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** [=Al2O3=] has been around a bit longer than Star Trek. It’s variously known as corundum, sapphire or ruby.

to:

** [=Al2O3=] has been around a bit longer than Star Trek. It’s variously known as corundum, sapphire sapphire, or ruby.



* Not to mention all sorts of stories of RealLife celebrities looking up with admiration to Creator/NichelleNichols as Nyota Uhura, television's first female African astronaut — such as Dr. Mae Jemison, NASA's first female African-American astronaut.
* The mini-datatapes used on the Original Series bore more than a passing similarity to later datatapes, 3.5 floppies, and especially Zip Disks. TNG's isolinear optical chips now can claim a real life antecedant with flashdrives.
* And now we can add the Universal Translator to the list. There is an app currently under development for the [=BlackBerry=] called Polyglotz. Now while there are a ton of type out a phrase and get a translation websites and programs, this is one of the first "spoken translators". You speak a phrase into your phone and the translated version is played back. It is really new and has a ton of bugs, so your [=BlackBerry=] won't help you commiserate with a roomful of Klingons. Yet...
* The Original Series also made a surprisingly accurate prediction of when the first manned moon mission would occur. "Tomorrow is Yesterday", first broadcast in early 1967, was a time-travel story in which the Enterprise is sent back in time to the year 1969, shortly before the launch of the first moon mission, which is said to occur on a Wednesday. The only facts missed: the month (though no month is actually mentioned on screen), and the time given for the launch is a few hours off when it would happen in real life.
* In 1994, theoretical physicist and Trekkie Miguel Alcubierre published a theoretical paper describing a possible warp drive. Today the AlcubierreDrive is considered one of the most potentially feasable forms of FasterThanLightTravel ever concieved. It's not ''actually'' feasable yet (it requires something called "negative mass" to work) but future generations may look back on Miguel Alcubierre as the man who made ''Star Trek'' a reality.

to:

* Not to mention all sorts of stories of RealLife celebrities looking up with admiration to Creator/NichelleNichols as Nyota Uhura, television's first female African astronaut — astronaut— such as Dr. Mae Jemison, NASA's first female African-American astronaut.
* The mini-datatapes used on the Original Series bore more than a passing similarity to later datatapes, 3.5 floppies, and especially Zip Disks. TNG's isolinear optical chips can now can claim a real life antecedant antecedent with flashdrives.
* And now we can add the Universal Translator to the list. There is an app currently under development for the [=BlackBerry=] called Polyglotz. Now while there are a ton of type "type out a phrase and get a translation translation" websites and programs, this is one of the first "spoken translators". You speak a phrase into your phone and the translated version is played back. It is really new and has a ton of bugs, so your [=BlackBerry=] won't help you commiserate with a roomful of Klingons. Yet...
* The Original Series also made a surprisingly accurate prediction of when the first manned moon mission would occur. "Tomorrow is Yesterday", first broadcast in early 1967, was a time-travel story in which the Enterprise is sent back in time to the year 1969, shortly before the launch of the first moon mission, which is said to occur on a Wednesday. The only facts missed: the month (though no month is actually mentioned on screen), and the time given for the launch is a few hours off from when it would happen in real life.
* In 1994, theoretical physicist and Trekkie Miguel Alcubierre published a theoretical paper describing a possible warp drive. Today the AlcubierreDrive is considered one of the most potentially feasable feasible forms of FasterThanLightTravel ever concieved. conceived. It's not ''actually'' feasable feasible yet (it requires something called "negative mass" to work) work), but future generations may look back on Miguel Alcubierre as the man who made ''Star Trek'' a reality.



* The Star Trek Franchise showed humans becoming so technologically advanced that they are able to live in outer space on spaceships and space stations with food, home comforts and entertainment, the first twelve Star Trek films are now 12 of the 533 Listed Movies and TV shows onboard ''the International Space Station''.
* Ever noticed that Siri, Alexa and Cortana all have default female voices? Blame Star Trek's talking computers. Air Force pilot Roddenberry knew that fighter pilots responded better to female voices for the automatic warning systems ("pull up", "missile lock", etc.); also, a higher voice is easier to hear. Lately some very artificial-sounding female voices have been used on commercial airlines, so the pilots can tell this is the computer talking and not a female voice coming over the regular radio. Somewhere, Gene specified that the computer voice sounds like Majel because Number One (Majel's first role in the show) had installed the computer voice system for the Big E, and programmed it with her own voice.

to:

* The Star Trek Franchise showed humans becoming so technologically advanced that they are able to live in outer space on spaceships and space stations with food, home comforts and entertainment, entertainment; the first twelve Star Trek films are now 12 of the 533 Listed Movies and TV shows onboard on board ''the International Space Station''.
* Ever noticed that Siri, Alexa Alexa, and Cortana all have default female voices? Blame Star Trek's talking computers. Air Force pilot Roddenberry knew that fighter pilots responded better to female voices for the automatic warning systems ("pull up", "missile lock", etc.); also, a higher voice is easier to hear. Lately some very artificial-sounding female voices have been used on commercial airlines, so the pilots can tell this is the computer talking and not a female voice coming over the regular radio. Somewhere, Gene specified that the computer voice sounds like Majel because Number One (Majel's first role in the show) had installed the computer voice system for the Big E, and programmed it with her own voice.
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** followed by the iPad, and the recent tablet craze - which of course, bears more than just a casual resemblance to those data pads.

to:

** followed Followed by the iPad, and the recent tablet craze - which of course, bears more than just a casual resemblance to those data pads.
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lk TNG episode "Matter Of Time"


* The creator of the system to tag music was inspired by a ''Next Generation'' episode in which, as a throwaway gag, Data has ordered the computer to play him four symphonies at once. He ignored the gag and thought "hey, it might be a pretty cool to tag music files so that you actually ''could'' tell the computer to play you a specific artist or album", and the rest is history.

to:

* The creator of the system to tag music was inspired by a the ''Next Generation'' episode [[Recap/StarTrekTheNextGenerationS5E9AMatterOfTime A Matter Of Time]] in which, as a throwaway gag, Data has ordered the computer to play him four symphonies at once. He ignored the gag and thought "hey, it might be a pretty cool to tag music files so that you actually ''could'' tell the computer to play you a specific artist or album", and the rest is history.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* Ever noticed that Siri, Alexa and Cortana all have default female voices? but Blame Star Trek's talking computers. Gene Roddenberry was an Air Force pilot, and knew that fighter pilots responded better to female voices for the automatic warning systems ("pull up", "missile lock", etc.); also, a higher voice is easier to hear. Lately some very artificial sounding female voices have been used on commercial airlines, so the pilots can tell this is the computer talking and not a female voice coming over the regular radio. Somewhere, Gene specified that the computer voice sounds like Majel because Number One (Majel's first role in the show) had installed the computer voice system for the Big E, and programmed it with her own voice.

to:

* Ever noticed that Siri, Alexa and Cortana all have default female voices? but Blame Star Trek's talking computers. Gene Air Force pilot Roddenberry was an Air Force pilot, and knew that fighter pilots responded better to female voices for the automatic warning systems ("pull up", "missile lock", etc.); also, a higher voice is easier to hear. Lately some very artificial sounding artificial-sounding female voices have been used on commercial airlines, so the pilots can tell this is the computer talking and not a female voice coming over the regular radio. Somewhere, Gene specified that the computer voice sounds like Majel because Number One (Majel's first role in the show) had installed the computer voice system for the Big E, and programmed it with her own voice.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* Ever noticed that Siri, Alexa and Cortana are all female? Blame Star Trek's talking computers. (Although those are the default voices. Siri, for example, can be set for a male voice. Still a valid point though)

to:

* Ever noticed that Siri, Alexa and Cortana are all female? have default female voices? but Blame Star Trek's talking computers. (Although those are Gene Roddenberry was an Air Force pilot, and knew that fighter pilots responded better to female voices for the default voices. Siri, automatic warning systems ("pull up", "missile lock", etc.); also, a higher voice is easier to hear. Lately some very artificial sounding female voices have been used on commercial airlines, so the pilots can tell this is the computer talking and not a female voice coming over the regular radio. Somewhere, Gene specified that the computer voice sounds like Majel because Number One (Majel's first role in the show) had installed the computer voice system for example, can be set for a male the Big E, and programmed it with her own voice. Still a valid point though)
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* Fans of ''Franchise/StarTrek'' wrote so many letters to NASA, that eventually, they did name the first full-scale prototype Space Shuttle ''Enterprise''. The shuttle [[CelebrityParadox subsequently appeared]] on murals in both ''Film/StarTrekTheMotionPicture'' and ''Series/StarTrekTheNextGeneration'', as well as the opening credits of ''Series/StarTrekEnterprise'', implying that in the Trek universe the ''starship'' was named after the ''shuttle'' which was partially named after the previous ships bearing the name Enterprise like the WWII U.S.S Enterprise carrier making this ArtImitatesLife plus Life Imitates Art.

to:

* Fans of ''Franchise/StarTrek'' wrote so many letters to NASA, President Gerald R. Ford, that eventually, they he did name the first full-scale prototype Space Shuttle ''Enterprise''. ''Enterprise'' instead of ''Constitution'' as planned. The shuttle [[CelebrityParadox subsequently appeared]] on murals in both ''Film/StarTrekTheMotionPicture'' and ''Series/StarTrekTheNextGeneration'', as well as the opening credits of ''Series/StarTrekEnterprise'', implying that in the Trek universe the ''starship'' was named after the ''shuttle'' which was partially named after the previous ships bearing the name Enterprise ''Enterprise'' like the WWII U.S.S Enterprise ''Enterprise'' carrier making this ArtImitatesLife plus Life Imitates Art.
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Added DiffLines:

** One episode of TNG dealt with an experiment into a new form of warp-speed travel, involving a ship riding on a "soliton wave". In 2021, new research by physicist Erik Lentz [[https://physicsworld.com/a/spacecraft-in-a-warp-bubble-could-travel-faster-than-light-claims-physicist/ suggested]] that a soliton might potentially provide a viable mechanism for an Alcubierre drive.
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None


* Ever noticed that Siri, Alexa and Cortana are all female? Blame Star Trek's talking computers.

to:

* Ever noticed that Siri, Alexa and Cortana are all female? Blame Star Trek's talking computers. (Although those are the default voices. Siri, for example, can be set for a male voice. Still a valid point though)
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

* Ever noticed that Siri, Alexa and Cortana are all female? Blame Star Trek's talking computers.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* Fans of ''Franchise/StarTrek'' wrote so many letters to NASA, that eventually, they did name the first full-scale prototype Space Shuttle ''Enterprise''. The shuttle [[CelebrityParadox subsequently appeared]] in a mural in ''Series/StarTrekTheNextGeneration'' and the opening credits of ''Series/StarTrekEnterprise'', implying that in the Trek universe the ''starship'' was named after the ''shuttle'' which was partially named after the previous ships bearing the name Enterprise like the WWII U.S.S Enterprise carrier making this ArtImitatesLife plus Life Imitates Art.

to:

* Fans of ''Franchise/StarTrek'' wrote so many letters to NASA, that eventually, they did name the first full-scale prototype Space Shuttle ''Enterprise''. The shuttle [[CelebrityParadox subsequently appeared]] on murals in a mural in ''Series/StarTrekTheNextGeneration'' both ''Film/StarTrekTheMotionPicture'' and ''Series/StarTrekTheNextGeneration'', as well as the opening credits of ''Series/StarTrekEnterprise'', implying that in the Trek universe the ''starship'' was named after the ''shuttle'' which was partially named after the previous ships bearing the name Enterprise like the WWII U.S.S Enterprise carrier making this ArtImitatesLife plus Life Imitates Art.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* The Star Trek Franchise showed humans becoming so technologically advanced that they are able to live in outer space on spaceships and space stations with food, home comforts and entertainment, the first twelve Star Trek films are now 12 of the 533 Listed overs and TV shows onboard ''the International Space Station''.

to:

* The Star Trek Franchise showed humans becoming so technologically advanced that they are able to live in outer space on spaceships and space stations with food, home comforts and entertainment, the first twelve Star Trek films are now 12 of the 533 Listed overs Movies and TV shows onboard ''the International Space Station''.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* The Star Trek Franchise showed humans becoming so technologically advanced that that are able to live in outer space on spaceships and space stations with food, home comforts and entertainment, the first twelve Star Trek films are now 12 of the 533 Listed overs and TV shows onboard ''the International Space Station''.

to:

* The Star Trek Franchise showed humans becoming so technologically advanced that that they are able to live in outer space on spaceships and space stations with food, home comforts and entertainment, the first twelve Star Trek films are now 12 of the 533 Listed overs and TV shows onboard ''the International Space Station''.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


The Star Trek Franchise showed humans becoming so technologically advanced that that are able to live in outer space on spaceships and space stations with with food, home comforts and entertainment, the first twelve Star Trek films are now 12 of the 533 Listed overs and TV shows onboard ''the International Space Station''.

to:

* The Star Trek Franchise showed humans becoming so technologically advanced that that are able to live in outer space on spaceships and space stations with with food, home comforts and entertainment, the first twelve Star Trek films are now 12 of the 533 Listed overs and TV shows onboard ''the International Space Station''.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* The Star Trek Franchise showed humans becoming so technologically advanced that that are able to live in outer space on spaceships and space stations with, the first twelve Star Trek films are 12 of the 533 Listed overs and TV shows onboard ''the International Space Station''.

to:

* The Star Trek Franchise showed humans becoming so technologically advanced that that are able to live in outer space on spaceships and space stations with, with with food, home comforts and entertainment, the first twelve Star Trek films are now 12 of the 533 Listed overs and TV shows onboard ''the International Space Station''.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


The Star Trek Franchise showed humans becoming so technologically advanced that that are able to live in outer space on spaceships and space stations with, the first twelve Star Trek films are 12 of the 533 Listed overs and TV shows onboard ''the International Space Station''.

to:

* The Star Trek Franchise showed humans becoming so technologically advanced that that are able to live in outer space on spaceships and space stations with, the first twelve Star Trek films are 12 of the 533 Listed overs and TV shows onboard ''the International Space Station''.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

The Star Trek Franchise showed humans becoming so technologically advanced that that are able to live in outer space on spaceships and space stations with, the first twelve Star Trek films are 12 of the 533 Listed overs and TV shows onboard ''the International Space Station''.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


----e

to:

----e----
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* In 1994, theoretical physicist and Trekkie Miguel Alcubierre published a theoretical paper describing a possible warp drive. Today the [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alcubierre_drive Alcubierre drive]] is considered one of the most potentially feasable forms of FasterThanLightTravel ever concieved. It's not ''actually'' feasable yet (it requires something called "negative mass" to work) but future generations may look back on Miguel Alcubierre as the man who made ''Star Trek'' a reality.

to:

* In 1994, theoretical physicist and Trekkie Miguel Alcubierre published a theoretical paper describing a possible warp drive. Today the [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alcubierre_drive Alcubierre drive]] AlcubierreDrive is considered one of the most potentially feasable forms of FasterThanLightTravel ever concieved. It's not ''actually'' feasable yet (it requires something called "negative mass" to work) but future generations may look back on Miguel Alcubierre as the man who made ''Star Trek'' a reality.

Added: 5

Changed: 502

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----

to:

----* In 1994, theoretical physicist and Trekkie Miguel Alcubierre published a theoretical paper describing a possible warp drive. Today the [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alcubierre_drive Alcubierre drive]] is considered one of the most potentially feasable forms of FasterThanLightTravel ever concieved. It's not ''actually'' feasable yet (it requires something called "negative mass" to work) but future generations may look back on Miguel Alcubierre as the man who made ''Star Trek'' a reality.
----e
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nope, VSS Unity


* Richard Branson has also named his first commercial passenger spacecraft the VSS ''Enterprise''. He named the second the VSS ''[[Series/StarTrekVoyager Voyager]]''.

to:

* Richard Branson has also named his first commercial passenger spacecraft the VSS ''Enterprise''. He named the second the VSS ''[[Series/StarTrekVoyager Voyager]]''.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Sugar Wiki in main


* Not to mention all sorts of stories of RealLife celebrities looking up with admiration to Creator/NichelleNichols as Nyota Uhura, television's first female African astronaut — such as [[CrowningMomentOfAwesome Dr. Mae Jemison, NASA's first female African-American astronaut]].

to:

* Not to mention all sorts of stories of RealLife celebrities looking up with admiration to Creator/NichelleNichols as Nyota Uhura, television's first female African astronaut — such as [[CrowningMomentOfAwesome Dr. Mae Jemison, NASA's first female African-American astronaut]].astronaut.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


** According to G. Harry Stine in "To Make A ''Star Trek''" (''Analog'', February 1968), the doors, diagnostic bed and [=McCoy=]'s saltshaker tools were already in the works for real when the series premiered.
** Clamshell cell phones almost always come in designs reminiscent of the Original Series communicators, although communicators are of course a lot more powerful in terms of the communication part.
** [[http://www.inc.com/magazine/20110201/star-trek-style-communicator-badge.html?nav=related Vocera's B2000 communications badge]] is inspired in part inspired by the combadge seen in the later Trek series. It also works the same way - tap & talk.
** Transparent Aluminum. First mentioned in ''Star Trek IV'' in 1986. According to Wikipedia, there are now (by 2008) different methods and brand products: Aluminum oxynitride ([=AlON=]) is a transparent ceramic composed of aluminum, oxygen and nitrogen that can apparently be produced in sizes large enough for windows; aluminum oxide, a chemical compound of aluminum and oxygen ([=Al2O3=]) is made transparent through a process of fusing fine particles; and transparent nanophase aluminum in various colors.
*** [=Al2O3=] has been around a bit longer than Star Trek. It’s variously known as corundum, sapphire or ruby.
** Fans of ''Franchise/StarTrek'' wrote so many letters to NASA, that eventually, they did name the first full-scale prototype Space Shuttle ''Enterprise''. The shuttle [[CelebrityParadox subsequently appeared]] in a mural in ''Series/StarTrekTheNextGeneration'' and the opening credits of ''Series/StarTrekEnterprise'', implying that in the Trek universe the ''starship'' was named after the ''shuttle'' which was partially named after the previous ships bearing the name Enterprise like the WWII U.S.S Enterprise carrier making this ArtImitatesLife plus Life Imitates Art.
*** In one ExpandedUniverse novel, Kirk actually ''commanded'' the space shuttle ''Enterprise''.
** The creator of the system to tag music was inspired by a ''Next Generation'' episode in which, as a throwaway gag, Data has ordered the computer to play him four symphonies at once. He ignored the gag and thought "hey, it might be a pretty cool to tag music files so that you actually ''could'' tell the computer to play you a specific artist or album", and the rest is history.
** Richard Branson has also named his first commercial passenger spacecraft the VSS ''Enterprise''. He named the second the VSS ''[[Series/StarTrekVoyager Voyager]]''.
** Let's not forget how the ever-versatile Tricorder (and to a lesser extent, the thin computer pads of TNG) inspired the creation of Palm Pilots, [=PDAs=], and - eventually - the iPhone.
*** followed by the iPad, and the recent tablet craze - which of course, bears more than just a casual resemblance to those data pads.
*** In a case of {{Defictionalization}} glurge, Creator/GeneRoddenberry made it clear that the term "Tricorder" was public domain, available to anyone who could build a scientific instrument similar to the prop. The latest example of this is the Tricorder X PRIZE, announced in 2011, which will be awarded to the first portable medical tool that can provide instant diagnoses a la Franchise/StarTrek's medical tricorders.
** The Captain's Log - voice and handwriting recognizing software/hardware.
** Not to mention all sorts of stories of RealLife celebrities looking up with admiration to Creator/NichelleNichols as Nyota Uhura, television's first female African astronaut — such as [[CrowningMomentOfAwesome Dr. Mae Jemison, NASA's first female African-American astronaut]].
** The mini-datatapes used on the Original Series bore more than a passing similarity to later datatapes, 3.5 floppies, and especially Zip Disks. TNG's isolinear optical chips now can claim a real life antecedant with flashdrives.
** And now we can add the Universal Translator to the list. There is an app currently under development for the [=BlackBerry=] called Polyglotz. Now while there are a ton of type out a phrase and get a translation websites and programs, this is one of the first "spoken translators". You speak a phrase into your phone and the translated version is played back. It is really new and has a ton of bugs, so your [=BlackBerry=] won't help you commiserate with a roomful of Klingons. Yet...
** The Original Series also made a surprisingly accurate prediction of when the first manned moon mission would occur. "Tomorrow is Yesterday", first broadcast in early 1967, was a time-travel story in which the Enterprise is sent back in time to the year 1969, shortly before the launch of the first moon mission, which is said to occur on a Wednesday. The only facts missed: the month (though no month is actually mentioned on screen), and the time given for the launch is a few hours off when it would happen in real life.

to:

** * According to G. Harry Stine in "To Make A ''Star Trek''" (''Analog'', February 1968), the doors, diagnostic bed and [=McCoy=]'s saltshaker tools were already in the works for real when the series premiered.
** * Clamshell cell phones almost always come in designs reminiscent of the Original Series communicators, although communicators are of course a lot more powerful in terms of the communication part.
** * [[http://www.inc.com/magazine/20110201/star-trek-style-communicator-badge.html?nav=related Vocera's B2000 communications badge]] is inspired in part inspired by the combadge seen in the later Trek series. It also works the same way - tap & talk.
** * Transparent Aluminum. First mentioned in ''Star Trek IV'' in 1986. According to Wikipedia, there are now (by 2008) different methods and brand products: Aluminum oxynitride ([=AlON=]) is a transparent ceramic composed of aluminum, oxygen and nitrogen that can apparently be produced in sizes large enough for windows; aluminum oxide, a chemical compound of aluminum and oxygen ([=Al2O3=]) is made transparent through a process of fusing fine particles; and transparent nanophase aluminum in various colors.
*** ** [=Al2O3=] has been around a bit longer than Star Trek. It’s variously known as corundum, sapphire or ruby.
** * Fans of ''Franchise/StarTrek'' wrote so many letters to NASA, that eventually, they did name the first full-scale prototype Space Shuttle ''Enterprise''. The shuttle [[CelebrityParadox subsequently appeared]] in a mural in ''Series/StarTrekTheNextGeneration'' and the opening credits of ''Series/StarTrekEnterprise'', implying that in the Trek universe the ''starship'' was named after the ''shuttle'' which was partially named after the previous ships bearing the name Enterprise like the WWII U.S.S Enterprise carrier making this ArtImitatesLife plus Life Imitates Art.
*** ** In one ExpandedUniverse novel, Kirk actually ''commanded'' the space shuttle ''Enterprise''.
** * The creator of the system to tag music was inspired by a ''Next Generation'' episode in which, as a throwaway gag, Data has ordered the computer to play him four symphonies at once. He ignored the gag and thought "hey, it might be a pretty cool to tag music files so that you actually ''could'' tell the computer to play you a specific artist or album", and the rest is history.
** * Richard Branson has also named his first commercial passenger spacecraft the VSS ''Enterprise''. He named the second the VSS ''[[Series/StarTrekVoyager Voyager]]''.
** * Let's not forget how the ever-versatile Tricorder (and to a lesser extent, the thin computer pads of TNG) inspired the creation of Palm Pilots, [=PDAs=], and - eventually - the iPhone.
*** ** followed by the iPad, and the recent tablet craze - which of course, bears more than just a casual resemblance to those data pads.
*** ** In a case of {{Defictionalization}} glurge, Creator/GeneRoddenberry made it clear that the term "Tricorder" was public domain, available to anyone who could build a scientific instrument similar to the prop. The latest example of this is the Tricorder X PRIZE, announced in 2011, which will be awarded to the first portable medical tool that can provide instant diagnoses a la Franchise/StarTrek's medical tricorders.
** * The Captain's Log - voice and handwriting recognizing software/hardware.
** * Not to mention all sorts of stories of RealLife celebrities looking up with admiration to Creator/NichelleNichols as Nyota Uhura, television's first female African astronaut — such as [[CrowningMomentOfAwesome Dr. Mae Jemison, NASA's first female African-American astronaut]].
** * The mini-datatapes used on the Original Series bore more than a passing similarity to later datatapes, 3.5 floppies, and especially Zip Disks. TNG's isolinear optical chips now can claim a real life antecedant with flashdrives.
** * And now we can add the Universal Translator to the list. There is an app currently under development for the [=BlackBerry=] called Polyglotz. Now while there are a ton of type out a phrase and get a translation websites and programs, this is one of the first "spoken translators". You speak a phrase into your phone and the translated version is played back. It is really new and has a ton of bugs, so your [=BlackBerry=] won't help you commiserate with a roomful of Klingons. Yet...
** * The Original Series also made a surprisingly accurate prediction of when the first manned moon mission would occur. "Tomorrow is Yesterday", first broadcast in early 1967, was a time-travel story in which the Enterprise is sent back in time to the year 1969, shortly before the launch of the first moon mission, which is said to occur on a Wednesday. The only facts missed: the month (though no month is actually mentioned on screen), and the time given for the launch is a few hours off when it would happen in real life.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

** According to G. Harry Stine in "To Make A ''Star Trek''" (''Analog'', February 1968), the doors, diagnostic bed and [=McCoy=]'s saltshaker tools were already in the works for real when the series premiered.
** Clamshell cell phones almost always come in designs reminiscent of the Original Series communicators, although communicators are of course a lot more powerful in terms of the communication part.
** [[http://www.inc.com/magazine/20110201/star-trek-style-communicator-badge.html?nav=related Vocera's B2000 communications badge]] is inspired in part inspired by the combadge seen in the later Trek series. It also works the same way - tap & talk.
** Transparent Aluminum. First mentioned in ''Star Trek IV'' in 1986. According to Wikipedia, there are now (by 2008) different methods and brand products: Aluminum oxynitride ([=AlON=]) is a transparent ceramic composed of aluminum, oxygen and nitrogen that can apparently be produced in sizes large enough for windows; aluminum oxide, a chemical compound of aluminum and oxygen ([=Al2O3=]) is made transparent through a process of fusing fine particles; and transparent nanophase aluminum in various colors.
*** [=Al2O3=] has been around a bit longer than Star Trek. It’s variously known as corundum, sapphire or ruby.
** Fans of ''Franchise/StarTrek'' wrote so many letters to NASA, that eventually, they did name the first full-scale prototype Space Shuttle ''Enterprise''. The shuttle [[CelebrityParadox subsequently appeared]] in a mural in ''Series/StarTrekTheNextGeneration'' and the opening credits of ''Series/StarTrekEnterprise'', implying that in the Trek universe the ''starship'' was named after the ''shuttle'' which was partially named after the previous ships bearing the name Enterprise like the WWII U.S.S Enterprise carrier making this ArtImitatesLife plus Life Imitates Art.
*** In one ExpandedUniverse novel, Kirk actually ''commanded'' the space shuttle ''Enterprise''.
** The creator of the system to tag music was inspired by a ''Next Generation'' episode in which, as a throwaway gag, Data has ordered the computer to play him four symphonies at once. He ignored the gag and thought "hey, it might be a pretty cool to tag music files so that you actually ''could'' tell the computer to play you a specific artist or album", and the rest is history.
** Richard Branson has also named his first commercial passenger spacecraft the VSS ''Enterprise''. He named the second the VSS ''[[Series/StarTrekVoyager Voyager]]''.
** Let's not forget how the ever-versatile Tricorder (and to a lesser extent, the thin computer pads of TNG) inspired the creation of Palm Pilots, [=PDAs=], and - eventually - the iPhone.
*** followed by the iPad, and the recent tablet craze - which of course, bears more than just a casual resemblance to those data pads.
*** In a case of {{Defictionalization}} glurge, Creator/GeneRoddenberry made it clear that the term "Tricorder" was public domain, available to anyone who could build a scientific instrument similar to the prop. The latest example of this is the Tricorder X PRIZE, announced in 2011, which will be awarded to the first portable medical tool that can provide instant diagnoses a la Franchise/StarTrek's medical tricorders.
** The Captain's Log - voice and handwriting recognizing software/hardware.
** Not to mention all sorts of stories of RealLife celebrities looking up with admiration to Creator/NichelleNichols as Nyota Uhura, television's first female African astronaut — such as [[CrowningMomentOfAwesome Dr. Mae Jemison, NASA's first female African-American astronaut]].
** The mini-datatapes used on the Original Series bore more than a passing similarity to later datatapes, 3.5 floppies, and especially Zip Disks. TNG's isolinear optical chips now can claim a real life antecedant with flashdrives.
** And now we can add the Universal Translator to the list. There is an app currently under development for the [=BlackBerry=] called Polyglotz. Now while there are a ton of type out a phrase and get a translation websites and programs, this is one of the first "spoken translators". You speak a phrase into your phone and the translated version is played back. It is really new and has a ton of bugs, so your [=BlackBerry=] won't help you commiserate with a roomful of Klingons. Yet...
** The Original Series also made a surprisingly accurate prediction of when the first manned moon mission would occur. "Tomorrow is Yesterday", first broadcast in early 1967, was a time-travel story in which the Enterprise is sent back in time to the year 1969, shortly before the launch of the first moon mission, which is said to occur on a Wednesday. The only facts missed: the month (though no month is actually mentioned on screen), and the time given for the launch is a few hours off when it would happen in real life.
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