dewline: Text: Trekkish Chatter Underway (TrekChatter)
The fan fiction project by John Concagh that I've been working on that map for just uploaded a new chapter tonight.

https://edgeofmidnight.weebly.com/chapter-fourteen.html
dewline: Text - "On the DEWLine" (Default)
I am remembering "All Good Things", the wrap-up of The Next Generation's branch of Star Trek. Specifcally, one of the "guest" starships in that episode, the hospital ship USS Pasteur as captained in an alternative future by Beverly Crusher Picard.

Well, hospital ships are a real thing in some few real-worlds wet navies. The USNS Mercy and USNS Comfort are in US service and have been for some decades. Since I was in grade school, I think.

Anyway. It's occurred to at least one naval affairs blogger that maybe more hospital ships would be a good thing for the USN to have at hand in case of future crises, domestic and overseas. Whether new-built or refitted from private hands. I would agree re: Canadian purposes as well, if we get through this current mess reasonably intact enough. If we don't need them at home, there's UN/WHO operations that could be supported, right?

But again, we have to get through this mess without being annexed by "Trumpistan" or being remade into a province of Xi Jinping's or Putin's regimes. Or bankrupted and whatever else our nightmares can dream up.

And on to whatever's next between now and the end of the first season of Picard...

Related note: https://cdrsalamander.blogspot.com/2020/03/cruise-ships-and-usnr-covid-19-public.html
dewline: Logo: Canadian Spaceflight (space)
Okay, I've had this idea percolating in the Trekkish corners of my brain for a little while. I'm sharing it now before this grind/whine noise in the right ear distracts me completely: the Constitution class of starships has been in service since at least two decades before Enterprise NCC-1701 was commissioned.

You want evidence. That's good.

What I have is the confirmed - in the episodes and movies as shown on TV and in the cinema and via subscription-streaming - registry numbers of the Federation starships we know for certain to be of that class. I'm sourcing this from Memory Alpha...

NCC-956 USS Eagle
NCC-1017 USS Constellation
NCC-1631 USS Intrepid
NCC-1659 USS Potemkin
NCC-1664 USS Excalibur
NCC-1672 USS Exeter
NCC-1700 (Unknown)
NCC-1701 USS Enterprise
NCC-1703 USS Hood
NCC-1707 (Unknown)
NCC-1709 USS Lexington
NCC-1764 USS Defiant
NCC-1856 USS Emden
NCC-1895 USS Endeavour
NCC-2014 USS Korolev
NCC-2048 USS Ahwahnee

I discount Greg Jein's theory - "The Case of Jonathan Doe Starship" - that all starships docked at Starbase 10 during Kirk's court-martial re: the death of Benjamin Finney were Constitution-class. The odds of such a happenstance are too small for me to consider. And thanks to Star Trek: Discovery in general and the work of designer John Eaves in particular, we now have other options for the registries listed there.

I also prefer to assume - based on over 50 years' worth of evidence from the various series - that Federation Starfleet ship registry numbers are issued on a chronological basis, without interruption.

Up until now, I chose to believe that (1) the Constitution herself was NCC-1700, and that all ships with registry numbers prior to hers were salvaged from previous starship classes. No longer.

It may still well be that NCC-1700 belongs to a Starship Constitution...but she need not be either the first of her name or of her starship class. Not with six other starships of the class commissioned before her.

Kirk's claim of "twelve like her in the fleet"? Depends on your point of view. Going by registry numbers as confirmed, I'm willing to hazard a guess of at least three, perhaps as many as five production batches of ships. Kirk's twelve ships would certainly count as one of those three to five batches.

A lot of us have some investment in the mythology as established before DSC. I certainly did. I bought books and deck plan sets and stuff - not all of it officially licensed, but that's okay, because multiversal theory allows us to keep enjoying what we've bought as if it were official in some other version of Starfleet, somewhere in that multiverse.

Anyway, there it is. I think I wrote it out coherently enough. Fellow Treknology fans are welcome to debate whatever parts they like.
dewline: Three question marks representing puzzlement (Puzzlement 2)
I am thinking of the "round table" introductions of the bridge crew in "Brother" at the start of the current season. Something came to mind: being in the alpha-shift bridge crew doesn't always translate to being head of whatever department/division they're in, right?

So, I'm still wondering who's in charge of what aboard USS Discovery NCC-1031. Our roster is incomplete on this point.
dewline: Logo: Canadian Spaceflight (space exploration)
I was listening to a discussion of the Mars-rover Opportunity on CBC Radio's The Current while doing my cleaning project.

As a Star Trek fan: I'd be disappointed to not see the rover names represented in Starfleet's order of operations-type starship lists.

(Okay, maybe "Opportunity" would be one that the Ferengi merchant fleet would want an exclusive claim on...)
dewline: Text - "On the DEWLine" (Default)
1. The Expanse started its third season tonight, so I put it on the PVR for later review. Looking forward to watching that.

2. Need sleep. Still not getting it.

3. Yes, I heard about Anson Mount and Tig Notaro re: ST: Discovery. Interesting developments, both. Implication about Notaro's character's role and home starship: if they name one for Hiawatha, is there one for Deganawideh? Given the reverence/respect shown the latter among the Haudenosonee in his role as their Great Peacemaker, what would be the proper starship-naming protocol here?
dewline: Text - "On the DEWLine" (Default)
Just how busy was that sector in May 2256, anyway? When Adm. Anderson sent out the "red alert" call in "Battle of the Binary Stars", he was able to get 10 other ships to show up within the space of however many hours...
dewline: Text - "On the DEWLine" (Default)
Noting that Netflix isn't doing business inside mainland China, but they are offering their services in Traditional and Simplified Chinese langages anyway in assorted other markets.

Also noting that Star Trek: Discovery is being carried outside of the US and Canada by Netflix.

One of the supporting cast ships in the new series is USS Shenzhou NCC-1227.

Wondering if the dedication plaque will credit the Dalian Yards in mainland China for that starship. Dalian is where mainland China's first aircraft carrier, the Liaonang, was refitted to their navy's requirements.
dewline: Text - "On the DEWLine" (Default)
If you're a Trek fan who likes to look at Cool Spaceship Art, get your browser's backside over to Doug Drexler's blog for a sneak peek at the 2010 Ships of the Line Calendar.

Now.

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