To me it does NOT make better drama, because it breaks one of the tenants of the genre this drama is set in.
That giant hands can grab spaceships or people can be turned into cubes and then back into people?
What were we discussing again?
To me it does NOT make better drama, because it breaks one of the tenants of the genre this drama is set in.
3D Master, we should recognize that Trek has never shown us a space habitat that wasn't a Starfleet facility. There were no space habitats in sight in TMP other than the office complex and the drydock. Nothing. Same for TWOK. Spacedock was almost certainly a Starfleet facility too. Nothing in TNG, DS9, or VOY either to suggest that humans had any number of civilian space habitats.
In fact, the VOY crew seemed to marvel at the the space-borne societies...
http://voy.trekcore.com/gallery/albums/7x22/Natural_Law_054.JPG
http://voy.trekcore.com/gallery/albums/6x13/Virtuoso_059.JPG
... like you imagine Earth to be. But we see none of this at Earth in Trek.
There were mentions of the Lunar Colonies, but supposedly they had a lake, too, that was visible from Earth, suggesting terraforming... much like how the Mojave Desert in the 23rd century is lush and green.
No space "cruise ships" were mentioned either. Any vacation spots, like Risa or Wriggle's Pleasure Planet, were all planets, and you probably took a "space bus" to get there, like we'd take an airplane to get to France. We heard about transports (like today's commercial airlines or old steamships) and cargo ships (like today's semis or shipping vessels). But nothing like, say, the luxury ship seen in The Fifth Element.
Admit it, 3D, you are filling in the blanks with your own imagination, not evidence from Trek. That's fine, but don't expect us to share your opinions.
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:sighs:
By the way, 3D Master, you seem to be under the impression that I was joking when I advised you back here to knock it off with the ":sighs:" business.:sighs:
. . . Space station K7, commanded by a civilian commander, populated by civilians, including a bar with civilian waitresses. . .
Seeing as Battlestar Galactica is barely known and even its best ratings couldn't even get close to the ratings of Star Trek's worst show Enterprise. It barely even got half, no, looking at Battlestar Galactica would be a BAD thing indeed.
Battlestar Galactica is a dramatically VERY BAD show, and scientifically as well. All the extremely advanced technologies like lasers, phasers, force fields and such that Moore didn't want to use, are exactly the technologies needed to produce the FTL drive - more advanced that Star Trek's FTL drive - as well sentient, artificial intelligence.
The result is, that Battlestar Galactica to anyone with even a passing knowledge of science and what we've got these days, looks ridiculous. They've got computers less advanced than us, yet artificial intelligence that those computers wouldn't be able to generate in a million years. Massively advanced FTL-drive, with not a shred of the technology needed to build it. In some ways, not just computers, less advanced than we are today.
If you actually watched the show, you should know that Galactica was a very old ship, ready to be decommissioned. That's why it was full of old technology, and that's the only reason they managed to survive the Cylon attack. The topic is repeatedly mentioned throughout the show.
I never said anything about believability of the technologies themselves, I was talking about the mismatch; magnificently advanced FTL drive, requiring a myriad of technologies to make it work, all technologies that the show claims does not exist, because they don't use them anywhere.Pelase, BSG technology is much more believable than Trek's.It's ridiculous from start to finish.
Please explain.No, it wouldn't.Logic would make transporter technology usable only between two transporter devices.
There were mentions of the Lunar Colonies, but supposedly they had a lake, too, that was visible from Earth, suggesting terraforming... much like how the Mojave Desert in the 23rd century is lush and green.
Actually, DS9's "Valiant" established that Luna has not been terraformed and remains a planetoid devoid of an atmosphere or ecology. The colonies are established to reside inside of pressurized domes -- presumably the same is true of Lake Armstrong.
Of course, every time Luna has been shown in Trek, we saw no evidence of neither terraforming nor pressurized domes large enough to be seen from Earth.![]()
. . . Space station K7, commanded by a civilian commander, populated by civilians, including a bar with civilian waitresses. . .
K7 is the exception to the rule, and for all we know, K7 is essentially a glorified airport terminal, complete with an airport bar, annoying salespeople, management offices, and storage lockers for holding your stuff between flights.
Now expand it to the entire world and beyond. Tell me something, what unifying trait could it be, that nearly entire species, 95% at least are unwilling to travel about? There are but very few but all serious, serious things that could do that on such scale.
ETA:
Just to weigh in on this ever-so-heated argument:
Seems to me that the Federation has more than enough resources and safety measures to build ships in orbit or on the ground, whichever they may wish. If we want an in-universe justification for the building of Constitution-class starships on the ground in the mid-23rd Century, we can just say that Starfleet wanted the Earth-bound public to be able to easily see the enormity of Starfleet's space program and achievements and to perhaps inspire them in that way. Perhaps they're doing similar things on other worlds throughout the Federation -- maybe the Vulcan-crewed USS Intrepid was built in a ground-based shipyard just outside of Shir'Kahr, for instance, or maybe a Constitution-class USS Kumari or USS Shallash was built just outside the Andorian and Tellarite capitals, respectively.
Which again requires an apathic people and extremely UNoptimistic.
It's a major credibility violation, along with the Grand Canyon's cousin being nestled in the cornfields of Iowa.
1. Erm, do we know that the opening sequence with Lil' Kirk takes place in Iowa? We see Iowa license plates, but that's all we know. It could easily take place somewhere in the Southwest United States.
2. To you, the ship being built on the ground is a credibility violation. It's not to me -- I mean, hell, they have energy fields capable of canceling out the g-forces that high impulse would entail and of keeping their ships from being crushed by inertia when they go to warp, let alone the fact that they can break the known laws of physics and travel faster than the speed of light. Given that, why shouldn't I buy the idea of them being able to build the ships on the ground?
:sighs: The known laws of physics are NOT broken by going faster than the speed of light. In fact, the known laws of physics tell us that if space is warped as Star Trek tells us it is warped, it will happen EXACTLY as Star Trek tells us happens.
Seriously folks: Alcubierre warp drive theory. Has been around for FOURTEEN ffing years. Keep up with the times, will you.
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I'm getting to point of giving up on sighing and just going with slamming my head in the table with exasperation.
Are u insane? The aircraft carriers in Pearl Harbor were REAL SHIPS, WITH REAL HISTORY! They actually happened. Thats why the ships they used in Pearl Harbor were wrong, especially since they were not flattop carriers like the Japanese used.
The Enterprise is a fictional ship. JJ can do whatever the fuck he wants with it, and it will not effect actual history in any way.
There is no point in either using it or not using it. It would be totally up to whoever is making the production... JJ chose not. Had this been a different director who knows what we would get, every director would apporach that question in his own way...:sighs:
I'm getting to point of giving up on sighing and just going with slamming my head in the table with exasperation.
Yes, please do... This ceased being a fun, fruitful debate several pages ago.
Have we sufficiently answered "Why not just use the pilot design?" already?
Oh, let's not even go there! The existence of transporters calls wayyyy too many of Trek's construction techniques into questionGiven what was shown on screen in TOS (the "limitless power" the warp engines, scanning technology, transporter technology, computer power, etc.) it's clear that if they so desired the engineers at Star Fleet could have beamed the Enterprise into existence anywhere they desired. Either in parts or whole..
Oh, and the 'space is a cleanroom' thing? No it isn't, especially in near-Earth orbit.
Microparticles, and space dust are still up in the hard vacuum of space...Oh, and the 'space is a cleanroom' thing? No it isn't, especially in near-Earth orbit.
In what sense, exactly? As the STS Wake Shield Facility Program experiments demonstrated, the vacuum at 300 km altitude is substantially "harder" than anything that can be presently generated in laboratory vacuum chambers.
TGT
A CLEANroom is called a CLEANroom not because it's a Vacuum, but because... It's CLEAN.. In other words NO DUST or Particles to get into what your working on.
Lest we forget, Star Trek, more than anything else, is a dramatic production. At some level, it just makes better drama for Young Kirk to ride up on a motorcycle, trapped in the Iowa cornfields as he is, and see workers swarming over a starship under construction.
I'll accept that as a logical argument (with Qonos's caveat about clean v. vacuum), and say good for you for pointing it out without rancour, belittling and namecalling.Oh, and the 'space is a cleanroom' thing? No it isn't, especially in near-Earth orbit.
In what sense, exactly? As the STS Wake Shield Facility Program experiments demonstrated, the vacuum at 300 km altitude is substantially "harder" than anything that can be presently generated in laboratory vacuum chambers.
TGT
Bull. It would make better sense for young James Kirk to fly his speeder bike up into space, and get a look at the Enterprise being constructed in Spacedock, much like Kimball Kinnison might do with his Cycleroader space bike in the movie, TV, and comic book versions of Lensman. That would have made it like real science fiction, and or Star Trek, than what we've seen in the trailer.
A CLEANroom is called a CLEANroom not because it's a Vacuum, but because... It's CLEAN.. In other words NO DUST or Particles to get into what your working on.
Spacecraft assembly cleanrooms are not completely particle free. They are assigned class ratings such as Class 100,000, Class 1000 and Class 100. The rating refers to the average particulate content of a cubic foot of air, so the lower the number the cleaner the facility. Class 100 facilities are exceedingly difficult (and expensive) to maintain, especially if there is work in progress. LEO is, needless to say, substantially cleaner.
TGT
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