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2009-04-13
, 06:35
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Posts: 145 |
Thanked: 18 times |
Joined on Aug 2008
@ Vancouver, BC
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#42
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2010-08-20
, 20:14
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Posts: 87 |
Thanked: 16 times |
Joined on Aug 2010
@ Southern California
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#43
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2010-08-20
, 20:23
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Posts: 261 |
Thanked: 73 times |
Joined on Sep 2009
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#44
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2010-08-20
, 20:28
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Posts: 87 |
Thanked: 16 times |
Joined on Aug 2010
@ Southern California
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#45
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2010-08-20
, 20:33
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Posts: 369 |
Thanked: 167 times |
Joined on Mar 2010
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#46
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2010-08-20
, 21:06
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Posts: 207 |
Thanked: 154 times |
Joined on Nov 2009
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#47
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some might hate me for this, but it gets annoying when people introduce apps without introducing them properly. i appreciate that you made the app, but it would have been nice if you would have explained what this app does..after reading through 5 pages i still dont know, and that just shouldnt be the case..
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2011-09-09
, 14:10
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Posts: 51 |
Thanked: 63 times |
Joined on Jun 2010
@ Klein/Spring, Texas, USA
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#48
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Cute toy. But it really makes it obvious that Star Trek got it wrong. Your faithful reproduction of the interface makes it clear that, as interfaces go, the tricorder's interface really stinks. Lots of big, unnecessary buttons, a tiny, tiny screen, and a generally poor layout really makes it clear that the tricorder is only useful as a prop in a TV show; it would flop as a real-world device.
Strangely, they got it "right" with the on-board computer interfaces (touch-screen LCARS), but the tricorder is all physical buttons and almost no screen!
Star Trek should have had pocketable all-in-one devices, like what's happening in the real world.
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2011-09-09
, 14:20
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Banned |
Posts: 3,412 |
Thanked: 1,043 times |
Joined on Feb 2010
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#49
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Sorry to resurrect an old thread but I came across this and just had to respond.
I couldn't disagree more. The tricoder was, and still is, ahead of its time. Not only was it a computer millions of times more powerful than anything we have today, but it utilized highly sophisticated AI algorithms to scan for basically any pattern. It was also an information storage device of huge capacity, an information transmission and retrieval device, and an information recording device. It performed passive and *active* scanning where active scanning is the emission of practically any kind of flux of particles or any other type of radiation or energy to see how the environment responds. It had a scanning radius of thousands of miles and due to the aforementioned features, the user could scan for something non-specific, or just anything for that matter, and if it was there it would be recognized. Lastly, it could also function as a communications device and an auxiliary power source as its power cells basically lasted forever.
If you watch Star Trek : The Next Generation, you can see that they got it almost all right as almost everything has a touch-display interface, including the new tricorder which has been upgraded with fewer buttons and a larger touch sensitive display -- ahead of its time for the 80's.
But that's exactly what a tricorder is! It's your basic pocketable subcompact swiss-army-knife of the 23rd or 24th centuries.
jdb2
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2011-09-09
, 15:50
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Posts: 51 |
Thanked: 63 times |
Joined on Jun 2010
@ Klein/Spring, Texas, USA
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#50
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You could not be closer to the explanation of a Tricorder if you tried, i just came back in time to let you know.
I think the trick to surviving as a 'red shirt' is to avoid 'away missions' as much as possible, so as to keep a 'low profile'. If you simply *have* to go, then no more "I will just go over there by myself to investigate that strange sensor reading on my tricorder". That is simply *asking* for trouble! And make sure your phaser is set to 'kill' (not 'stun'), and have your finger on the 'fire' button, just in case!
There is nothing more dangerous than a bored cat.