51 points

Honestly if I could just print up a new tablet instantly and without cost, I would have half a dozen around me when I am deep into a research fugue.

Being able to quickly and easily flip between books or articles (or even different sections of the same book) while at the same time keeping the existing information up on a screen that I can directly reference is great.

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25 points

Why are there 4 browsers split between 2 monitors with dozens of tabs a piece?

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4 points

I’m starting to feel limited at two monitors and I think I have a problem. I don’t even know what I’d use #3 for yet, I just would like to have options.

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7 points

If nothing else, remember to stay hydrated and wash your hands.

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7 points

I can see it used for that sort of thing, but they pass them around like they’re post-it notes.

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7 points

They apparently put the human element back into communications by having a third party physically carry the message like pre-screen eras. For reasons, you see.

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15 points
Deleted by creator
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6 points

I have a 42inch curved 4K main monitor.

It’s fucking huge.

Still have 2 27 inch ones in portrait to each side for documentation and browsing.

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1 point

That sounds amazing. Honest question: how much more screen would it take before a full VR setup would seem more practical? Not everyone has a battlestation like this, and I’m genuinely curious where the line is. Thank you.

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1 point

Rather have 4x 21" screens though.

Much easier to organise all the different windows that way.

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1 point

Both Windows and Linux do a rather fantastic job at restoring your desktop to its previous state if you ever reboot.

And in Windows, if you use Powertoys, the options to do so grow even more.

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16 points
*

Engineering - Apple iPad

Security - GNU/Hurd Mobile Flatscreen

Medical - MS Surface TNG

10 Front - Samsung FuchsiaPad

And none of them are interoperable. Did you really think they would solve that in the future?

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7 points

Considering that Star Trek’s Earth is a communist utopia, I would expect so, yes.

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9 points

I recently read an interesting argument that the federation isn’t in fact communist, but basically something beyond our current economic concepts.

We have:

  • explicit self determination, individualism and self fulfillment are held in the highest regard, so much so that it is considered the objective of life to find personal fulfillment and in doing so, giving back to society
  • post scarcity economy, everyone can have any material need fulfilled at any time by virtue of replicators. Though many goods and commodities are still produced in the traditional way to provide a better quality product (how is this limited amount allocated?)
  • Money is not used internally, but the federation has no objection to using it for commerce with other cultures. There is also indication for power tied credit system that federation citizens are subject to, for example for complex replication and transport
  • being a merchant or trader, or rather generally seeking profit and material wealth are, while considered outdated by most, not offensive or even illegal within the federation. There is plenty of evidence for private enterprise, for example the publishing studio that distributes the doctor’s holo novel in VOY

And many more, even contradictory to our current day minds, aspects that put the federation system and ideology someplace further than our current concepts.

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3 points

It has always seemed to me that their society is what you’d get if the United States didn’t have billionaires hoarding 90% of the wealth. Allocate all of those resources fairly, reduce the population, add in some free electricity and replicators, and you have TNG.

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3 points

I’m sorry, what?

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2 points

post-scarcity, not communist.

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1 point

They don’t have money, and other than Starfleet and The UFP council, they don’t seem to have government. I assume that someone is still administering France, since we do see France still exists, but they don’t refer to The US, because I don’t think the US survived to the 24th century. There’s an argument to be made that they’re mostly communist.

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2 points

Why would each area of the ship need to use a different brand or model of device?

That’s sure not how military ships work now.

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1 point

They all run Syncthing and KDE Connect. What more interoperability you could expect is probably about things those devices won’t even allow you to do.

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16 points

Like all predictions about future technology, Star Trek was both right and way off.

Padds are almost used like portable storage devices. Want to give someone a book? Load it onto a padd for them.

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12 points

But who wants to deal with searching through the UI for pertinent info when you can have several PADDs each attuned to a specific set of data?

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They can even have their own special UI! The way they talk about reconfiguring panels makes it seem like you can build your own UI on the fly, especially the time Worf yelled at a dude who put the con controls in the engine room of the defiant and didn’t use the standard layout.

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8 points

I’m more amused by Jake writing his stories on a PADD with a stylus, but you see it and it’s all printed text.

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11 points

I get it. I hate typing on mobile devices.

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3 points

In the future, kids learn how to hand-write text that looks printed.

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2 points
*

Production reason: without a stylus it looks like he’s reading, not writing. Without one, dialogue like “I’m writing a book” would come across as lying, which can completely change a scene for the worse.

In-universe lore reason: Jake is a romantic and probably feels that the more tactile approach is better for his creative process.

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16 points

My headcanon is that some of the PADDs are 1-time use with read only memory that can’t have the data loaded or transferred off it. A secure way of passing information.

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9 points

Just chuck them into a matter recycler when finished. No messy piles of old PADDs. Unless you’re Sloan from Section 31.

I know this is in his head, but in all likelihood how he really kept his notes.

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2 points

That is one way to not get hacked I suppose

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2 points

Reminds me of the paper printouts in the very earliest TOS episodes. Like, what do you do when you run out of paper in deep space? And do you really have the storage for 5 years worth of computer printouts? Logistically, even an etch-a-sketch makes more sense.

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8 points
*

Yeah, it’s commonly thought to have something to do with security. Similar to chain of custody for criminal evidence.

Engineering compiles a department report for the captain. The Shift Lead puts the data on a PADD, then gives that PADD to the Chief Engineer. The Chief Engineer signs the data with their command code and notes that it is PADD-1217. That data then becomes locked to that PADD. Someone from Engineering is assigned to take PADD-1217 to the bridge and hand deliver it to the Captain. The Captain receives the PADD, reviews the report, confirms that they are holding PADD-1217, and signs the report with their command code. Someone from Engineering is sent to retrieve the PADD, and re-deliver it to the Chief Engineer. The Chief Engineer confirms the PADD was read and signed by the Captain, confirms it is PADD-1217, and transfers the signed data to the computer core to be logged and archived. The Chief Engineer then confirms all data on the PADD has been transferred and erased, then stores the PADD until it is needed again.

This is why it’s common to see a pile of PADDs on the Captain’s desk. Each department is sending their own secure report on their own PADD.

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13 points

It’s very amazing to me that we have better tablets today than they had on TNG, yet we’re further from space exploration today than we were when TNG was being made.

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