One of you people has counted. Don’t tell me you haven’t. Nerds.
And yes, I know the picture isn’t from Voyager. That was the only one I could find with him saying it.
One of you people has counted. Don’t tell me you haven’t. Nerds.
And yes, I know the picture isn’t from Voyager. That was the only one I could find with him saying it.
https://youtube.com/watch?v=W2On-nEoe1A
See? I knew it.
I never really noticed before how he just randomly appears somewhere in sickbay. You’d think there’d be a designated spot.
The engineers probably workshopped it. “He should appear close to the patient but not like, threatening close…”
LOL I can just imagine those meetings. “1 meter?” “Way too close.” “How about 5 meters?” “He’s not shouting!” Programmer: Sigh.
Probably wherever the shot made it easiest to edit him in or move the camera slightly.
Oh, certainly. All about the story and pacing. But in-universe it would definitely turn into a game of, “Place your bets on where he appears this time! Everyone ready?”
Starfleet’s computers are a lot smarter than they let on. Just look at how the doors behave.
In universe, it’s likely some algorithms deciding it. If the activator is explicitly waiting for the doctor to appear, just appear in front of them. If they are involved in something, appear out of direct eyeline, and so allow for a less jarring blend into the situation. The latter is more important around those unused to systems like the doctor.
Yeah, if we’re looking for examples of crazy intelligence in inanimate objects (well, inanimate most of the time), the computers have an excellent knack for understanding context. In universe, it could be argued a computer smart enough to understand context could be smart enough to figure out the optimum EMH placement upon appearance.
Or maybe he just appears where he was shut off last time. That would be a lot easier, and it matches what we see in the show, in those instances where he’s shut off and then brought back a little later.
He often appears in the same place he was shut down. Not always however, so it’s not a hard and fast rule.
But as I said, compared to the mind reading doors, it’s a comparatively simple problem.