Hey, if I succeed, I will have banked so much positive Karma, I'll be able to have a threesome with Jolene Blalock and Jeri Ryan.Reliant121 wrote:If god exists, I hope he believes in hopeless causes
Good karma have perks, you know
Hey, if I succeed, I will have banked so much positive Karma, I'll be able to have a threesome with Jolene Blalock and Jeri Ryan.Reliant121 wrote:If god exists, I hope he believes in hopeless causes
You're not coming into formal meeting or a business environment or anything of the sort. This is an internet forum. There is an established culture here, one in which my comments to you are rather mild, by our standards. And our standards are the ones that matter. If you don't like it you are welcome to leave. However understand that you're one new guy coming into an established group of twenty or thirty who have already decided what the standards of conduct are going to be. Don't expect us to change to accommodate you.SolkaTruesilver wrote:I already said the same thing to Deepcrush: Just because your environment makes it casual to throw insults and offensive comments around doesn't make it right. And just because the rules says nothing is against doesn't make it right too.
If you're twelve yes. If you're an adult you should be able to either ignore the insults, or at the least keep the rational portion of your brain engaged at all times. If you can't that's your problem.Being insulting makes any kind of argument personnal and detrimental to the conservation, since you are attacking the arguer, not the argument. Why? Because the insutled parties start sticking to their side of the issue at all cost, regardless of wether they are right or not, just for the principle of things. Therefore, removing any point of the argument, where you are trying to convince the other party.
Then be an adult and don't. You have control of your actions. You weren't drawn, you decided to proceed down that path of your own accord. If you don't want to go down it than be an adult and DON'T.I already lost my temper once on this website because of such attitude, and I don't want to be drawn again into another useless fece-throwing.
I think I will.Be abusive as much as you want,
Why in the hell would I think that?and you aren't proven right just because I refuse to participate in further insults.
Because emergency situations typically require quick direct action. If someone told you that your child had been hospitalized because of an accident do you get in the car and then take the time to get your radio tuned right and your AC set just how you want it or do you haul ass and screw the little things? Picard taking the time to set up his music isn't the actions of a man responding to an emergency.- Emergy situation. What does it have to do with the argument? Picard knew Data has gone berserk, and he had time to plan his strategy, very much in-character for Picard.
Well if we're going to just throw out the movie as evidence of anything I don't know how we're going to have a debate. You can stick to your fantasy land interpretation of what you want it to be and I guess I'll stick to mine. Personally I'd prefer to actually... you know, use the film as a basis of debate for what happens during the film.- It is not indicated that Picard improvised it either. Whatever "visuals" that you may perceived as "Picard thought it on the fly" is quite subjective, and can be interpreted in many ways. Maybe he had quite a good number of strategy in mind, and he set his mind on one at that very moment.
Impressive, you whine about wanting a coherent debate and then reduce a great deal of evidence and logic against your standpoint and reduce it to that. Careful, your hypocrisy is showing.Blablabla
Reference my above arguement. If he did do that why didn't he have it set up that way. As a single button to push that would execute his sing-a-long and why didn't he do it first if he's going through this much pre-planning for his karaoke?Even on a modern computer, a work computer, or anything, you can easily set any interface to "with this click, play this music and make one of my screen go into Karaoke mode". It doesn't take that much time on our own computers, I don't see why the shuttle Picard decided to pick for his mission couldn't have been programmed like that.
Might?The LCARS interface itself might be dubious,
Facts not even a little bit in evidence. While I won't argue that they likely rearrange their work spaces to their suiting that doesn't explain the disaster that is every other console on the ship. Unless you're suggesting that these guys spend all this time reconfiguring every potential display in the system exactly how they want it and then memorize every single possible keystroke. Getting off track here.but I have no problem thinking that Starfleet officers are all trainer programmers who can redesign their interface based on their most common needs. Since they all know their own console set out personnally, for having programmed them, they all know intuitively how to use it. Hell, there is probably also "standardized" programming courses at the Academy to make sure that your officers keep the same basic design templates.
I accept that they likely can reconfigure their consoles. However your extreme claims that Picard naturally has the shuttle use a central display screen for his music. Which really makes little sense given that that, "Computer, play HMS Pinafore," is a perfectly valid way of calling up music in Trek and we've seen people use that method plenty of times. There's no good reason to burn a screen that could be displaying critical flight data.When an officer takes a console, you usually see him tap a few things immediately on the screen. Maybe they are calling up the interface they already pre-programmed? Would make sense, if you accept my interpretation.
No, first of all you're assuming quite a lot, and second of all you're ignoring what actually happens in the movie and loosely intepreting it to fit what you want it to mean rather than taking what is shown at face value.Well, your "obvious reasons" why I am stupid aren't so obvious at all, since I can actually argue about it, and make good points regarding them.
Look, you said something incredibly stupid and you're still pushing it. I don't feel the need to nursemaid every dumb idea people put forth in contradiction to all logic and sense and I don't feel the need to coddle the idiots that put forth the stupid ideas either.Just because you think you are right about an opinion you made beforehand doesn't make people stupid. Stay civil, keep your cool, and just tell me what you think I got wrong.
But he is right about one thing; I remember Picard actually shuffling through a selection. Which kinda shoot down the idea of a pre-prepared plan.stitch626 wrote:Is it possible that the shuttle used voice recognition to bring up some sort of quick menu.
Also, given Starfleets penchant for poor security, perhaps the shuttle was linked to the Enterprises computer, in which case two clicks would be enough.
Could work. So, one button to bring up the playlist, the other one to select the tune?Reliant121 wrote:Maybe you can set up shortcuts on a screen to lead to a playlist, sorta like you can save bookmarks on a browser?
He never said a word.stitch626 wrote:Is it possible that the shuttle used voice recognition to bring up some sort of quick menu.
Maybe he was unsure of what he wanted to play, and therefore he wanted to go through it and see what might be to Data's liking.Tyyr wrote:And again, I have to ask why would you? "Computer, play HMS Pinafore."
Why bother putting things on the display for something so esoteric?
You bet he did. He was talking to Worf for a while there. Perhaps the computer heard him say Gilbert and Sullivan and brought up a small quick menu with their... stuff.Tyyr wrote:He never said a word.stitch626 wrote:Is it possible that the shuttle used voice recognition to bring up some sort of quick menu.
That might make sense, but I could see a thousand reason why such interface that reacts to what you are saying would be SOOOO annoying.stitch626 wrote:You bet he did. He was talking to Worf for a while there. Perhaps the computer heard him say Gilbert and Sullivan and brought up a small quick menu with their... stuff.Tyyr wrote:He never said a word.stitch626 wrote:Is it possible that the shuttle used voice recognition to bring up some sort of quick menu.
The song was one that Data was singing earlier. The overall impression of the scene was that Picard picked that song out specifically for that reason.Nickswitz wrote:Maybe he was unsure of what he wanted to play, and therefore he wanted to go through it and see what might be to Data's liking.
1) I stand corrected. 2) Exactly what he said. Also, almost every other time we've seen someone give voice commands to the computer it's been presaged by "Computer..." which frankly sounds a bit weird but does make it clear when you're speaking with the computer.That might make sense, but I could see a thousand reason why such interface that reacts to what you are saying would be SOOOO annoying.SolkaTruesilver wrote:You bet he did. He was talking to Worf for a while there. Perhaps the computer heard him say Gilbert and Sullivan and brought up a small quick menu with their... stuff.