Edit: Starfleet door.And on the front door of the Leightons' home on Planet Q.
Edit: Starfleet door.And on the front door of the Leightons' home on Planet Q.
I found that hilarious when it was first pointed out to me.The only 23rd century Starfleet doorknob seen in TOS was on the door to injured Pike's room.
That it was dangerous and uncommon was a major plot point. They should have at least mentioned that in Discovery. Instead they do it without a second thought.[Intraship beeming]'s dangerous but not unheard of.
That it was dangerous and uncommon was a major plot point. They should have at least mentioned that in Discovery. Instead they do it without a second thought.
Another 23rd century door on hinges:
http://tos.trekcore.com/hd/albums/1x29hd/operationannihilatehd157.jpg
It wasn't just for Kirk and Spock to save their own hides. Kirk got the idea to get to the weapons right away and stop the slaughter of Zeons. Waiting around in the cell for an hour wouldn't have helped save any Zeons.
The ST franchise has a long history of saying that something being newly introduced was a huge deal to undertake, only to have it turn out fine, and quickly become routine. The first mind meld ("Dagger of the Mind") was going to be dangerous. Telling an outworlder about ponn farr was forbidden ("Amok Time"). Kirk's wildest of longshot risks always pay off. Saucer separation at warp speed worked just fine ("Encounter at Farpoint"). Flying through the barrier at the center of the galaxy proved painless (Star Trek V).
Intraship beaming in "Day of the Dove" was just another case of starting out with breathless hype and worrying about later stories later.
In the process of watching any TOS episode, did you ever question why a character said or did something that was borderline ridiculous?
I'll start off.......in Miri, Kirk picks up a tricycle and then hands it to Spock, who looks like he's thinking, "What the heck?......"
Obviously that should be The Changeling not The Channeling.
All beaming requires pinpoint precision. The shorter the distance, the safer it should be.
Perhaps transporters are farsighted. To beam within the ship you need to use the special "reading glasses" mode. More seriously, it occurs to me that the transporter emitters are aimed away from the hull (one would assume), so they would have to beam backwards through themselves to materialize someone not on the pad inside the ship.
Is ever said they weren't traveling at FTL speeds?Romulans not being able to do FTL in "Balance of Terror"..
And yet the Enterprise not being to easily outpace it.
Scotty says their (Romulans) power is simple Impulse.Is ever said they weren't traveling at FTL speeds?
Scotty says their (Romulans) power is simple Impulse.
They had blankets.Why not just beam down blankets to the guys on the planet in "Enemy Within"?
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