masako wrote: ↑Fri Jul 21, 2023 12:13 pm
Raphael wrote: ↑Thu Jul 20, 2023 12:51 pm
It's a bit weird that I watched and re-watched TNG era Star Trek for decades and never once thought about how creepy a computer system listening to everything you say in your room would be in real life until Amazon started selling Alexa.
Watch again...the characters say "Computer!" and there is a notification sound that the computer waits for their follow-on instruction. This suggests that the computer is not actively listening until called to do so.
This seems to have been the case for
most interactions with the ship's computer in TNG, at least (having a binge of it again at the moment too). There are a couple of example where "computer!" isn't the first spoken word, like when Geordie asks "how about some different music, computer?" which, I assume, would suggest that the computer is
passively listening, but only responds when directly addressed (taking into account recently spoken words)
Newer Trek series are.... weird...
On the one hand, the computer now seems to respond to crew without needing a direct response, which could be a) the writers wanting to show that computers then are more advanced than the Alexa-style voice-command systems we have around us today, b) could just be the writers not wanting to write "computer!" into the script several times an episode
On the other hand, the computer also seems to be used a lot less, I think? From what I can remember of TOS (I don't watch it much, to be fair), there was a "library computer" on the ship, which crew could speak to to access files, but the general computer was very hands-on, literally, needing to type and read. So computers in, say, ST:SNW, seem to be keeping in line with the "touch and read" style computer of TOS, while also being much more sophisticated "responds when appropriate" (there are moments where it
really looks like the writers are doing that to move the plot, rather than to be a mechanic, so it feels somewhat inconsistent, which, eh... it happens)
I don't mind, to be fair. Star Trek has been running for almost 60 years, and the technology on-screen has had to adapt to that, especially in the case of prequel series, where it has to be familiar, but
more fantastical
But, yeah, TNG, the computer was
very Alexa. The dataPADDs were very much like a Kindle or an iPad. I suspect that's, in part, a direct response to Star Trek (they depicted
a future, so tech people now are borrowing the mechanics and aesthetics, because that's what they
perceive as being futuristic). No doubt some tech people now
will be looking to create a call-and-response computer system that
doesn't rely on a direct call (which will be damn terrifying because it's the whole "I wish that person would go away" when a genie is around and listening scenario. Did you really mean "wish", or does the genie just interpret it that way regardless?)