If you introduce a certain kind of technology... then it has to work a certain way without any too obvious "contradiction".
Forgive me but, have you watched an episode from any Star Trek series? They introduce more nonsensical, bull**** technology than the average Brookstone catalog.
Maybe i'm doing you a disserve, but please adress my actual argument instead of nitpicking on a single sentence. /shrugs maybe i just wasn't clear enough, in that case, my bad!
As i posted in some other thread:
The believability of the "science" in science fiction can be stretched quite a bit, as long as one stays at least somewhat consistent within the world one presents. "Somewhat consistent" is naturally a subjective matter and i would fully agree that there is a lot of bull**** in the TV show as well... i would however also contend that the new movie sets a new record on the bull**** meter. In the TV show you can see them sometimes at least "trying" to avoid obvious selfcontradictions, or even just "trying" to cover it up a little if its too much bull****... the new movie however doesn't even try anymore, it keeps rubbing it in your face and laughs about it. There isn't even an attempt anymore to offer some believability or consistency.
More to the point however is that their utter disregard of "believability" extends to entirely "non-sci" fi concepts, like characters, their actions, fate and their motivations as well as chance itself... once you stop caring about making that believable, your plot basically dissolves into incoherency and becomes a random selection of scenes that just happen to be presented in that order because the producers decided it to be that way, not because there is any kind of coherent or consistent storyline to follow.
Once you cross that line.... you basically go into "lala" land, no matter if your movie happens to be sci-fi, fantasy or real-life drama.
And yes... that's pretty much how i started feeling after the whole Kirk/Ice-Planet/Spock/Scotty desaster which appeared to be the point where the writers started not to care about anything anymore really.
Believability of Science and Believability of characters are two entirely different things. The new Star Trek doesn't seem to care about either however and that is the reason it outright sucks.
If it was just screwy science then i frankly wouln't even mind all that much, as long as the plot wasn't entirely based on that "screwy science" and kept rubbing in your face just how stupid it was (Fringe i'm looking at you, but that s a different story heh

).