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    The Computers of Star Trek

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    Light and virtual reality programming

      Local area networks (LANs)

      LOC units

      Locutus

      Logic

      Logic Theorist

      Luke Skywalker

      M—5 incident

      Magnetic bubble matter

      Main Computer System (figure)

      Main processing core

      figure

      and keyboard and speech commands

      “Masks” (TNG)

      “Matter of Time, A” (TNG)

      McCarthy, John

      McCoy, Leonard, Dr.

      and antidote for aging disease

      as an emotional humanist

      and Spock’s brain

      and subcutaneous transponders

      and tricorder

      Medicine

      Memory

      “Meridian” (DS9)

      Micron junction links

      Microprocessors

      Millenium Falcon

      Miniature subspace field generators (MSFG)

      Minsky, Marvin

      Minuet

      “Miri” (TOS)

      Mistrust of computer technology

      Monitoring of conversations

      Moore, Gordon

      Moore’s Law

      Moriarty, Dr.

      and sentience

      “Most Toys, The” (TNG)

      Music, and human versus android capabilities

      “Naked Now, The” (TNG)

      “Naked Now, The” (TOS)

      “Naked Time, The” (TOS)

      Nanites

      and medical science

      Nanocommunicators, injected

      Nanoprocessor

      definition of

      Nanotechnology

      and the Borg

      and encryption

      and the Federation

      Navigation

      Networking design, of Enterprise computer

      Neurons

      and analog behavior

      artificial

      and the brain

      and connection weights

      Neuroprocessors

      “Neutral Zone, The” (TNG)

      Newell, Allen

      Next Generation, The

      computer of, architecture of

      generational difference in

      Nomad

      NVisage

      Object-oriented programming (OOP)

      O’Brien, Chief Operations Officer Miles

      and bomb explosion

      and computer malfunction

      and fixing of chips

      and overriding of DS9 computer

      shrinking to enter computer console

      O’Brien, Keiko

      ODN. See Optical Data Network (ODN)

      Odo, Security Officer

      Offenhouse, Ralph

      “Offspring, The” (TNG)

      Ogihara, Mitsu

      Ohm, Georg Simon

      Ohm’s Law

      “Omnilingual” (Piper)


      “11001001” (TNG)

      “One Little Ship” (DS9)

      Operating systems

      Operation Desert Storm

      Operations per second (OPS)

      Optical computers

      Optical Data Network (ODN)

      compared to Internet

      compared to LCARS

      and Distributed Processing Network, figure

      Optical isolinear chips

      physical size of

      Optical Translator Clusters

      Optitek

      Original Series, The (TOS)

      computers as primitive

      and differences in later series

      and mistrust of computer technology

      and use of first and second generation computers

      “Outrageous Okona, The” (TNG)

      Overall Ship Computer System (figure)

      PADDs. See Personal Access Display Devices

      “Paradise Lost” (DS9)

      Paris, Lieutenant Tom

      “Patterns of Force” (TOS)

      Paxans

      “Peak Performance” (TNG)

      Pentium chip

      Personal Access Display Devices (PADDs)

      Personal Computers (PC)

      Phaser beams

      Phoneme

      Photolithography

      Physics of Star Trek, The (Krauss)

      Picard, Jean-Luc, Captain

      and Data

      and Dixon Hill

      kidnapping of

      and killing of Borgs

      and Locutus

      and use of Holodeck

      “Piece of the Action, A” (TOS)

      Piper, H. Beam

      Plagues

      Plaques

      Positronic brain

      Power, computer, growth of

      “Power Play” (TNG)

      Pretty Good Privacy (PGP)

      Privacy issues

      and encryption

      and holosuites

      and security

      Processing modules (of main processing core). See Core elements (of main processing core)

      Programming languages

      Proto Snippet

      Psi 2000

      Psychic power

      Pulaski, Dr.

      Q (superbeing)

      Quadritronic optical subprocessor (QOS)

      “Quality of Life, The” (TNG)

      Quark

      and the holodeck

      and holosuites

      “Quest, The” (DS9)

      “Q Who?” (TNG)

      R2D2

      Rachelis

      RAM

      Rand, Yeoman

      Rationality and computers

      Ray, Animesh

      Raymond, Clair

      Red Squad

      Repairs, to computers

      Replicator technology

      “Return of the Archons, The” (TOS)

      Riker, William, Commander

      Rivest, Ron

      R’Mor, Telek

      Robots

      in industry

      and MIT

      and music

      and NASA

      “Rocks and Shoals” (DS9)

      Roddenberry, Gene

      Rom

      Romulans

      Roykerk, Jackson

      RSA Data Security, Inc.

      Russell, Dr. Toby

      “Sacrifice of Angels” (DS9)

      Sarek, Ambassador

      “Schizoid Man, The” (TNG)

      Schneider, Bruce

      “Scorpion” (VGR)

      Scott, Chief Engineer Montgomery

      “Second Chances” (TNG)

      Security

      and cyberwar

      and encryption

      suggested system of

      weakness of

      Servo machines

      Seska

      Sevrin,* Dr.

      “Shadowplay” (DS9)

      Shakey (robot)

      Shells, Mary

      “Ship in a Bottle” (TNG)

      Sigma Draconis

      Silicon

      Simon, Herbert

      Singh, Khan Noonien

      Sisko, Captain Benjamin

      and bomb explosion

      and Dominion blockade

      Smart-Shirts

      Snare

      Sojourner

      Solo, Han

      Soong, Noonien

      Sound recognition

      Space, vastness of

      “Space Seed” (TOS)

      “Space War” (Ley)

      Species 8472

      and DNA computers

      Speed of Enterprise computer

      Spock, Mr.

      and androids(n5)

      and logical approach to life

      and Nomad

      and top-down artificial intelligence

      “Spock’s Brain” (TOS)

      Spot

      Starfleet command, information transfer to

      Starfleet ship computers, and personal privacy

      Star Trek: Generations

      Star Trek: The Next Generation—Technical Manual (Sternach and Okuda)

      and Core Elements

      and Core Memory

      and de
    scription of Enterprise computer

      and holodecks

      and isolinear optical chips

      and PADDs

      and Universal Translator

      Star Trek Encyclopedia

      Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country (n)

      Star Wars

      Stricom Project

      Subspace boundry layer

      Symmetric Self-Electro-Optic Effect

      Tainer, Dr. Juliana

      Tares, Simon

      Tate, Bill

      Technical Manual. See Star Trek: The Next Generation—Technical Manual

      “Time’s Arrow” (TNG)

      “Time to Stand, A” (DS9)

      “Tin Man” (TNG)

      Top-down artificial intelligence

      limitations of

      table

      Translators, universal

      Transporter

      biofilter of

      malfunctions of

      technology of

      “Trials and Tribblations” (DS9)

      Tricorders

      Troi, Deanna

      Trojan-horse computer warfare

      Tsiolkovksy (science vessel)

      Turing, Alan

      “Turnabout Intruder” (TOS)

      Tuvok, Tactical/Security Officer

      “Twisted” (VGR)

      “Ultimate Computer, The” (TOS)

      Undiscovered Country, The

      United States Navy and use of computers for artillery

      Universal translators

      “Unnatural Selection” (TNG)

      Vaal

      Verne, Jules

      Virtual reality

      and immersion in worlds

      on-screen

      Virtual Reality Modeling Language (VRML 2.0)

      Viruses

      Vision

      Voyager

      breaking of encryption codes of

      and changes from earlier shows

      computer of, architecture of

      and contact with Romulan science vessel

      and importance of its computer

      Vulcans

      War

      on computer battlefront

      computer controlled

      and human element

      See also Cyberwar

      Warp speed

      measurements in

      Watt’s Law

      “Way to Eden, The,”

      Wells, H.G.

      “What Are Little Girls Made Of?” (TOS) (n5)

      “Whom Gods Destroy” (TOS)

      Wiener, Norbert

      “Wolf in the Fold” (TOS)

      Worf, Lieutenant Commander

      Alexander, son of

      and computer malfunctions

      and nanotechnology

      Worm, computer

      “Worst Case Scenario” (VGR)

      Yadera

      Zadeh, Lofti

      Zimmerman, Dr.

      a This is standard practice for engineers and programmers. To create hardware, we start with a general design, and draw our vision as a high-level engineering schematic. Then we break the schematic into components, and draw a more detailed blueprint for each one. We continue to subdivide the design into smaller components and to draw more detailed blueprints. Eventually, we have a roadmap to the entire system, from the outer skins and the chassis to the circuits. To create software, we do the same thing. First we write a general design that defines the main software modules (for example, one for financial accounting, another for accounts payable, and so forth). Then we break each module into components and describe such items as input, output, pointers, public or private, main tasks, required files, relationships among modules. The detailed design explicitly states how records are created, sorted, archived, deleted, and shipped over the network. It defines how each software function will be coded.

      b Not a great use of dual processors, but for now, we’re keeping things simple. The dual processors come in handy during 3D graphics rendering.

      c A phoneme is an individual speech sound, for example the “p” in “pat.” Although the correspondence isn’t exact, phonemes are, roughly speaking, the “atoms” of speech.

      d The Lego company, in conjunction with MIT, introduced a Robotics Invention System in October of 1998. Children can now build fully functional robots equipped with sight, touch, temperature, and light sensors.

      e To isolate the problems, Geordi and Data crawl through a Jeffries tube and use a device resembling an old AM radio with blinking lights, plus a miniscreen. But even more fun is the movie, Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country, in which the ship has a huge kitchen complete with dozens of cooks, all making turkeys, biscuits, and mashed potatoes. Using pots and pans! Where are the replicators?

      f This also implies that each chip supplies 4,375 kiloquads of memory (630,000 kiloquads per module) / (144 chips/module).

      g Actually, these security problems are just one system of a general ineptitude. Considering how many times landing parties are infected by exotic diseases that they then bring back to the Enterprise, it’s amazing the crew has survived at all. No more astonishing than the fact that many off-world colonies suffer from plagues that always require serums stored on far-distant planets. We won’t even ask why the colonies in peril never send a subspace message asking for the replicator data necessary for the needed serum!

      h Pretty Good Privacy, discussed later in this chapter.

      i If for each kilometer, we are one millimeter off, then we’re off approximately 4 x 1010 meters, or 4 x 107 kilometers—in very approximate terms, 40 million kilometers.

      j This raises the interesting question of why a ship capable of warp speed would need a cloaking device. If the signals detected by sensors travel at the speed of light, you’d never detect a ship approaching at warp speed until it was well past. FTL speed serves as its own cloak. Most ships wisely use cloaking devices when traveling at impulse speed, well below light speed.

      k A digital signal has two discrete voltage levels. An analog signal varies continuously between minimum and maximum voltages.

      l Actually, if you think trig is fun when you first learn it, you’ll probably remember trig forever. It’s not practice that makes us perfect, it’s enjoyment. This factor makes us wonder how our neural pathways are really strengthened. If we like a particular subject—say, organic chemistry—we tend to remember the material easily without intense study and repetition. So how do our neural pathways strengthen and become accustomed to excitement patterns? And how could we possibly reproduce such an occurrence (such as feeling that organic chemistry is fun but calculus is not) in a creature such as Data?

      m In our near-future technothriller The Termination Node (Del Rey Books, January 1999), genetically constructed digital alife creatures steal fifty billion dollars through the Internet.

      n We can’t think of Shakey as an “it” any more than we can think of Data as an “it.” A bias of computer people, perhaps. The monster machine on which this chapter’s being typed began its shaky life as a “he,” a computer version of Frankenstein (with Wolfie, based on The Wolfman, sitting by the opposite wall). As the monster calmed down and behaved in a more appropriate manner, it somehow became a “she.” Go figure. ‘According to traditional science fiction, Data isn’t really an android but a sentient robot. Androids are generally considered to be artificial biological beings created in growth vats, much like clones. A number of 1950s science fiction novels deal with the dilemma of whether androids deserve to be considered human. The late SF writer Philip K. Dick used the terms android and robot interchangeably, and the scriptwriters of TNG seem to have followed his lead. “The term positronic brain is a tribute to Isaac Asimov, who first used the term in a series of short stories about robots written in the early 1940s. Asimov freely admitted in numerous interviews that he used the term positronic because it sounded good.

      o Oddly enough, when Data’s “mother” visits him, nobody notices that she’s also an android. Even Data is fooled for a long time. Unlike Data, his android mother has a feedback processor that sends out a false bi
    osignal, fooling everyone into believing she’s human. Even more strange is that she never knew she was an android. Soong designed her to shut down if she ever learned the truth.

      p In the original series, Kirk and crew encounter androids in such adventures as “What Are Little Girls Made Of?” and “I, Mudd.” But these androids are always the results of alien super-science, and they lack independent intelligence. They are robotic drones, controlled by central computers. “To function as they do,” Spock tells us, “each android mind must be one component of a mass brain linked to a central locus.” In the Kirk episodes, of course, the androids have perfect human female anatomy and wear harem-type outfits. They obey male orders and often express fascination when Captain Kirk attempts to seduce them.

      q All the androids, except of course Juliana, were built in Dr. Soong’s image. ‘Data initially establishes contact with the nanites using the ship’s computer. On Data’s computer screen, we see the nanite’s language as pink and yellow binary. It’s interesting that the nanites easily penetrate Data’s body, enter his “nerve circuitry,” and interface with his verbal program—that is, speak English through Data’s lips. Amazing! And certainly in return for the gift of an entire planet on which to live and flourish, we’d think the nanites might easily be persuaded to give Data the blueprints of his own brain.

      r Estimates vary about the number of neurons in our brain. But we have a lot. A slug brain, by contrast, has approximately 20,000 neurons, yet is a sufficiently interesting neural net for major computer-science research studies.

      s There are also spectacular interactive rides at amusement parks, which rely on motion machines and synthetic actors to create an illusion of reality (such as the Star Tours ride at Disneyworld and the Jurassic Park ride at Universal Studios). ‘Even the recreation of Seska who plagues Tom Paris and Tuvok in “Worst Case Scenario” (VGR), is merely a holodeck simulation of the real person, and basically follows a narrow set of commands—torment then kill the two crewmembers. “It’s possible to beam real guns and weapons into the holodeck, but that doesn’t seem to happen in this episode. (In any case, it’s unlikely that the Enterprise weapons locker would have a few 1930s Tommy guns and perhaps a musket or two stashed behind the phaser rifles.)

      Copyright © 1999 by Lois H. Gresh and Robert Weinberg.

     


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