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One of the reasons that Star Trek has been so popular over the last 45 years is Gene Roddenberry’s vision of a future in which humans put their differences aside and unite to explore the universe. Roddenberry’s future says, “Hey, we made it. Life is good. Let’s see what’s out there.” There are lots of valuable lessons to be learned from the Star Trek universe. None of those lessons are included in this list. These are things that the writers probably didn’t intend to teach.

  1. No matter where you go in the universe, every species you encounter will speak perfect English. In TNG and DS9 they alluded to the fact that Starfleet officers had a “universal translator” implant that handled the translation, but in TOS this translator was the size of a good flashlight – way too big to be implanted in your ear.
  2. Almost all aliens look like humans with variations only in either the shape of their ears or ridges on their brows or nose.
  3. You can tell whether an alien is good or bad by how ugly or frightening it is. The more the creature makes your skin crawl, the more likely it is that the alien is going to try to destroy you and all your shipmates.
  4. In spite of the fact that the universe expands forever in every direction, every starship, probe, or meteor you encounter will be traveling on the same plane as your ship. You will never see a ship traveling from the bottom of your viewscreen to the top or encounter a ship that appears to be traveling upside down from your perspective.
  5. When the evil alien fires his energy weapon at your ship, it will be necessary to reverse the engines and back away from the weapon because, for some reason, the idea of going over or under the blast just won’t occur to you.
  6. Even though sound waves cannot travel in the vacuum of space, when you’re “playing dead” trying to lure the enemy closer you will have to speak in hushed tones and whispers and the enemy will hear it when your first officer accidentally presses a button that starts his computer console beeping.
  7. By the 23rd century computers will respond to voice commands with a simulated voice because the only “computer display” developed by that time will be a group of multi-colored, unlabeled lights. Voice command will be necessary because the only alternate input method will be a group of different colored buttons and toggle switches which aren’t labeled.
  8. When you present a computer or android with a paradox such as “The Liar’s Riddle” the machine will continue to repeat the contradictory parts of the riddle until it begins smoking and eventually just quits working.
  9. When your navigation console bursts into flames or showers you with sparks, no actual damage will be done. Once the fire is out, everything will function perfectly.
  10. By the 23rd century the human body will evolve to eliminate the need to eliminate. Bathrooms will be a thing of the past. When you transport to a planet where the natives imprison you for days upon days, the fact that your cell contains no bathroom facilities won’t bother you in the least. Starships will use the space that would have been allotted for bathrooms for extra corridors that are always empty.
  11. Phaser beams or other energy beams will travel exactly the distance you need them to and no farther. If you’re blasting Apollo’s temple from orbit there’s no problem, but if you’re standing on the bridge next to the command chair and fire a phaser at the Scalosion woman who has “accelerated” you, the beam will not reach as far as Lt. Uhura’s station when the alien dodges it.
  12. If you’re a woman and the Captain or Chief Medical Officer falls in love with you, don’t get too excited. It will be a very short-term fling that will more than likely end with your death.
  13. If a particular system or device has never malfunctioned in all of history and someone points out that it would be disastrous if it did, you can be guaranteed that within 24 hours the system or device in question will malfunction.
  14. If Starfleet Command issues you a uniform with a red shirt, go buy a bunch of life insurance because your family is going to need it.
  15. Your superior officer doesn’t know what’s going on, so feel free to disregard his direct orders. In the end he will either congratulate your quick thinking or punish you by taking back that promotion you regretted accepting and giving you back your old job that you miss so much.

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150px-TNGopeninglogo

Many people will tell you that the holodeck made it’s first appearance on Star Trek: The Next Generation. It’s actually been around a lot longer than that.

The Practical Joker

The computer plays a prank on Kirk

In the Star Trek: The Animated Series episode “The Practical Joker”, the ship’s computer becomes sentient and starts playing practical jokes on the crew. These jokes range from having the laundry print “Kirk is a Jerk” on the captain’s uniform shirts to trapping McCoy, Uhura, and Sulu on the Recreation Deck. In that episode, the Recreation Deck is programed to appear as a forest, then a maze, and, eventually, a frozen wasteland.

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A few months ago I was making tentative plans to visit family in Tulsa, Oklahoma and hit the Star Trek convention, Trek Expo, while I was there.

You know what they say about man’s best laid plans. It’s been one unexpected problem after another since I first thought about it and here we are, the weekend the event is taking place, and here I am, at home, several hundred miles away.

If any of my readers attend this convention and want to send pictures to ADMIN AT TREKNICALITIES DOT COM, I’ll be happy to post them here.

 

James Montgomery Doohan, known to millions as Star Trek‘s miracle working engineer, Scotty, was born on this date in 1920.

Doohan was the son of an Irish couple who had emigrated to British Columbia. He joined the Royal Canadian Artilary at the beginning of World War II and saw his first combat mission on the beaches of Normandy on D-Day, where he was fired upon by a nervous Canadian sentry. He was shot four times in the leg, with one shot removing the middle finger from his right hand and another impacting a silver cigarette case in his breast pocket.

After the war, Doohan began acting. His early credits include The Twilight Zone, The Man From U.N.C.L.E., The Outter Limits, and Bonanza. When he auditioned for the roll of an unnamed engineer on Star Trek, he tried several different accents and, when Gene Roddenberry asked his opinion, Doohan commented that all the best engineers are Scottish. The character Montgomery Scott was given James Doohan’s middle name as a first name and the last name Scott because he was Scottish.

There are a few scenes from Star Trek in which you can tell he’s missing a finger: “The Trouble with Tribbles”, “Cats Paw”, “Day of the Dove” (when Doohan grabs a claymore) and “The Lights of Zetar” (towards the end, when Scotty grabs Lt. Mira Romaine). Also in Star Trek III: The Search for Spock, when Scotty is handing McCoy the parts from the Trans-Warp Drive, as well as in Star Trek V: The Final Frontier when Scotty is holding a plastic bag dinner given to him by Uhura.

After the original Star Trek series was canceled, Doohan lent his voice to The Animated Series, often voicing as many as four characters in a single episode, and reprised his role as Scotty for the Star Trek movies. He was noticeably heaver by the time the Star Trek movies were made, a result of his having stopped smoking cigarettes and sancho panza cigars.

James Doohan fathered four children with his first wife, Janet Young, and three more with his last wife, Wende. His youngest child, Sarah, was born in April of 2005 when the actor was 80 years of age.

James Doohan was given his own star on the Hollywood Walk Of Fame on August 31, 2004. In spite of failing health, Doohan was present for the ceremony. This would turn out to be his final public appearance before his death on July 20, 2005 due to pneumonia and Alzheimer’s disease.

Ironically, James Doohan died on the anniversary of what is arguably the greatest engineering achievement in human history, the landing of Apollo 11 on the Moon.

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There are several instances in Star Trek where a character makes a comment that they no longer use money in the 23rd century – most notably, in Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home when Kirk is explaining to his lunch date why she’s getting stck with the bill.

There are also sevreal other instances of a character or group of characters referring to their pay; Kirk, in “The Doomsday Machine”, telling Scotty, “You’ve just earned your pay for the week”, the weekly poker game on TNG‘s Enterprise-D, and anything involving a Ferrengi.

So, the question is, if they don’t use money, what are they exchanging? Dead fish? That’d be one way to get people to stop asking for payday advance loans.

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