Archive for March, 2010

Followup: iPad: The Star Trek Use Case

Mar 31 2010 Published by Uncle Mikey under Gadgetry,Living in the Future,Star Trek

[Original article]

Several of you have pointed out to me that I’m not the only one who has noticed the resemblance between Apple’s impending device and Star Trek‘s ubiquitous portable data thingummies. Gizmodo points out there will be an app for that…

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iPad: The Star Trek Use Case

Mar 28 2010 Published by Uncle Mikey under Gadgetry,Living in the Future,Star Trek

Star Trek is, of course, a world full of ubiquitous computing, although it’s rarely portrayed in those terms exactly. We see communicators, tricorders, flat-panel displays everywhere…and, for portable information access and messaging, the PADD.

Of course, these are really all just non-functional props. But the ideas behind them have long-since fired the imagination of real-world engineers. Communicators have already completely infiltrated our real-world lives–we call them cellphones. Flat panel displays are now so common it’s getting hard to remember when televisions took up significant cubic volume and not just rectangular area. Tricorders…well, we’ve got a way to go on that one, because we’re nowhere near the necessary technology for that kind of magical scanning. But they’re working on it.

PADDs, however, are in reach of our real-world technology, and the iPad seems to be consciously trying to make them a reality. The way PADDs have been portrayed, even as far back as Classic Trek1 gives us some insight, I believe, into how Apple envisions the iPad being used.

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  1. Which didn’t call them PADDs, or course; in fact, in they didn’t call them anything. They never referred to them. They just used them. This is one of the reasons I sometimes argue that Classic Trek was actually better science fiction that TNG and later.

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Doctor Who: The Davies Era

Mar 06 2010 Published by Uncle Mikey under Doctor Who,Unsolicited Opinion

Let’s start out with the obvious: Russell T. Davies ressurrected Doctor Who. In the process, he also completely re-created the concept of “family television”, meaning television the entire family actually watches together, as opposed to something the kids watch while the parents ignore them. He did two things that everyone, himself included, were fairly sure were impossible, and in a way that appears to be sustainable without him 1

Given how savage I’ve been about RTD’s writing in some of my recent reviews, you might find this praise surprising, but it’s nothing but the documentable truth. Doctor Who had collapsed in the late 80s, and languished as a television property for nearly 15 years. Lots of people wanted to see it revived, but nobody was quite sure how to do successfully accomplish it.

Until RTD found a way.

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  1. Yes, I know, we don’t know this for certain yet. But the BBC seems willing to bet heavily on it.

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