I can't speak for others, but that has literally nothing to do with what's going on with my reaction.Same here, but I've come to the conclusion that there is a certain expectation of what Starfleet ships of this era are to look like. Since they don't, they must fit in to another box. It's all categorizing.
The original NCC-1701 was the first fictional spaceship I fell in love with, over 40 years ago.
Before you think, "Aha! He's biased!" I've been to the rodeo of reimagining the Enterprise, in 1979 for TMP.* I also fell in love with that version. I'm perfectly open to new versions of my first love.
If the Discoprise looked better, I wouldn't mind, but it's just fugly. It completely lacks the grace of both the TOS and the TMP version.
* - As far as I'm concerned, it's irrelevant for this discussion that in terms of continuity the TMP version was a refit. There are certain facts and realities production-wise. The TOS models were unsuitable for use in motion picture filming in the late 1970s. It was a foregone conclusion that a new model had to be built. Aesthetics had shifted somewhat over the course of 15 years also, naturally. Tweaks of the design were inevitable and a practical necessity, regardless of story. Ditto for sets and costumes. Accounting for all these differences by labeling them as in-universe technical progress, either explicitly or implicitly, was a natural thing to do. But regardless of the in-universe rationale, the production reality was that the TMP refit was the "movie version" of the TOS starship.
So, I've been to this rodeo before, accepted, and fell in love with a redesign, one that was thoughtfully and skillfully executed.
The Discoprise just ain't that. Production realities apply here: tweaks were inevitable. That's fine. The ones they chose weren't that great, though. Anyway, that's the outside. next stop: the inside (*crosses fingers and prays*).