Star Trek's Design Influence On Palm, New Tech
kevcol writes "The San Francisco Chronicle has a fun article describing how many of the inventions of Star Trek have made early appearances, 2 centuries ahead of Captain Kirk's time. They talk with one of Palm's UI designers, who admits that '...my first sketches were influenced by the UI of the Enterprise bridge panels', and also notes: 'When we designed the first Treo... it had a form factor similar to the communicators in the original series. It had a speakerphone mode so you could stand there and talk into it like Capt. Kirk'."
The UI of star trek (at least TNG and onwards) has been horrible. A bunch of numbered buttons with lines going in virtually random directions to displays of other grouped buttons that don't seem to make any sense as to why they are grouped... They look pretty, but there is no way someone would lay out an interface like that and use it daily...
Don't take my word for it, do some googling for actual set shots of the UI... it's upsettingly poorly designed.
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Programming is like sex... Make one mistake and support it the rest of your life.
Isn't there a ST communicator-styled cell phone avaliable yet? It seems to me we have the miniaturization tech to produce a really cool and obvious product.
Remember SARS? In East Asia (and maybe Canada - I don't know) they used infrared imagers to scan passengers boarding planes for symptoms of fever.
Back during my days before the internet was in wide use I was on GEnie. A lot of the staff on trek hung out there. Mike Okuda who did the graphic art of the show and helped write the tech manuals and technical writing guides told me in an oline clat that the computer was constantly ease dropping on everyone in order to tell if you were about to request a comm link.
Thus you had Picard saying to the ceiling "Picard to Bridge" and get an instant comm link with out having to touch anything. The only issue I had was there was never a pause. He would instantly say that and Riker or Data would instantly answer. Obviously in real life the computer would have had to record that request and play that on the bridge for whoever to hear an answer. A delay of a second or two should have always happened while the computer repeated the request and got an answer back.
Picard: "Picard to Bridge"
Computer on bridge: "Picard to Bridge"
Riker: "Riker here, sir."
Computer in Picard's quarters: "Riker here, sir."
Only at that point would the two way link be established.
Obviously from a TV point of view that realistic a use of comm links would have slowed down the show.
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Seriously. I think I'd buy a new wireless phone in a heartbeat, if it was modeled after the classic trek communicator. I fail to understand why Paramount hasn't licensed this to Motorola yet.
144l. ph34r my 133t l3g4l 5k1lz!
The idea being that PADDs are about as ubiquitous as paper or floppy disks or burned CDs are nowadays. It's supposed to be like handing around a floppy disk that happens to have a touchscreen on it. No big loss. In fact you probably don't care if it gets returned, or even expect it to get returned.
It's a neat idea, and I would be surprised if it didn't happen in some form eventually.
Random and weird software I've written.
You have an excellent point. To all those people who talk about how "intuitive" Windows is, I beg to differ. You learned how it works, so it makes sense to you. And don't get me started on Macs! It's never made sense to me that you eject your CD by throwing it away.... that is NOT intuitive!
That's why I love seeing someone trying Linux for the first time using something like twm instead of KDE or Gnome! It's hilarious!
And how many Isaac Asimov ideas have been turned into everyday reality? Humanity writes it's own future in Science Fiction.
How many science fiction books dealt with the grim future of a corperate controlled government?
*DrugCheese rants*
Temperature and heart rate should be easy - infrared pyrometers are used in industry to measure, with accuracy, the temperature of a surface, no reason it shouldn't work to point it at a person & get a number.
I do believe that "core temp" is what is important.
Sure the temperature under the tongue of the average healthy person will be 98.6 F, but who knows what the normal skin temp of the forehead of the average person is?
LK
"Hi. This is my friend, Jack Shit, and you don't know him." - Lord Kano
Don't take my word for it, do some googling for actual set shots of the UI... it's upsettingly poorly designed.
It's upsettingly poor if you want to have friendly, discoverable user interface.
I suspect rather it's a learned interface. Some 22nd century researcher computed the fastest, most error-proof interface and it has to be learned how to use.
Think about it. "Mr. Worf, target the leftmost and rightmost ships' engines. Fire."
Mr. Worf has about 2 seconds to input this into the computer. He can't grab a mouse and go:
Menubar...Weapons...Select Ship... Ship 1...
Modify target type... Engines...Modify weapon type...phasers....
OK...OK...OK...
[repeat for ship 2]
Menubar...Weapons...Fire
At best he has time to go "bleepity bleep bleep bleep". As a tradeoff he had to go to 3 semesters of targeting computer class at Starfleet Academy. But it's worth it because he nails the other ships before they can return fire.
UI books are filled with real-world analogues - in the 90's they replaced lots of VT terminals with Windows GUI apps on Citrix terminals for travel agents, telesales folk, hospital registrations, etc., and usually their productivity was cut in half on their data entry tasks. They had memorized the keypresses 5 screens in advance on the terminal apps, but now had to wait between each step and use a mouse to navigate. It's largely a latency problem.
GUI's are a great solution to many UI problems, but not all of them.
My God, it's Full of Source!
OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
By mind reading?
..." that is snuffed out when the finally says the destination.
How can the computer play, ON THE BRIDGE, the words "Picard to..." when he hasn't even uttered the words yet?
Sure the computer is wrapped up in an FTL field. That just means that, from the POV of the computer, it is having to wait an enormously long time while it waits on Picard to utter Bridge, Sickbay, Barbershop, or whatever he might be wanting to call. Unless shipwide there is this utterance of "Picard to
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Yes: you don't have to waste time doing a lot of simple tests whose time cost adds up or hooking up a (possibly convulsing) patient using wires to a hulking box in the corner when you can just look at a panel to get a wealth of data. Very handy in an emergency.
OTOH, Jabra seems to have done it right.
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I almost went as far as to play the asshole and point out how often we see people in the shower, until I realized that even I don't want to be the guy that corrects cast members.
StoneCypher is Full of BS