• @[email protected]
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    285 months ago

    I’d like to think that it is an unspoken rule among all spacefaring people, regardless of their planetary origin or biological design, to automatically reorient their ships to match the “up” direction of any other ship they are approaching.

    It makes sense since (effectively) all spacefaring peoples started on a planet with gravity and well defined “up” directions. You wouldn’t interact with anyone in gravity while upside down, so as a courtesy you’d always want to be facing “up” for both your sake’s.

    • @[email protected]
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      205 months ago

      Technically, this only needs to be the practice of Starfleet (or even just human) navigators in order to account for 99% of what we see in Star Trek. Maybe it’s our guys who are doing all the careful orienting, and the alien of the week just comes in from whatever angle they want.

      • andyburke
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        105 months ago

        And there are LOTS of examples of other ships uncloaking in non aligned positions.

        I like this “starfleet policy is to make a best guess and align up when approaching” - borg cube presents particular problems.

      • @AA5B
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        55 months ago

        Or maybe, since Starfleet is seeing it all through the view screen rather than directly, it’s just a little image manipulation for the comfort of the viewer

        • Norah - She/They
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          25 months ago

          I thought that it was canonical, at least in some series, that the viewscreen is a window that displays a 1x view of outside and any time they want to zoom in, or are hailed, if turns into a monitor? I swear there’s been multiple times where someone was sucked out of the bridge through it.

      • @KISSmyOSFeddit
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        25 months ago

        There’s probably thousand of pages written on diplomatic rules about which civilization’s ships have to re-orient themselves to meet another’s.