OnToMars
Now on to the making of films!
Member # 621
posted
Final Point: don't like it, dont watch it and dont complain, let others enjoy it.
No. Don't like me complaining? Don't come here. Don't read my posts. Let others enjoy stimulating conversations.
I like trying to apply real science and engineering to Star Trek. It's enjoyable and an intellectual excercise.
As for throwing around the words 'science' and 'engineering', I wasn't fond of using them so much in my posts. The problem is that there are no decent synonyms for them like almost every other word in the English language.
I am pursuing an aerospace engineering degree, but I by no means consider myself an engineer yet, as I'm only a month into my college career. But you don't have to be an engineer to know something about engineering.
The bottom line is, we are all interested in figuring out the hinted at or unreavealed elements of the Star Trek universe. I have used the best of my ability to come to my own determination. Take it or leave it, but as it stands it makes the most sense for its subject until something more logical and cohesive is presented.
-------------------- If God didn't want us to fly, he wouldn't have given us Bernoulli's Principle.
quote:Originally posted by Stingray: Final Point: don't like it, dont watch it and dont complain, let others enjoy it.
No. Don't like me complaining? Don't come here. Don't read my posts. Let others enjoy stimulating conversations.
Agreed. Freedom of speech, and all that.
quote:Originally posted by Stingray: I am pursuing an aerospace engineering degree, but I by no means consider myself an engineer yet, as I'm only a month into my college career. But you don't have to be an engineer to know something about engineering.
Nifty. I was an aerospace engineering major for almost two years, until I realized that I hate math.
posted
I've been all over the board. First I was a studio art major for about a week, then aerospace engineering for two years, then a year off from school, and now I'm back.