My question is has anybody checked it out to verify if the star dates
correspond with the order of the episodes release? In other words did they
forget about that aspect of contiguity.
Well your honor, this is the way it really was..........
Bob Nebert
sdcsvax!bmcg!bobn
He admits that he had to make up this silly explanation because they
never bothered to check the continuity of stardates.
--
Barry Margolin
ARPA: barmar@MIT-Multics
UUCP: ..!genrad!mit-eddie!barmar
The series remembered, but N.B.C. didn't. The order is pretty
scrambled.
No, the episodes were not released with continuing time order, but the general
stardate did increase as the show went on.
First Season:
The Man Trap
SD:1513.1
Charlie X
SD:1533.6
Where No Man Has Gone Before
SD:1312.4
The Naked Time
SD:1704.2
The Enemy Within
SD:1672.1
Mudd's Women
SD:1329.1
What Are Little Girls Are Made Of
SD:2712.4
Miri
SD:2713.5
Dagger of the Mind
SD:2715.1
The Corbomite Manuver
SD:1512.2
The Managerie (2 parts)
SD:3012.4
The Conscience of the King
SD:2817.6
Balance of Terror
SD:1709
Shore Leave
SD:3025.3
The Galileo Seven
SD:2821.5
The Squire of Gothos
SD:2124.5
Arena
SD:3045.6
Tomorrow is Yesterday
SD:3113.2
Court-Martial
SD:2947.3
The Return of the Archons
SD:3156.2
Space Seed
SD:3141.9
A Taste of Armageddon
SD:3192.1
This Side of Paradise
SD:3417.3
The Devil in the Dark
SD:3417.3
Errand of Mercy
SD:3198.4
The Alternative Factor
SD:3087.6
The City on the Edge of Forever
SD:3134.0
Operation--Annihilate!
SD:3287.2
Season 2:
Amok Time
SD:3372.7
Who Mourns for Adonais
SD:3468.1
The Changeling
SD:3451.9
Mirror, Mirror
SD:????.?
The Apple
SD:3715.0
The Doomsday Machine
SD:4202.9
Catspaw
SD:3018.2
I, Mudd
SD:4513.3
Metamorphosis
SD:3219.4
Journey to Babel
SD:3842.3
Friday's Child
SD:3497.2
The Deadly Years
SD:3478.2
Obsession
SD:3619.2
Wolf in the Fold
SD:3614.9
The Trouble With Tribbles
SD:4523.3
The Gamesters of Triskelion
SD:3211.7
A Piece of the Action
SD:4598.0
The Immunity Syndrome
SD:4307.1
A Private Little War
SD:4211.4
Return to Tomorrow
SD:4768.3
Patterns of Force
SD:2534.0
By Any Other Name
SD:4657.5
The Omega Glory
SD:????.?
The Ultimate Computer
SD:4729.4
Bread and Circuses
SD:4040.7
Assignment: Earth
SD:????.?
Third Season:
Spock's Brain
SD:5431.4
The Enterprise Incident
SD:5031.3
The Paradise Syndrome
SD:4842.6
And the Children Shall Lead
SD:5027.3
Is There in Truth No Beauty
SD:5630.7
Spectre of the Gun
SD:4385.3
Day of the Dove
SD:????.?
For the World is Hollow and I Have Touched the Sky
SD:5476.3
The Tholian Web
SD:5693.4
Plato's Stepchildren
SD:5784.0
A Wink of an Eye
SD:5710.5
The Empath
SD:5121.0
Elaan of Troyius
SD:4372.5
Whom Gods Destroy
SD:5718.3
Let That Be Your Last Battlefield
SD:5730.2
The Mark of Gideon
SD:5423.4
That Which Survives
SD:????.?
The Lights of Zetar
SD:5725.3
Requiem for Methuselah
SD:5843.7
The Way to Eden
SD:5832.3
The Cloud Miners
SD:5818.4
The Savage Curtain
SD:5906.4
All Our Yesterdays
SD:5943.7
Turnabout Intruder
SD:5928.5
Rob Cook
UUCP: {ihnp4,pur-ee}!uiucdcs!uiucuxc!rcook
'Life is just a cocktail party on the street'
-Mick Jagger-
Well, actually it was the *network* that messed this up. The
studio actually got it right, at least as far as order was concerned.
But the network didn't *air* them in the order they were filmed.
Actually, ther *is* a continuity problem with stardates.
I sorted the first dozen or so episodes by stardate and discovered
that they didn't leave nearly enough time between episodes! In the
pilot(Where No Man Has Gone Before), a careful watching of the episode
will reveal that the number after the "point" in the stardate is
*hours*. This can be accomplished by comparing anounced ETA's with
recorded stardates. Using this interpretation there was on the average
only a day or so between each episode! Or at most about a week! I have
*never* heard of a Navy ship *that* busy, and with the enormous
distances involved it becomes even more ludicrous.
--
Sarima (Stanley Friesen)
{trwrb|allegra|cbosgd|hplabs|ihnp4|aero!uscvax!akgua}!sdcrdcf!psivax!friesen
or {ttdica|quad1|bellcore|scgvaxd}!psivax!friesen
Ken Crist
Computer Vision Lab
University of Maryland
Now since they do tend to progress from the first program to the last,
as others have observed in recent net conversations, we could guess
that the script editors may have altered the actual numbers chosen
sometimes, while preserving the author's internal time scheme in the
stories. I have yet to read a good (i.e. both imaginative and
scientifically plausible) explanation of how this kind of stardate
would operate - what this time is *relative to* etc. - and how it would
relate to "ship time" (an artificial construct to keep beings on a
biological schedule), or "planetary standard time" upon arrival somewhere.
Comments?
sb