual generator." Although I always figured it must be something more like a laser interferometer or beam-splitter apparatus of some sort.
Have to go with classic FX because:
-it's the stuff that has been canon for over forty years, with tons of official, licensed, and fan-made stuff based off of it.
-someone must rail against the slide toward Orwellian revisionism that the new FX represents. (Okay, I really don't feel that strongly about it, but no one should pass on the opportunity to use the phrase slide toward Orwellian revisionism in RL?)
Nah, thats continuity.I've always thought of canon more as the stories and the appearance of ships, planets, etc. Chekov is an only child was established in a story. That's part of canon. (at least TOS canon. If NuChekov was born four years earlier then there's no telling what else is different.)
To me. canon is the accumulation of the stories, not trying to explain why Kirk was missing his insignia.
To me. canon is the accumulation of the stories, not trying to explain why Kirk was missing his insignia.
No worries. We've got lots of room here.To me, 'canon' is what would really happen in order from first to last if Star Trek were to 'happen' in real life. For example, JJ Abrams' Trek, though an excellent addition to Star Trek, is not what I consider 'canon'. If you'll excuse me, I'm going to hide in a bomb shelter while I wait for the storm of both haters and supporters of Abrams' movie to try and tear me apart.
To me, 'canon' is what would really happen in order from first to last if Star Trek were to 'happen' in real life.
To me, 'canon' is what would really happen in order from first to last if Star Trek were to 'happen' in real life.
To me, 'canon' is what would really happen in order from first to last if Star Trek were to 'happen' in real life.
Since Star Trek could not happen "in real life," this is moot.
Nah, thats continuity.I've always thought of canon more as the stories and the appearance of ships, planets, etc. Chekov is an only child was established in a story. That's part of canon. (at least TOS canon. If NuChekov was born four years earlier then there's no telling what else is different.)
To me. canon is the accumulation of the stories, not trying to explain why Kirk was missing his insignia.
To me, 'canon' is what would really happen in order from first to last if Star Trek were to 'happen' in real life.
Well, let's see, that would mean...
No humanoid aliens.
No Spock, since interspecies hybrids are impossible.
No telepathy.
Probably no warp drive, unless it were millennia in the future and a resource employed by a civilization capable of harnessing the energy output of entire stars.
No universal translators, and the characters using a language heavily altered from modern English.
And so on.
And any definition of canon beginning with "to me" is totally misunderstanding the point of the word. The term "canon" means that which is defined as official by a central authority. It's the exact opposite of individual opinion.
To me, 'canon' is what would really happen in order from first to last if Star Trek were to 'happen' in real life.
Since Star Trek could not happen "in real life," this is moot.
To me, 'canon' is what would really happen in order from first to last if Star Trek were to 'happen' in real life.
Since Star Trek could not happen "in real life," this is moot.
To me, 'canon' is what would really happen in order from first to last if Star Trek were to 'happen' in real life.
Well, let's see, that would mean...
No humanoid aliens.
No Spock, since interspecies hybrids are impossible.
No telepathy.
Probably no warp drive, unless it were millennia in the future and a resource employed by a civilization capable of harnessing the energy output of entire stars.
No universal translators, and the characters using a language heavily altered from modern English.
And so on.
And any definition of canon beginning with "to me" is totally misunderstanding the point of the word. The term "canon" means that which is defined as official by a central authority. It's the exact opposite of individual opinion.
Anything is possible in an infinite universe.
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