Best products from r/startrek
We found 149 comments on r/startrek discussing the most recommended products. We ran sentiment analysis on each of these comments to determine how redditors feel about different products. We found 601 products and ranked them based on the amount of positive reactions they received. Here are the top 20.
1. Star Trek: The Next Generation - The Complete Series Box Set- Season 1-7 [Blu-ray]
- Star Trek: The Next Generation (Complete Seasons 1-7) - 41-Disc Box Set ( Star Trek: TNG (176 Episod
- Star Trek: The Next Generation (Complete Seasons 1-7) - 41-Disc Box Set
- Star Trek: TNG (176 Episodes)
Features:
2. The Good That Men Do (Star Trek: Enterprise)
- Used Book in Good Condition
Features:
4. Star Trek The Next Generation: Technical Manual
- Includes TWO packs of Lavash Bread (8 squares total) and TWO packs of Pita Bread (12 loaves total)
- Includes TWO packs of Lavash Bread (8 squares total) and TWO packs of Pita Bread (12 loaves total)
- 6g Net Carbs Lavash / 7g Net Carbs Pita and 60 Calories per serving; Pita: 6.5" Diameter, Lavash: 11.5" x 8.25"
- Good source of Omega-3 ALA. Vegan.
- Breads ship FRESH, not frozen so be sure to consume within two weeks OR freeze unopened for up to 1 year. (16 day shelf life after defrost for Pita/MINI Pita Bread; 30 day shelf life after defrost for Lavash Bread.)
Features:
5. Star Trek Star Charts: The Complete Atlas of Star Trek
- Complete Set: 42 dice in 6 different colors - purple, red, blue, black, white, green with gold, easy-to-read numbers; Customize your Dungeons and Dragons or any other tabletop role-playing game or even create your own game
- Dice Variety: Each of the colored set includes 7 varieties; D4: 2 x 2cm; D6: 1.6 x 1.6cm; D8: 2.4 x 1.8cm; D10: 2.2 x 2.1cm; D12: 2.1 x 1.8 cm; D20: 2.3 x 2cm
- Comes with a Storage Bag: Includes a velvet drawstring pouch to conveniently store your dice collection
- Factory First Dice: Each polyhedral dice is brand new, made from durable acrylic and is in mint condition
- Ideal Multi-Gaming Dice: This makes a great dice set collection for players of RPG, DND, MTG or other dice games; These are also great for math lessons at home or in school
Features:
6. A Stitch in Time (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine #27)
- High-Performance Mecha-Membrane Switches: Provides the tactile feedback of mechanical key press on a comfortable, soft-cushioned, membrane, rubber dome switch suitable for gaming
- 32 Mecha-Membrane Keys for More Hotkeys and Actions: Perfect for gaming or integrating into creative workflows with fully programmable keys
- Thumbpad for Improved Movement Controls: The 8-way directional thumbpad allows for more natural controls for console-oriented players and a more ergonomic experience
- Fully Programmable Macros: Razer Hypershift allows for all keys and keypress combinations to be remapped to execute complex commands
- Ultimate Personalization & Gaming Immersion with Razer Chroma: Fully syncs with popular games, Razer hardware, Philips Hue, and gear from 30 plus partners; supports 16 8 million colors on individually backlit keys
Features:
7. The Good That Men Do (Star Trek: Enterprise Book 11)
- 3-pack dotted notebook journal, inserts for A5 size travelers notebook
- 40 sheets/80 pages per notepad, not too thin, not too thick
- Lay flat sewn binding, round corner, multicolor covers & eye pleasing cream paper
- The dots are dark enough, make it easy to draw straight lines and graphs, but not distracting at all
- Great for bullet notebook journal, class notes, doodles, project notebook for work, home or school and much more
Features:
12. Star Trek: Picard: The Last Best Hope
- Now shipping current edition: DECEMBER 2
- Next Effective Date: JANUARY 27
- High quality paper and print - Folded
- Always in stock at Ruby & Rudy's Books
Features:
13. DIAMOND SELECT TOYS ST TNG Enterprise D Ship (O/A)
- Features the voice of Captain Jean-Luc Picard and an array of sound effects from the Iconic series
- Authentic light-up Warp Nacelles, Deflector Dish, and Impulse Engines, plus real separating Saucer Section
- Measuring over 15 inches long, every detail of the Galaxy-class vessel has been recreated with attention to even the smallest detail
- This special release from Diamond Select Toys brings the classic Star Trek
- A Diamond Select Toys release
- The Next Generation ship into the your collection just in time for a new era of Star Trek adventures
Features:
14. Star Trek: The Complete Comic Book Collection
- Revisit and relive your favourite Star Trek comic books
- Includes all issues from 1967 - 2002, including every annual, all articles and advertisements--over 500 issues
- All content in printable, user-friendly PDF format
- Series include Star Trek, Star Trek: The Next Generation, Star Trek: Voyager, and Star Trek: Deep Space Nine
- Issues from all publishers together on one disk for the first time
Features:
15. Star Trek: Light-Up Starship Enterprise (RP Minis)
- This kit includes a Starship Enterprise with a cool light-up feature, and a 32-page book on the history of the Enterprise ,a must-have item for Star Trek fans!
- Dispatched same day
- Officially Licensed Merchandise
Features:
16. The Physics of Star Trek
- Medium 6-Subject notebook; 150 leaves/300 pages (equally divided colored subsections of blue, red, grey, green, purple, aqua)
- Extra opaque 70gr/m2 paper; 5mm graph squares; header for titles
- Micoperforated pages for easy detachment; hole-punched for filing
- Opaque polypropylene basic cover
- Coil binding which allows the notebook to be opened flat and to make 180 degree turn
Features:
Well, the most important thing when learning a language is having people to practice with :)
/r/tlhInganHol is where you'll find the highest concentration of jatlhwI'pu' and ghojwI'pu' on Reddit ... though, admittedly, it's still not very active. You'd have better luck on Facebook; the Learn Klingon group has daily activity from both new learners and experienced speakers.
Apart from that, the most important resource is The Klingon Dictionary (TKD) by Marc Okrand, which contains all the basics.
His follow-up book, Klingon for the Galactic Traveler (KGT), uses language as a vehicle for exploring Klingon culture; it reads almost like a tourist's guidebook. It's not as important as TKD, but still a must-have for any Klingon language student, and it's also very enjoyable (it's my second-favorite Star Trek book, following The Final Reflection).
There's also a great audio guide called Conversational Klingon (CK), starring Michael Dorn as Worf. Like KGT, it's played like a tourist's guide, with a lot of humor and cultural insights. I used to listen to it on the commute to school; very enjoyable. Plus, you get to hear Marc Okrand himself pronouncing the sounds of the language; straight from the figurative horse's literal mouth.
The follow-up audio course, Power Klingon (PK), is even better, but it's not available as a digital download, so it can be difficult to find.
Some useful websites:
Hope that helps! batlh yIHaD!
You're mad if you think they "upscaled" ENT. There's a common thing in film of recording on film or 2k or higher tapes and then editing them and finally broadcasting shows or movies In a lower resolution. That may be why you're getting your info from whereever wrong. Cable broadcasts in 720p and before the advent of HDTVs, everything was broadcasted in 480.
I don't care what you say, but my ENT BD set from the UK is native 1080 and was not scaled up. It was actually scaled down for TV, cable and sattelite broadcasting, likely from a digital tape.
Here's a link so you can see what the details say about what resolution it is in and if any reviewers complained it was a taboo of the filming industry of showing low resolution on BD (they didn't):
https://www.amazon.com/Star-Trek-Enterprise-Complete-Collection/dp/B00SM43MO2
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Star_Trek:_Enterprise#Home_media_release
Recording info from: http://www.st-v-sw.net/STSWbasics-tv.html
"Finally, we come to Star Trek: Enterprise. All four seasons were broadcast in 16:9 widescreen, and the DVDs are in anamorphic widescreen. This means that whereas an older 4:3 NTSC television will have black bars blanking out many of the 480 lines, one of the newer 16:9 televisions will get the full 852x480i, though this will be compressed on the DVD to 720x480i. Thus, for full quality an NTSC-type interlaced DVD with anamorphic widescreen is the way to go. PAL up-conversion and high-density optical discs won't help.
For the third and fourth season of Enterprise, though, the broadcast wasn't in 480i but in 1080i HDTV. This means that the DVD sets are actually featuring far less resolution than the original broadcast. Many fans are thus also downloading high-quality versions online ripped from the original 1080i broadcasts, from extremely clean down-conversions to ~480i to some episodes in 720p format. I'm not sure if the PAL versions of the last couple of seasons of Enterprise are properly-done transfers of the originals straight to PAL or if they are upconverted from 480i. In either case, though, until the emergence of high-density optical discs, these few 720p HDTV-rips will be the best available versions.
Native:
S1, S2, S3, S4: 480i 16:9 (35mm Film down-conv.) 1080i60 16:9
Best Consumer Recording (Next-Gen):
S1, S2, S3, S4: 1080i NTSC (HD-DVD / Blu-Ray)"
-------------------
Same page about DS9 and Voyager:
"With TNG, DS9, and Voyager, things are a little confusing. These were all shot on 35mm film and then transferred to an interlaced analog signal (480i) (a process called telecining) for broadcast. Further, the special effects (at least during TNG) were largely done on simple 480i video, though the model shots and whatnot were also shot on film. These would be telecined to 480i video and composited, with certain effects like phaser beams and torpedoes done entirely via video. Certain other effects like computer-generated viewscreen images by Okuda and company would be done in quite high resolution before transfer to video. So, in theory, you could get some reconstruction of this film-quality imagery via a 480p player, but certain FX elements were natively 480i. I'd say the safest course to ensure the closest-to-native quality would be simple 480i, just as with the Original Series. PAL viewers are watching up-converted (non-native) versions, meaning that they're gaining almost 100 artificially-interpolated scan lines but are losing ten fields (five half-frames) per second. There's little point to buying the show on the next-generation optical discs."
TNG/DS9/VOY
Format Info:
Native: 480i / 35mm film down-conversion
Best Consumer Recording (Next-Gen): (none)
--------------------
So at least they were recorded on film. We will see a blu ray copy of the two eventually.
I guess it depends on which Trek you like the most.
I like TNG the best...so I enjoyed Vendetta a lot, but I enjoyed TOS's Kobayashi Maru...there are literally tons of them. Tell us what you like in terms of series and episodes
EDIT
Also, I've got to throw props to the Crucible series by David R George. I've only read McCoy so far, but I'm looking forward to the rest. It was pretty amazing, really, how he wove canon, supposition, and his own imagination together. Great stuff. Do make sure to watch City on the Edge of Forever before reading it, though... :-)
Does it need to be TNG specific? If anything Trek is fair game this pizza cutter is pretty clever.
I always think custom ice cubes are pretty fun also.
Again, this is more Voyager than Next Generation, but a cooking book with Neelix on the cover would make me laugh too.
Hope these help. There are tons of stuff. I'm sure you'll do great!
I would have switched TOS and ENT in your order, but everything else looks pretty good. Since Garak is your favorite character, I would recommend A Stitch In Time which is basically a bunch of letters from Garak to Bashir written by the actor who plays Garak. I am part way through it and it's pretty good especially reading it in his voice.
Try Planet of the Apes TV series if you want something along the lines of classic Trek:
http://www.amazon.com/Planet-Apes-Complete-Roddy-McDowall/dp/B000GUJZ0K/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1425850646&sr=8-1&keywords=planet+of+the+apes+tv+series
I'm pretty sure the actors graduated from the Captain Kirk school of fistfights.
And this ain't sci-fi, but if you enjoyed Enterprise season 3, watch 24 if you haven't seen it already.
Another thing to consider: Star Trek books and audiobooks
And it's already been mentioned, but Babylon V (lots of common points with DS9), Farscape, & Battlestar Gallactica are all good. BSG has a spin off series called Caprica - I've only seen the pilot so far but was impressed
There are also some fan made productions that recreate the classic series' universe but with new plots (I've only seen 1 episode years ago - dunno what it was called but was impressed and will look into it more when I have the chance).
I've also heard there's a Turkish rip-off series of the original Star Trek but never seen it myself
From what I've been able to find, the UK version and the US version are exactly the same discs in different packaging. The few minor errors made in the remastering (a blue light instead of a red light, a planet rotating in the wrong direction, those are the only 2 I can even remember) were not fixed and are so minor who really cares. The UK ones are region free, on Amazon the US ones are listed as region a but from what I've heard they're exactly the same as the UK ones so that may or may not be an error. I am in the US I bought the UK version from Amazon.UK which currently with shipping converts to $66. I Can verify they are region free and I've have watched through them and am perfectly happy with my purchase. If the Best Buy one is different than the regular US release I don't know anything about it, but I doubt anything significant is different. I suggest buying whichever is cheapest...
The UK one isn't better, its just cheaper for the same content.
Honestly I made most of it up on the spot. But I do have an extensive collection of Star Trek technical manuals many of which discuss the in-universe technical issues. The most popular being: TOS Tech Manual, TNG Tech Manual, Mr Scott's Guide to the Enterprise, and Enterprise Owner's Manual
The big flaws are that canon Star Trek tends to over-rely on manual human action instead of automation. The classic example being hand delivering a stack of PADDs to your superior officer, one for each document, instead of just emailing all your reports from a single PADD.
Good or non-android robots are nearly unheard of as well. But maybe more in use off screen in construction or industrial scenarios.
Really, it's just the idea of how easy large projects would be if you have reliable and cheap access to vacuum, zero-g, force fields, tractor beams, and transporters. Plan ahead and make everything modular and large construction projects become easy.
I love Star Trek and honestly didn't even know the anniversary was coming up. While there will always be a special place in my heart for Kirk and the original crew I'm 27 so Next Generation will always be my personal favorite.
I remember running across the family room in my one piece pajamas with my arms out making whooshing noices to the opening. I still get goosebumps when I hear Patrick Stewart say "Space the final frontier".
So in honor of the 50th anniversary I spent the big bucks and got me one of these.
https://www.amazon.com/Star-Trek-Next-Generation-Enterprise/dp/B0016NAA32
I just don't understand this reaction and frankly I'm surprised to see so much of it. Did people not realize this was a promotional event organized in conjunction with the release of the Season One Blu-Ray set which, by no coincidence at all, was released today?
And how did the two unedited, remastered episodes without commercial breaks feel like an advertisement? How did the two short featurettes about the remastering process, which will be included in the Blu Ray sets as bonus materials, feel like an advertisement? The two commercials for the Season One and Season Two Blu-Ray sets were commercials, but they were at the very end and heck, the season two commercial was brand new and really got me excited about it.
I don't get it. We saw two episodes, we saw a lot of bonus content about the show that included some really cool behind-the-scenes stuff (the original Star Trek TNG logo from 1986, the really hilarious screen tests, etc) - how can anyone complain about all of that?
Both the maps you and the OP posted are from Star Trek Star Charts. They're not super-canonical, but they've been used as reference for many official works.
> WTF, why do the Klingon and Romulan empires cut the Federation in two? How did the Federation colonize (annex) worlds on the other side?
The galaxy is 1000 LY thick. The UFP could be incorporating systems on the "upper" side while the Romulan Star Empire is on the "lower" side. No bisecting required.
> Finally, the map suggests that the Federation is 750 LY across, but it has been said several times on the show that the figure is between 8,000-10,000 LY.
Either the book itself or the website it was based on cover this. There was a bunch of conflicting information so they took it all and decided that the UFP has a "core" of a few hundred LY, with a few far-flung territories, making it about 8000 LY end to end, but with 90+% of the worlds within the core.
Many of the worlds visited in the series, for example, are within the UFP's vaguely-defined boundaries, but aren't UFP members.
I love this little Enterprise. And it's cheap. It's tiny but really nice and lights up, looks great on my desk next to my computer while working at night. Love it.
https://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/0762449896/ref=mp_s_a_1_11?ie=UTF8&qid=1526313293&sr=8-11&pi=AC_SX236_SY340_FMwebp_QL65&keywords=star+trek+Enterprise+model
The 1701 refit:
The NX-01:
The 1701-D:
About a decade ago I got the complete collection on a DVD Rom. I'm surprised its still available, honestly, I think it's one of those unknown treasures. I've honestly only read a few of them, there's just so damn many stories I know I'll never be able to read them all.
I read the DC issues in their second run of TOS in the early 90's. They felt heavily heavily influenced by TNG at the time, for obvious reasons. I've read the early Marvel comics, and I learned just recently that one of the reasons they were so terrible is that they were totally restricted to using just elements found in the first film. They had grand plans of making sequels to old iconic episodes but weren't allowed.
One thing I liked about the 80's DC comics was that they created their own secondary cast to play around with, including a Klingon who joined Starfleet, well before TNG was developed.
He did.
But “The Good That Men Do” link for Kindle edition, since it’s out of print retcons it in a great way. It’s an absolutely great novel.
If there were to be an ENT movie, I want it to be an adaptation of that. It’s that good.
(I’m on mobile, otherwise I’d spoiler tag the retcon)
I managed to pick up this collection from a Half Price Books but I've only read a handful of the stories so far. I really liked The Gorn Crisis from Wildstorm comics and most of the monthly comics for each series from marvel that I've read. I also like most of the IDW comics, like Blood Will Tell. Some aren't the best, like Hive, but are still enjoyable and the art is usually good. Romulans: Pawns of War is another good IDW story, and I've really enjoyed the ongoing series for the reboot films.
One thing to understand, the Star Trek '09 movie does a lot of things new to Trek lore to bring the characters together for the J.J.verse continuity. He did what he did for pacing and time constraint purposes, so you're not going to find anything quite like that in Prime lore. If it's TOS origin stories you're a wantin' here's a good one.
The Kobayashi Maru by Julia Ecklar
It's essentially the Prime versions of the original characters telling their academy stories involving the infamous Kobayashi Maru psych evaluation. It'll also give you a good frame of reference considering your current Trek exposure.
Vulcan's Glory by D.C. Fontana
A very intimate look at young Spock's first days on Enterprise under Captain Pike. Another title you can jump right into having already been exposed to Spock and Pike in Trek '09.
I also left some recommendations in your last post if you want to check those out too.
I'd also recommend watching TOS The Conscience of the King for Kirk's backstory, and The Menagerie and Journey to Babel for Spock's.
Buy from Amazon UK even if you are in a different country. Great Price! Great Box Set. Each Episode was re-mastered and the extras are awesome.
https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B00NQXC2YU/ref=ox_sc_act_title_1?smid=A3P5ROKL5A1OLE&psc=1
Basically, they are the same, but obviously very different circumstances. With acting, it's about creating a character, and with the writing it's creating that universe. In the memoir I just wrote I had to create the world of my childhood from memory and it was just as satisfying as creating Garak's world in A Stitch In Time.
Oh Ok.... That must of changed since the last story I read about it.
I remember around when all that was announced they were saying February for the novel.
And I must have forgot they said November for the comic, which makes more sense. I personally would have preferred the novel first but whatever.
edit - Just checked Amazon and they're still saying February 11th.
Star Trek: Picard: The Last Best Hope | Amazon
> I thought examining how history is not always correct or something like that would have been interesting.
You really should pick up The Good That Men Do. It basically re-writes These Are the Voyages and uses the same concept that I'm quoting from you and executes it in a much, much better way. Anyone who needs to wash the taste of Enterprise's finale out of their mouth will be happy reading that book.
I really wanted to buy it..
Then I seen that season 1 alone was over $100 CAD and I laughed my way to piratebay.
Sorry guys. I understand you did a lot of hard work, and put a lot of man-hours into this, but you need to sell it at a reasonable price (do what you gotta do) if you expect people to purchase it.
$700 on Star Trek TNG re-mastered? Sorry man. Even if I wasn't a broke college student.. which I am.. that wouldnt fucking happen. Ever.
Now that they've all been released, you can buy the box set for $350 which is MUCH more reasonable. Still a punch in the bag.. sure.. but if I wasn't poor as hell I would probably do it as a gift or something to a friend.
Now... put it up online for stream at $10 a season? You've got my money.
$70 > $0
According to the extended universe fiction, a Federation ship called the Gestalt was stranded in deep space (delta quadrant) and thrown back in time. The ship was heavily damaged and they obviously had no hope of making it home before they all died. The decision to approach near light speed and head for home was made so that at least they would all get to see home again.
Along the way, this super powerful race called the Caeliar took them in and some nonsense happens which ends up with a few Caeliar merging with some humans deep in the delta quadrant and going insane. The only feeling they have left is hunger and the need to assimilate. Thus, we are the Borg and due to time travel almost cause our own demise. It's way more awesome than I'm giving it credit for on purpose. I want you to go read it. You should go read the series. Star Trek: Destiny. [Buy it on Amazon](http://www.amazon.com/Star-Trek-Destiny-Complete-ebook/dp/B00AHE24ZS/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1369859186&sr=8-1&keywords=star+trek+destiny)
Or if you just want to spoil it for yourself go read this.
The Borg back story is amazing and I strongly encourage picking up the series, Star Trek: Destiny.Buy it on Amazon
Edit: Original post was gibberish. :)
fyi you can get the region free TNG Complete Blu-Ray for like $70ish shipped from Amazon UK - and it occasionally drops to like $60ish shipped
again, region free, and has all the subtitles and available dubs too. source: own it
You want Star Trek recipes? There's a Star Trek cook book that not only tells you how to make your favorite Trek foods, but it also tells you how they made the prop food for the show. It has a drinks section, and even includes a handful of recipes that the actors themselves like, from their personal lives. Best "frivolous" purchase I've made in ages. Also, it's even more epic if you have kids that are into Star Trek.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/0671000225/ref=mp_s_a_1_1?qid=1464561251&sr=8-1&pi=SY200_QL40&keywords=cooking+with+neelix&dpPl=1&dpID=51w%2BuQNwqoL&ref=plSrch
It's not canon, but the Destiny novel series addresses some of this, and is a pretty good read. Ditto for the
Kristen StewartKirsten Beyer Voyager novels based around the same time.Edit: Not Kristen Stewart.
Wow, you're right. The opening paragraph was promising but then it's all like: "nope." "Yep." "Nope."
For an in-depth discussion of the subject, I enjoyed The Physics of Star Trek.
There are tons of episodes that deal with developing AI--Data's introduction in the pilot (his talk with Riker) probably has a couple gems, though I can't think of them off the top of my head. You might also look at episodes like
"The Ultimate Computer" (TOS), "Quality of Life" (TNG), "Measure of a Man" (TNG), etc. Voyager had some good AI moments with The Doctor, too--"Author, Author," deals with the personal rights of what is essentially a computer program, for example. I believe there was an episode in Voyager with a sentient bomb as well...Dreadnaught? If I weren't at work I'd like nothing better than to watch Star Trek all day and get you some quotes. :)
Also, I'll refer you to an excellent (though probably outdated) book by Lawrence Krauss: The Physics of Star Trek:
http://www.amazon.ca/Physics-Star-Trek-Lawrence-Krauss/dp/0465002048
Right on, that sounds totally cool! One of the cool things about the recipes is that they are intended to made in batches of various sizes (making it great for parties with large punch bowls). The original WCB was served in a fishbowl, and definitely meant for two or more people. It wasn't until later that Quark's started offering "single" sized drinks. Oh and the WCB tastes a lot like Hawaiian Punch, and the dry ice is worth the effort to get if you're doing a large group presentation.
Also, for your party: my geek, let me show you it. I haven't purchased that cookbook yet, but there's a space reserved for it on my cookbook shelf.
I know Amazon had the Blu Ray boxed set for $65 recently. Someone posted about it on the sub recently. It was a great price so I'm unsure if the sale is still in effect or whether there's any left. But it should be something Amazon normally carries. However, I don't know what country you're in and whether Amazon is easily accessible there.
Edit:
Found it! It's $64.99.
https://www.amazon.com/Star-Trek-Generation-Complete-Blu-ray/dp/B00NQXC2YU
Hell no, he's not a good character. Much less 'really good'.
He's a great character. Fantastic even. Andrew Robinson was excellent in portraying him.
In the Pale Moonlight is awesome for just his speech alone... and then Sisko's right behind it.
Did you read the book by Andrew? It's a great read, about Garak, by Garak!
Try The Left Hand of Destiny Book One and Book Two. It takes place after the end of Deep Space Nine and covers Martok's return to the Empire. It's pretty epic and J.G. Hertzler obviously knows this character very well.
Not likely, they're from a book by the same name so it's highly doubtful they would release them for free via pdf. For the record I actually have the book and it's quite awesome :) The big quadrants map is in a 4 part fold out.
I don't know if you saw any of my prior posts about this, but the Amazon UK site is selling the complete Set at a reasonable price, and the price gets reduced even further once you sign in and put it in your Cart and proceed toward checking out because we live in the U.S.
Star Trek: Enterprise: The Full Journey - Blu-ray - Region Free
Also, this site is a good resource for Blu-ray reviews, although these complete Box Sets usually don't get the usual coverage as the single by season releases, so you would have to scroll down to those and click on them one by one to read the review for each one.
http://www.blu-ray.com/movies/Star-Trek-Enterprise-The-Full-Journey-Blu-ray/123509/
I know you have this thing about HD, but now there's 4k and Ultra HD, so you might as well get over that peeve at this point.
No, the first one that introduces everything and is essentially the first one of the three part series is called, "The Good That Men Do" and is the back story to the Klingon mutagenic virus and takes place where Enterprise ended. I didn't read it, but a lot of it is mentioned in "Kobyashi Maru" so you get a sense of what it was about, Trips involvement with the Romulans and how the Klingons were nearly whiped out because of the mutagenic virus (which explains why the Klingons look different in TOS).
Here's a link if you're interested:
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0743440013/ref=pd_lpo_k2_dp_sr_3?pf_rd_p=486539851&pf_rd_s=lpo-top-stripe-1&pf_rd_t=201&pf_rd_i=1416554807&pf_rd_m=ATVPDKIKX0DER&pf_rd_r=1JB1RMDAKY60VYYQ53G4
I highly recommend "Kobayashi Maru" though.
The British edition is on pre-order, so I can't imagine the US version will be too far behind. I'm sure they don't want to make any announcements until after Christmas, so they can milk that sweet, sweet individual season money.
http://www.amazon.com/Star-Trek-Light-Up-Starship-Enterprise/dp/0762449896
They're fairly small, perfect for a desk or shelf. I found mine in a Barnes & Noble. The only other one they have is a tiny phaser.
Wow, something new under the sun!
Thank you for posting this, OP, this looks awesome. I look forward to comparing it to this and nerding out later.. I intend to let the guy know how close he is to Okuda's own charts.
Oh yes. It's glorious. They took the original film negatives and recomposited them for blu ray. TNG has never ever been so beautiful.
I have a some personal favorites I can recommend:
DS9's Terok Nor Trilogy
DS9's A Stitch in Time
TNG's The Romulan Prize
TNG's Imzadi
TNG's Kahless
I.K.S. Gorkon Trilogy
Note: I think all of these are available for the Kindle, which is handy because so many are out of print.
Read the books. Start with "The Good That Men Do"
http://www.amazon.com/The-Good-That-Star-Trek/dp/0743440013
You'll enjoy it immensely.
Not that I'm aware of. But I have the book Star Trek: Star Charts and it's very good - I'd recommend getting a copy of that.
I bought The Full Journey Box Set a few months ago when it was for sale for about $50... that deal was just too good to pass up. I'm happy with my purchase but the packaging leaves a lot to be desired. Price notwithstanding, I'd rather have the Complete Series box set that packed all the individual season releases together.
If you read the old Star Trek Next Generation technical manual...
http://www.amazon.com/Star-Trek-Generation-Technical-Unnumbered/dp/0671704273
They clearly state that they cannot create the chemical reactions and complexities of living flesh. the few attempts all created a lump that looked like it was covered in chemical burns.
Enterprise-D Technical Manual
Not exactly canon, but it might as well be, seeing as it's written by the same people who did all the on-screen and control panel graphics, invented the computer interface, and were responsible for the whole "look and feel".
Are these the ones you are referring to? I ask because Amazon seems have folded it together with an older DVD release of it and I want to make sure this is indeed the HD remaster and not just the originals on Blu Ray.
EDIT: Nevermind. Just started the Amazon Prime available episodes and this is DEFINITELY remastered.
if you love Martok you must check out these books writen by the man himself http://www.amazon.com/Left-Hand-Destiny-Book-Star/dp/0671784935
It's from the book, Star Trek Star Charts: The Complete Atlas of Star Trek. If you manage to find a decent copy of said book, there is a 2 section foldout poster of that exact image. Just carefully remove from book, paste to together, and frame. Makes for a wonderful conversation piece when hung on a wall in the rec-room, man-cave, personal Ten Forward lounge, etc.
That's cool, I had never heard of this. It lists for 24.99 USD on Amazon. Good deal for the content, I would say.
The TNG and DS9 technical manuals are both cool resources and are packed with jargon that is easily referenced. Those plus Memory Alpha should give you plenty of technobabble to go on.
Still have this; this was the shit when I was a kid. (http://www.amazon.com/Star-Trek-Next-Generation-Technical/dp/0671704273)
Read the books after the finale. They aren't canon, but it's as close as you'll get because newer Star Trek books are almost all linear, with the various authors working together to make sure their storylines mesh with each other.
These books are considered the "Relaunch" books, and pick up the story after the series ended. IMO, they do a very good job of continuing the story:
Last Full Measure
The Good That Men Do
Kobayashi Maru
The Romulan War: Beneath the Raptor's Wing
The Romulan War: To Brave the Storm
Rise of the Federation: A Choice of Future
Coming March 25th:
Rise of the Federation: Tower of Babel
This gets posted whenever the ending comes up, but go read The Good that Men Do
Did you read the Garak backstory book written by Andrew Robinson, A Stitch in Time? It's excellent.
> If you're holding out for the whole set, it will be at most 3 to 400$
The UK price for the S1-7 box set is ~£160 which is roughly $252...you might be lucky and get it for that price, but yeah it's about half the price of what they cost to buy on release day £50 * 7 = 350, although I have never paid more than £28 for them...
Came here to post the same thing. Glad someone else was on it already! I saw the same message over at amazon.com as I recently purchased from there for $60. (See now the price is higher:D does not matter though, I would have gladly paid full price of $129.99.
Ghost edit: Formatting
http://www.amazon.com/The-Good-That-Star-Trek/dp/0743440013/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1381334729&sr=8-1&keywords=The+Good+that+Men+do
Enjoy :D
You may want to read The Good Men Do
I most certainly did!
That map is from a book of Star Trek maps . It's a good little collection if you can get it for around $15.
This cookbook exists. My wife gave it to me as a gift. It's nice, but I haven't yet been able to persuade her to actually make me any of the recipes yet. (What, do it myself? Nah...)
This blog also exists.
I would suggest anyone interested in learning how humble Garak is, should read A Stitch In Time.
I used to carry the Star Trek: The Next Generation Technical Manual around with me in high school and it definitely has these drawings in it.
Yes, there are books. I've been learning from here:
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/067174559X/ref=oh_details_o03_s00_i00?ie=UTF8&psc=1
It was written by the linguist that helped develop Klingon in the first place. However, you must have some previous understanding of grammar and linguistics in general.
Qapla'
This is a scan of the folded up map at the back of "Star Trek Star Charts: The Complete Atlas of Star Trek".
The map is 4 large folded sheets that have to be removed and put together if you wish to replicate the image here (which is obviously 4 scans with the seams poorly photoshopped out)
Seems like a ripoff of The Physics of Star Trek from 2007
Looks like this one: Star Trek: The Next Generation Enterprise D Ship https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0016NAA32/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_.ga2xb7JK1455
Looks like you can get it on DVD from amazon.
I remember getting the Klingon Dictionary as a kid and thinking I was pretty badass. Looking back on it, a prepubescent uttering the guttural Klingon dialect may not have been the most intimidating thing ever.
Relevant: http://www.amazon.com/The-Klingon-Dictionary-Star-Trek/dp/067174559X
"They" being the guy that played Garak (http://www.amazon.com/Stitch-Time-Star-Trek-Space/dp/0671038850).
Unfortunately, it's super impractical since it was designed for Star Trek and most words have to do with battle and space/technology. The Klingon Language Institute (apparently this is a real thing) might be helpful. Here's a cd, but there's also The Klingon Hamlet, Klingon for the Galactic Traveler, and The Klingon Dictionary
lol, thanks for indulging my st questions on the st subreddit, but if there weren't people like me, would we have the
Star Trek The Next Generation: Technical Manual a book I apparently need to read.
You could order it on the U.S. Amazon site & have them ship it to you. I order 3D blu-rays from amazon.uk all the time.
https://www.amazon.com/Star-Trek-Enterprise-Full-Journey/dp/B00SM43MO2/ref=sr_1_1?crid=EUC9J32KEAJY&keywords=star+trek+enterprise+blu-ray+the+full+journey+complete+series&qid=1575154683&sprefix=star+trek+enterprise+blu-ray%2Caps%2C165&sr=8-1
If you don't mind UK box and labels, the whole set is currently US $89 at UK Amazon when shipped to USA (probably slightly more to Canada). The discs are exactly the same worldwide, with no region locking.
edit: seems the cheapest "sold by Amazon UK" listing is gone now, I guess they are out of stock and not yet sure if more will come. 3rd party sellers still sell it via the above link but with a higher price (still cheaper than in North America though).
Actually it's only $73.75 with the right listing.
It fluctuates like a lot of items but it rarely costs more than $85.
Or get them in a nicer box (or Blu-Ray) for much lower price.
There is this book which I have...somewhere. If I can find it later, I'll try to see what's in there. I also want to say there was at least a small one in the Okuda encyclopedia that came out in the '90s.
Also, I discovered this awesome-looking thing while searching for the above. Comes out Dec. 3rd.
https://www.amazon.com/Physics-Star-Trek-Lawrence-Krauss/dp/0465002048
More recipes... http://www.amazon.com/Star-Trek-Cookbook-Ethan-Phillips/dp/0671000225
The Star Trek Cookbook
Bam.
I have this thing which is kind of fun
The first time my gf cooked for me, it was a recipe from this: http://www.amazon.com/Star-Trek-Cookbook-Ethan-Phillips/dp/0671000225
That night I knew she was the one.
Read this. Written by Andrew Robinson who portrayed Garak
It gets assimilated and re-processed into food or furniture or other things.
Source: Technical Manual of the Enterprise.
It's this book by Sternbach and Okuda: https://www.amazon.com/Star-Trek-Next-Generation-Technical/dp/0671704273
Should be available at other places too.
Umm that is a very old picture...this picture was used on the paperback for the Klingon dictionary.
https://www.amazon.com/Klingon-Dictionary-Star-Trek/dp/067174559X
Epsilon Ceti B II, according to Star Charts.
Have you looked into Star Trek: Star Charts?
Here is the mobile version of your link
You should read this.
I did a screenshot from the dvd that I ordered from Amazon, linked in another comment. Here are pages 1 and 2 from that specific book!
It's only $6.99 on Amazon!!!
Here you go.
15th December in the UK at least.
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Star-Trek-Generation-Complete-Seasons/dp/B00NQXC2YU/ref=sr_1_2?s=dvd&ie=UTF8&qid=1416759128&sr=1-2&keywords=star+trek+the+next+generation+blu+ray
>I doubt Voyager's path was THAT much of a straight line.
It just looks straight because of how zoomed-out it is. There are more zoomed-in and detailed routes in the same book that show the ship's route in a more zigzag pattern.
>But that is a two dimensional representation of three dimensional space. Borg space could reach over and under the path that Voyager took
I think that same principle could be applied to Voyager going under/over Borg space as well.
My take away is that space is freaking BIG, and even though the Borg have spread out quite a bit, there's still plenty of room to dodge them and for other life to flourish.
I feel like nerd-raging today so I whipped out my TNG Technical Manual. I will paraphrase some relevant sections.
___
The Structural Integrity Field System (SIF) has five different field generators located on two different decks. Each field generator has 20 separate graviton polarity sources. The SIF has four independent backup generators as well. So, that is nine total and only ONE is required during normal spaceflight, two during extreme maneuvers.
The Inertial Dampening Field System (IDF) is provided by 6 seperate generators located on Decks 11 and 33. Each generator consists of 12 independent subspace field distortion amplifiers. In addition to the 6 main generators, there are another 6 backup generators. So you have a total of 12, with the minimum being, again, a single generator. This is only in a reduced power situation, during normal spaceflight 2 generators are usually online.
To give you an idea of how integral they are, under complete SIF/IDF failure the Enterprise's spaceframe can only handle 3g of acceleration. Under impulse power, the Enterprise experiences more than 1000g on a regular basis. The failure of just 2 generators can have the Enterprise canceling the mission and heading to a starbase.
Found this on Amazon a couple years ago. Relived my childhood on my iPad for $25. And I finally got an answer to why the comics disappeared mid-storyline by reading the editor's letters. Star Trek: The Complete Comic Book Collection https://www.amazon.com/dp/B001B5KYR2/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_awd_nZT7wb5X8ASGD
http://www.amazon.com/Star-Trek-Charts-Complete-Atlas/dp/0743437705/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1300346394&sr=8-1
WTF? They're all used and at least $90. Makes me REALLY glad I bought a copy a couple of years ago at a Hastings.
Yeah, she likes Garak. I do too, but damn, that book is expensive!
Also, I have the Star Trek Cookbook!
This is from Amazon UK
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Star-Trek-Generation-Complete-Seasons/dp/B00NQXC2YU/ref=sr_1_5?s=dvd&ie=UTF8&qid=1416872893&sr=1-5&keywords=star+trek+next+generation
Crazy price but I imagine it'll drop (just in time for Christmas though)
I've read... pretty much all of them, and I'll say they're uneven. There are some stinkers, but if you hit one of those early on don't be discouraged, because there's also plenty of good ones.
Some recent stuff I've really enjoyed was the post-Enterprise stuff that came along and 'fixed' the finale then took the series to the logical next step: Romulan conflict.
These books really lay out a strong foundation about WHY the Romulan war was so bad and why emotion was still as strong as it was by Balance of Terror when crewman whathisname flipped out on Spock after they learned the 'terrible secret'. They also go into the logistics of how this secret could have been maintained, tie into TOS and even Voyager episodes in completely legit feeling ways ("Did Chulak of Romulus give an ultimatum after his defeat at Galorndon Core?", A Piece of the Action) that rewards knowledge of trek lore.
They even tackle (in what I felt were pretty convincing ways) explanations for why the bridge of the TOS Enterprise looks more 'primitive', and the reasoning they come up with adds depth and texture to the Trek universe. No spoilers, but it makes practical sense.
There's a little bit of suspension of disbelief needed, especially in that first book (which uses a post-DS9 Jake/Nog wrapper, no spoiler this is in the first few pages), but sometimes surgery hurts.
Here is the link without the extra stuff on the end: http://www.amazon.co.uk/Star-Trek-Charts-Geoffrey-Mandel/dp/0743437705/
I'm kinda weary of amazon links on reddit with all the spammers. What is the "ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1319972518&sr=8-1" on the end of that link for?
Is that so you can get money when someone buys it?