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What does the "tri" mean in tricorder?

Duane

Captain
Captain
Any thoughts? I always assumed they used this term because it sounded a lot more futuristic than "recorder." It's interesting that this term survived through TNG, DS9 and VOY.
 
It's a sensor/computer/data recorder. I believe it was inspired by the portable cassette recorders that were fairly new at the time, but they tacked on sensor and computer functions as well as a recording function, so it was a "trifunction recorder," or "tricorder."
 
It's explained in one of the books about the making of the show: It was something originally designed to record three different things, audio, video and something else that eludes me.
 
sound + video + time, IMO. (timeCODING, anyway.)

Though I could certainly see sound + video + sensor functions as well. :)
 
Hmm in the 24th century I always believed it was based on the three buttons:

GEO - Geological
MET - Metal
BIO - Biological
 
Fairly silly explanations all, though. Quite regardless of whether they are what the inventors of the word intended or not.

We could safely assume that the prefix is undecipherable by 21st century logic, just as an early 20th century person would have no hope understanding what "flash" in "flash memory" or "cell" in "cell phone" means - or where "googling" comes from. There need not be any connection to the number three in the prefix "tri", really.

Timo Saloniemi
 
^though Timo I'm sure someone from the early 20th century could decipher what a mobile phone is (not everyone uses the term cell phone)
 
I'm just trusting my fallible memory here, but I seemed to remember reading (perhaps in one of the Making of or World of Star Trek books from the lat 60's early 70's) that the "tri" referred not to three different things it could record, but to three differing functions. The way it was, in fact, used in the show would seem to support that.

It was a recording device, as we frequently see crew members using it to record logs or images. I remember both Uhura and Spock used it as a camcorder in City...

It was a portable sensor unit also. In fact, Spock used it for that most of the time, taking sensor readings on landing party missions to search for life forms, or certain substances, etc. Bones could also use his specially programmed tricorder for medical diagnostics, but in that case it was still basically a sensor unit, although programmed for a specific sensory function.

The third function is a little more murky. I get the impression that it could also be used as a handheld PC. Spock used it that way in City... also. It was obvious from close-up photos of it, that it contained a disk drive, with multiple interchangable disk storage units seen in the front, just below the display screen. Projecting 300 hundred years in the future from our own storage capacity in small flash drives, I would imagine that bank of a half-dozen silvery discs could probably hold the equivalent of all our world's current knowledge database. This supports the scene of Spock's data-retrieval effort in City... down to newspaper article images with zoom ability. Those disks would have to have enormous storage capacity for something like that.

I don't remember, off-hand, if anyone ever used it as a communicator also, since anyone with a tricorder usually had a communicator with them. But I don't see why it couldn't have had that functionality.
 
nx1701g said:
Hmm in the 24th century I always believed it was based on the three buttons:

GEO - Geological
MET - Metal
BIO - Biological

Isn't MET for Meteorological?
 
Timo said:
Fairly silly explanations all, though. Quite regardless of whether they are what the inventors of the word intended or not.

We could safely assume that the prefix is undecipherable by 21st century logic, just as an early 20th century person would have no hope understanding what "flash" in "flash memory" or "cell" in "cell phone" means - or where "googling" comes from. There need not be any connection to the number three in the prefix "tri", really.

Timo Saloniemi
The prefix means "three."
 
Okay, I should've cited my sources so that there wouldn't be any doubt. From The Making of Star Trek, page 174 (emphasis added):

The "tricorder," always carried by one or more landing party members, is a combination portable sensor-computer-recorder device that resembles many of today's smaller portable tape recorders but includes a tiny viewscreen. The tricorder can measure, analyze, and keep records on almost any required subject.

And from the Star Trek Encyclopedia entry (emphasis added):

tricorder. Multipurpose scientific and technical instrument. This handheld device incorporates sensors, computers and recorders in a convenient, portable form.

So that is definitely the explanation: sensor, computer, recorder.
 
Inside the safety of my own skull, I'd always imagined that the tricorder had three modes of operation, 1) Einsteinian phenomenon, the EM spectrum, gravity, matter and neutrinos. 2) FTL phenomenon, warp drives and the like, and 3) subspace phenomenon.

Sensors, Computers and Recorders may have made sense in the transistor age of the sixties, but today when you can have all three integrated on one piece of silicon it makes less sense.
 
The Laughing Vulcan said:
Inside the safety of my own skull, I'd always imagined that the tricorder had three modes of operation, 1) Einsteinian phenomenon, the EM spectrum, gravity, matter and neutrinos. 2) FTL phenomenon, warp drives and the like, and 3) subspace phenomenon.

That doesn't make much sense for a handheld instrument used on landing parties.
 
Christopher said:
The Laughing Vulcan said:
Inside the safety of my own skull, I'd always imagined that the tricorder had three modes of operation, 1) Einsteinian phenomenon, the EM spectrum, gravity, matter and neutrinos. 2) FTL phenomenon, warp drives and the like, and 3) subspace phenomenon.

That doesn't make much sense for a handheld instrument used on landing parties.

It makes perfect sense to me :p

It's a future world with a science sufficently advanced to be considered magic. It would make sense that any instrumentalities would reflect the future understanding of physics.

In Trek we have three aspects to science, that which we recognise, the technobabble that corresponds to our view of physics. Then we have that associated with the fantasy of Trek, faster than light phenomenon, then the magic subspace that allows ships to be sensed instantaneously from light years away, that allows immediate communication from similar distances. It follows that any future sensing device would also look beyond the EM spectrum. A simple EM sensor wouldn't be able to tell you if someone is beaming from A to B, if there is a starship in orbit, or temporal fluctuations, or WARP PARTICLES!

Watch an episode of CSI, and you'll see tricorder like gizmos being used regularly. I remember one episode that had a device that was used to scan for a rat that had eaten a bullet. And the lines between sensor, computer and recorder are blurring. There's no tape or disc in the average mp3 player.

Just because a device is multipurpose, it doesn't mean that it is perfect in all modes. It may only be able to sense certain phenomenon, and not discriminate, for which you'll need a lab on a starship.

Finally, sensor, computer recorder also leaves out one of a tricorders more important functions, that of transmitter. How many times have we seen a tricorder used to emit a signal?
 
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