When I first saw NX-01, I thought WTF....because in the TNG Technical Manual a page near the end had illustrations of concepts of what future Enterprises after the D might be expected to look like. And NX-01 looked mighty similar to one of them.
Over time, I have thought about how designers often bring back something from the past and make it 'new' again. Sometimes more purely due to nostalgia, but other times for other reasons.
Form does not always follow function. Sometimes the reverse can be true. You could have two warp nacelles that, from the outside, look identical, but the inside engineering could be completely different.
I relate that to this: Someone says that phasers are not real. They are just a static, dead prop with no actual function. Someone else promptly picks up one which that clever guy outfitted with a working 8-watt laser and burns a hole in the backside of the first one's britches.
The very reason that the 2005 re-design of the Ford Mustang was so successful was that, stylistically, it incorporated many of the design cues from the 1964 1/2 original. But the mechanical aspects were very much up-to-date. Form was retro, but function was modern.
I have no problem with a window and a viewscreen being blended. We know that they have transparent aluminum, but who knows what else they have? The idea of windows in the future being just as strong or stronger than the structures surrounding them is not a big stretch of the imagination.
Over time, I have thought about how designers often bring back something from the past and make it 'new' again. Sometimes more purely due to nostalgia, but other times for other reasons.
Form does not always follow function. Sometimes the reverse can be true. You could have two warp nacelles that, from the outside, look identical, but the inside engineering could be completely different.
I relate that to this: Someone says that phasers are not real. They are just a static, dead prop with no actual function. Someone else promptly picks up one which that clever guy outfitted with a working 8-watt laser and burns a hole in the backside of the first one's britches.

The very reason that the 2005 re-design of the Ford Mustang was so successful was that, stylistically, it incorporated many of the design cues from the 1964 1/2 original. But the mechanical aspects were very much up-to-date. Form was retro, but function was modern.
I have no problem with a window and a viewscreen being blended. We know that they have transparent aluminum, but who knows what else they have? The idea of windows in the future being just as strong or stronger than the structures surrounding them is not a big stretch of the imagination.