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Star Trek Home Theater

Critical Facilities writes "Someone thought it would be a good idea to model their home theater after the Enterprise NCC-1701D from Star Trek: The Next Generation. The result is super geeky, but actually rather cool. Named the best theme theater installation at CEDIA 2007, this Palm Beach County, FL home features motion-activated air-lock doors with series sound effects, and a "Red Alert" button on the Crestron TPMC-10 controller to turn all of the LEDs bright red and flashing."

10 of 123 comments (clear)

  1. I like the original Star-trek home theator more by module0000 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I like the first Star-trek themed theator I read about on /. in Jaunary.

    The original

    Looks more like the bridge itself.

    --
    Trackball users will be first against the wall.
  2. pretty, but the screen is too small by jollyreaper · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The view from the back would be about as poor as watching a normal-sized screen. But I do like the table element they have going with the worf arc (whatever you called that thing he stood behind.) If you're doing dinnner and a movie, it's nice to have that stuff right in front of you. Of course, with comfy chairs that lay back, you'll end up dropping food all over yourself. The last thing you want to do in a Star Trek-themed room is look like Jabba -- mixing shows is considered very gauche these days.

    --
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  3. Re:Just shoot me... by djupedal · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Wait - there are two cases of someone building and selling a home with a STHT?

    I'm trying to figure the odds of demand meeting supply on just one. How many people go looking for homes that specifically have a Star Trek themed home theater? How big does the pool of buyers need to be before you get at least one, in your area, that falls into that category? The odds seem pretty slim that even one is going to come thru the door. That's what gets me...all that work with the expectation that someone is going to fit the profile as buyer? We're not talking about an extra bathroom, after all.

  4. does the MPAA know... by advocate_one · · Score: 4, Interesting

    about those 3,816 DVDs he's admitted to copying???

    --
    Donald 'Duck' Dunn: We had a band powerful enough to turn goat piss into gasoline.
  5. It's not that hard with the right tools. by Animats · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The ceiling wouldn't be that hard to do. Use a CNC router to mill a clay mould, then vacuum-form plastic sheet over it. TechShop in Silicon Valley has all the gear for that, and there are shops that do large-area vacuum forming. Up to 6' x 11' vacuum forming of single pieces is commercially available.

    Much of the "future" that comes from Hollywood is made by vacuum forming. It's cheap.

  6. Re:Just shoot me... by billcopc · · Score: 3, Interesting

    If it weren't for debt, you wouldn't need 30 years worth of money to buy a home.

    The debt environment artificially inflates real estate pricing because people can "afford" more. They don't end up with a bigger home, they just pay more for the same old pile of dirt. How many people would own homes if it weren't for mortages ? More than you think, because everyone needs a home. What ? You think the land owners and banks would sit idly, waiting for that one wealthy buyer per thousand ? No, they would adapt, or else we would mob them!

    Seriously, it's a low-tech box made of concrete and wood, supposed to protect people from the elements and from other people. How such a basic device could come to be worth half a million or more is beyond logic.

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    -Billco, Fnarg.com
  7. Re:Is it 2003 again? by MobileTatsu-NJG · · Score: 2, Interesting

    And this is news? There was someone in the UK who converted his entire apartment to the bridge of the Enterprise. a.) His entire apartment wasn't converted into the bridge of the Enterprise. Take another look at the photos.

    b.) It was not a theater.

    Slashdot...news from half a decade ago, today. c.) That was years ago. This story has a 2007 date on it. It goes in a very different direction from our friend in the UK.

    The devil's in the details, my friend. You should take a stab at reading both stories. At the moment, you sound like somebody bitching about Slashdot covering Leopard when it had already done OSX years ago.

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    "I like to lick butts!" by MobileTatsu-NJG (#32700246) (Score:5, Informative)

  8. "Tiny" screens by ElvisGump · · Score: 1, Interesting

    A lot of posters have complained how far away and small the screens look in these pictures of home theaters.

    Because these are relatively small rooms these pictures are being shot with very wide angle lenses. If you compare the width of chair backs nearest the camera and farthest away and realize in reality they are pretty much the same size you can see the distortion.

    Wide angle lenses are going to make the tv screens look farther away and smaller than they actually are because of the wide angle distortion of the lens trying to include as much of the room as possible in one shot.

    As to the decor, if it was me I'd just build a dark colored room with a ring of comfy sofa with foot rests rather than go all sci-fi wild like this. If you must, go for a nice TARDIS in the back yard and put all your rakes, tools and trash cans in it or something.

  9. "Simulation" or 3D rendering? by Joce640k · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Those pictures look suspiciously like 3D-Studio renderings to me.

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    No sig today...
  10. Re:Just shoot me... by Mistshadow2k4 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    "The real problem lies within the buyer"? On what planet at this time would that be? Have you watched any of these home-selling shows on HGTV lately? (I'm a care-giver and it's very popular where I do volunteer work.) A great deal of the problem -- and thus, the "hold up" you mention -- is all too often the sellers trying to get two or three times the amount of money they've invested in the house. That's no exaggeration; I saw a show once in which the seller had bought the house for $95,000, invested about $40,000 in remodeling and was trying to sell it for $375,000. He only got $300,000 and bitched about for the last 5 minutes of the show. Jesus, $165,000 wasn't enough of a profit? That was a rather extreme case, but I've seen a lot of others on that show. On pretty much every episode, the sellers inflate the price to at least double what they've spent on the property. It's pure greed that has inflated the cost of a home to absolutely ridiculous levels, and folks like you wonder why it takes so long to sell a house? Duh, not only do your potential buyers have to get a loan for a humongous amount of money, and most likely these "ignorant" people are looking at other houses too -- why the hell shouldn't they? More than anything, artificially inflating prices like this -- not just on homes but on many, many things like cars -- is why we have a debt-based society. So what the hell are you griping about? They have to go through a hell of a lot more trouble to than you do. You sound just like the greedy jerks on that show, bitching that people just don't fall head over heels in love with your house the moment they see it and immediately puke a few hundred grand all over you, no matter how much the house is actually worth.

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